HALIFAX — A spokeswoman for Nova Scotia's prosecutors says any appeal of the acquittal of a Halifax cabbie charged with sexual assault will be on the basis of legal errors, not public protests.
Judge Gregory Lenehan found 40-year-old Bassam Al-Rawi not guilty last Wednesday.
Prosecution spokeswoman Chris Hansen says the Crown attorney in the case is reviewing the decision, and will make a recommendation that will be further considered by the senior Crown in the region and the prosecution service's appeal lawyers.
Al-Rawi was charged after police found the woman, in her 20s, passed out and partially naked in his car in the early hours of May 23, 2015.
Lenehan said in an oral decision last Wednesday that the Crown provided no evidence on the woman's lack of consent, and said "clearly, a drunk can consent."
Hansen says prosecutors are aware of the "public angst," but she adds the decision will based on a careful analysis of the law involved and the lawyers will take the time required.
Lenehan's decision and the wording in it has set off a storm of social media criticism, a letter writing campaign calling for a judicial council to investigate, and two public protests planned for this week.