Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

High court upholds B.C. man's voyeurism conviction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2023 11:38 AM
  • High court upholds B.C. man's voyeurism conviction

OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has overturned a British Columbia court ruling and restored two voyeurism convictions against a former Metro Vancouver minor hockey coach.

Randy Downes had coached minor hockey and children's baseball in Burnaby and Coquitlam for 30 years when he was charged in 2016 after border agents found images on his phone as he returned to Canada from Washington state.

All the images involved youths who were clothed and none were deemed pornographic, but Downes was convicted of two counts of voyeurism in 2019 for separate events where surreptitious cellphone photos were taken of two youths in their underwear in hockey changing rooms.

He was 62-years old when he was handed a suspended sentence in 2020 and placed on six months of probation.

The B.C. Court of Appeal rejected the lower court ruling in a split decision last year, finding that a conviction of voyeurism requires the subject of the photo to be in a place where it "can reasonably be expected" nudity will occur at the time the photo is taken.

In the unanimous Supreme Court of Canada decision, Justice Mahmud Jamal says the Criminal Code section used to convict Downes does not include a "temporal component," so the Crown did not need to prove the photos were taken in a place where nudity is reasonably expected at that time.

Downes violated a law that protects the sexual integrity of persons in specific places, writes Jamal.

"It does not require the person to be actually nude, exposing intimate parts of his or her body, or engaged in sexual activity; it suffices if they are in a place where a person may reasonably be expected to be in such a state, such as a changing room, toilet, shower stall, or bedroom," he writes.

Observation or recording in such "safe places" violates trust, says Jamal, noting that the result can be "emotional and psychological harm, even if the person is not observed or recorded when nude."

Lawyers for Downes also challenged the constitutionality of the voyeurism laws during the case in the B.C. Court of Appeal, but Jamal says questions about the law being "unconstitutionally overbroad" were not addressed by B.C.'s highest court.

The same questions were raised during the appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, but Jamal declined to rule on them, writing that the issue "has not been properly raised in the courts below" and would "require the Court to address an important Charter issue in a factual vacuum."

MORE National ARTICLES

Hells Angels properties forfeited to B.C.: court

Hells Angels properties forfeited to B.C.: court
Justice Mary Newbury writes that the lower-court ruling was "tainted" in several ways, including by failing to link Hells Angels' efforts to avoid criminal detection with the club's demonstrated “penchant for secrecy” and “preoccupation with rats and snitches."

Hells Angels properties forfeited to B.C.: court

84 year old woman in hospital with serious injuries after being struck by a flatbed truck

84 year old woman in hospital with serious injuries after being struck by a flatbed truck
The victim was crossing Cambie Street at West 41st Avenue at 9 a.m. on February 14 when she was struck by a flatbed transport truck that was making a right turn to head south on Cambie. She sustained serious injuries, and remains in hospital.

84 year old woman in hospital with serious injuries after being struck by a flatbed truck

Human remains located in Cloverdale

Human remains located in Cloverdale
On Wednesday close to 12:45pm, Police responded to a report of what appeared to be human remains found in a wooded area on an empty lot in the 19000-block of Fraser Highway. Police are working to identify the deceased individual.

Human remains located in Cloverdale

Canada faces fresh pressure on military spending

Canada faces fresh pressure on military spending
Member states, including Canada, first agreed in 2014 to "aim" toward spending two per cent of their GDP on defence over the next decade following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.

Canada faces fresh pressure on military spending

B.C. expands old-growth logging deferrals

B.C. expands old-growth logging deferrals
Premier David Eby says the latest deferral shows logging of the ancient trees is now at the lowest level on record. He says the government is introducing a $25 million, eight-point forest planning table that aims to improve old-growth management by incorporating local knowledge and community priorities.

B.C. expands old-growth logging deferrals

Man convicted in brutal murder gets day parole

Man convicted in brutal murder gets day parole
Kenneth David MacKay was found guilty of first-degree murder for the killing of 21-year-old Crystal Paskemin in 2000. He received a life sentence with no chance of parole for 25 years.

Man convicted in brutal murder gets day parole