Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Court Rules Against Allowing Man's Trial To Be Held In French

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Dec, 2016 07:56 PM
    NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. — A judge in British Columbia has ruled against a man's bid to have his trial heard in French.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Murray Blok says in a written decision released Wednesday that the Francophone man who applied for a judicial review of his request did not prove that a lower court made a mistake in refusing him a French-language trial.
     
    Joseph Bessette is disputing a charge of driving while prohibited dating back to September 2014, and asserts his right to have a trial in French.
     
    Bessette applied for the right in provincial court, claiming he can request his trial be conducted in either of Canada's official languages, but the judge refused.
     
    "(Bessette) says the trial judge is directly implicated in the violation of what he describes as his quasi-constitutional language rights," the decision says.
     
    The Crown claimed at both hearings that because the alleged offence falls under provincial law instead of the federal criminal code that it can only be tried in English, with interpretation if necessary.
     
    Blok ruled there is not "ongoing significant" infringement of Bessette's rights to have his trial heard in English.
     
    "The decision of the learned judge below is not so obviously wrong, if indeed it is wrong at all, that it merits immediate intervention by this court," the decision says.
     
    The judge also left the door open for Bessette to appeal the language decision after his trial is complete.
     
    Bessette argued that prolonging the court action with an appeal would be "absurd" because a second trial could be avoided if the potential language issue was dealt with by the B.C. Supreme Court.
     
    But Blok disagreed, saying the lower court had every right to rule on the language issue.
     
    "The provincial court may have been right or it may have been wrong in its ruling — a matter on which I express no opinion — but it was competent to make the ruling it did," he writes.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Canada's UFO Guy' Long Fascinated By Mysterious Lights In The Sky

    'Canada's UFO Guy' Long Fascinated By Mysterious Lights In The Sky
    WINNIPEG — After three decades being known as one of Canada's top UFO experts, Chris Rutkowski doesn't mind a bit of good-natured ribbing now and then.

    'Canada's UFO Guy' Long Fascinated By Mysterious Lights In The Sky

    Five Deaths At Winnipeg Remand Centre A 'Huge Flag:' John Howard Society

    WINNIPEG — The deaths this year of five people in custody at the Winnipeg Remand Centre is a big red flag and should be investigated in a wide-ranging inquest, says a prisoners rights group.

    Five Deaths At Winnipeg Remand Centre A 'Huge Flag:' John Howard Society

    CIBC To Repay $73 Million After Overcharging Clients For 14 Years

    CIBC To Repay $73 Million After Overcharging Clients For 14 Years
    The bank will also pay $3 million to the Ontario Securities Commission toward its mandate of protecting investors, while a further payment of $50,000 will go to cover the costs of the investigation.

    CIBC To Repay $73 Million After Overcharging Clients For 14 Years

    Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'

    Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'
    Adam Capay was in isolation for 52 months at a Thunder Bay, Ont., jail, held in a Plexiglas cell with the lights on 24 hours a day.

    Ontario Premier Calls Inmate's 52-month Segregation 'Extremely Disturbing'

    Conjugal Visits Increase Public Safety, Help Offenders Reintegrate, Experts Say

    Conjugal Visits Increase Public Safety, Help Offenders Reintegrate, Experts Say
    Lee Chapelle has fond memories of spending afternoons with his wife in the mid-1990s, barbecuing in a small yard while his young children played in the grass and mimicked the cows' moos as the animals grazed in a nearby field.

    Conjugal Visits Increase Public Safety, Help Offenders Reintegrate, Experts Say

    Adults Shamed From Speaking Indigenous Languages Hold Key To Revival, Survival

    Adults Shamed From Speaking Indigenous Languages Hold Key To Revival, Survival
    Now, people who didn't learn their mother tongue from their parents are key to saving and revitalizing the languages, British Columbia researchers say.

    Adults Shamed From Speaking Indigenous Languages Hold Key To Revival, Survival