Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Crown can't prove former B.C. mayor lied: defence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2022 01:24 PM
  • Crown can't prove former B.C. mayor lied: defence

SURREY, B.C. - A defence lawyer for former Surrey, B.C., mayor Doug McCallum says his client should be acquitted of a public mischief charge because the Crown failed to prove he intended to mislead police by saying his foot was run over.

Eric Gottardi says any embellishments in McCallum's statement to police that a woman with a history of harassing him peeled away from a supermarket parking lot were due to confusion following a frightening incident.

In the videotaped statement shown in court, McCallum says he recognized Debi Johnstone as a campaigner for a group wanting to keep the RCMP in Surrey while he was planning to replace it with a municipal police force.

Johnstone has testified McCallum walked toward her vehicle and stood there as she swore at him, yelled at him to resign, told him he had a scaly face and called him evil.

The trial has heard a surveillance video from outside the store during the incident in September last year is inconclusive in proving McCallum's foot was run over because shrubs conceal what happened.

Gottardi says it's up to the Crown to prove McCallum fabricated a story in his statement to police and that his foot was not run over.

MORE National ARTICLES

$475 million more for rural internet: Trudeau

$475 million more for rural internet: Trudeau
The money is in addition to the $2.75 billion already in the government's Universal Broadband Fund, which is dedicated to connecting 98 per cent of Canadians to high-speed internet by 2026 and 100 per cent of Canadians by 2030.

$475 million more for rural internet: Trudeau

Water supply on Sunshine Coast remains 'uncertain'

Water supply on Sunshine Coast remains 'uncertain'
Environment Canada data shows the region just north of Vancouver received 56 millimetres of precipitation this month and 68 mm in the last 10 days of October, but saw only a trace of rain between July and mid-October, when it usually records 200 mm or more.

Water supply on Sunshine Coast remains 'uncertain'

Mountie pleads guilty to Kelowna, B.C., assault

Mountie pleads guilty to Kelowna, B.C., assault
Const. Lacy Browning pleaded guilty to one count of assault on what was supposed to be the first day of her trial on Monday. Browning was accused of punching and dragging University of British Columbia student Mona Wang after the woman's boyfriend called police asking them to check on her.

Mountie pleads guilty to Kelowna, B.C., assault

Systemic issues behind deadly B.C. sinking: report

Systemic issues behind deadly B.C. sinking: report
The crew partially put on their immersion suits, but the life raft they were trying to deploy went into the ocean without being inflated, and the captain and a crew member went into the ocean after it.  

Systemic issues behind deadly B.C. sinking: report

Health ministers expect details of funding boost

Health ministers expect details of funding boost
British Columbia Health Minister Adrian Dix is hosting the country's health ministers for a second day of talks in Vancouver that are set to include discussions with federal minister Jean-Yves Duclos.  

Health ministers expect details of funding boost

Vancouver's new mayor and council sworn in

Vancouver's new mayor and council sworn in
Sim and the new council were sworn in at an inauguration ceremony at the Orpheum theatre where he also called for help from the federal and provincial governments to address the opioid crisis.  

Vancouver's new mayor and council sworn in