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Jian Ghomeshi Acquitted On All Charges Of Sexual Assault And Choking

The Canadian Press, 24 Mar, 2016 10:02 AM
    TORONTO — Former broadcaster Jian Ghomeshi was acquitted Thursday on all charges of sexual assault and choking following a trial that sparked a nationwide debate on how the justice system treats victims.
     
    Ontario court Judge William Horkins said he simply could not rely on the three complainants given their changing and shifting memories and evidence that at times strayed into outright lies.
     
    All he had to go on — as is usual in sexual-assault cases — was the complainants' credibility, which he said cross-examination showed to be sorely lacking.
     
    "What is troubling is not the lack of clarity, but the shifting facts from one telling to the next," Horkins said of one of the three complainants.
     
    "In cross-examination, the value of her evidence suffered irreparable damage," he said of another of the witnesses.
     
     
    Prosecutor Michael Callaghan said the Crown will take a look at the judgment and consider their position.
     
    "As you can imagine, we're still within the 30-day appeal period," he said before a topless female protester jumped in front him yelling "Ghomeshi guilty!" Police tackled her to the ground and took her back inside the courthouse as she struggled and kicked the door.
     
    Dozens of women gathered nearby to denounce the verdict and what they called the unfair treatment of victims of sexual assault by the justice system.
     
     
    Ghomeshi left the courthouse without speaking to reporters.
     
    The former CBC radio host had pleaded not guilty to four counts of sexual assault and one count of overcoming resistance by choking involving three women. All three women testified they were being romantic with Ghomeshi when he briefly turned violent in incidents dating to 2002 and 2003.
     
    Ghomeshi's defence argued the witnesses lied during testimony about their interactions with him and so were not credible.
     
    Horkins agreed, at various times describing the women as having lied, been manipulative, and hiding pertinent information about their flirtatious and at times intimate contact with him after the alleged assaults.
     
    "There is no smoking gun," the judge said. "There is only the sworn evidence of each complainant."
     
    He said he couldn't fault their imperfect memories, but stressed their "suppression" of evidence and "deceptions" under oath made it difficult to trust them.
     
    "The act of suppression of the truth will be as damaging to their credibility as a direct lie under oath," Horkins said.
     
    The case showed the need for vigilance about the false assumption that sex-assault complainants are "always truthful," Horkins said.
     
    However, he also stressed the acquittal was not the same as asserting the events in question never happened.
     
    Ghomeshi's sister said the ordeal has been extremely painful for the family.
     
    "Jian is not a symbol to us, but a beloved brother and son," Jila Ghomeshi said. "Our hardest burden has been our feeling of helplessness as we have watched him endure a punishment that was not only prior to a verdict but prior to any semblance of due process for well over a year."
     
    Ghomeshi, 48, who didn't testify, showed little emotion at his two-week trial last month.
     
     
    Horkins stressed the presumption of innocence in a criminal case is "not a favour or charity" and conviction requires "proof beyond reasonable doubt."
     
    At trial, the testimony of his three accusers and their cross-examination by Ghomeshi's high-profile defence lawyer Marie Henein led to moments of drama.
     
    The first complainant testified that Ghomeshi suddenly yanked on her hair when they were kissing in his car in late 2002. A few days later, she said he abruptly pulled her hair while they were kissing in his home and started punching her in the head.
     
    The second complainant, actress Lucy DeCoutere, the only woman who can be identified in the case, testified Ghomeshi suddenly pushed her against a wall, started choking her and slapping her face when they had been kissing in his bedroom in the summer of 2003.
     
    The third woman testified that she was kissing Ghomeshi on a park bench in 2003 when he suddenly bit her shoulder and started squeezing her neck.
     
    Under cross-examination, however, the trial learned that the first women sent friendly emails and a bikini photo to Ghomeshi after the alleged assaults, asking him to contact her. She said she sent the emails as "bait,'' so she could demand an explanation for the alleged assaults but also testified that she didn't remember the emails when she spoke with police.
     
    During DeCoutere's cross-examination, Henein produced an email the actress sent Ghomeshi hours after the alleged assault in which she expressed a desire to have sex with him. She also produced a hand-written letter the actress sent him days later that ended with the words: "I love your hands.''
     
     
    The third complainant acknowledged only under questioning from Henein that she had deliberately misled investigators by not initially telling them she had a sexual encounter with Ghomeshi days after the alleged assault.
     
    "(She) was clearly playing chicken with the justice system," Horkins said. "She was prepared to tell half the truth for as long as she thought she could get away with it."
     
    Ghomeshi still faces a separate trial in June on one count of sexual assault.
     
    The CBC said shortly after the verdict that their decision to end Ghomeshi's employment in the fall of 2014 had nothing to do with the criminal charges against him.
     
    "Based on the evidence that came to our attention, Mr. Ghomeshi's actions were not in line with the values of the public broadcaster nor with our employee code of conduct," CBC spokesman Chuck Thompson said in a statement. 
     
    "And we stand by our decision."
     
     
    QUOTES ABOUT JIAN GHOMESHI'S ACQUITTAL
     
    Here's a selection of quotes about Thursday's acquittal of broadcaster Jian Ghomeshi:
    ———
     
    "The bedrock foundation of the Crown's case is tainted. The evidence fails to prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt." Justice William Horkins. 
     
     
    "The charges that were before the court in this trial and the judge's ruling are unrelated to our decision to end Jian Ghomeshi's employment with CBC. Based on the evidence that came to our attention, Mr. Ghomeshi's actions were not in line with the values of the public broadcaster nor with our employee code of conduct." Chuck Thompson, head of public affairs at CBC.
     
    ——— 
     
    "Ghomeshi never denied choking + punching the survivors. Yet the women were put on trial." Toronto city Coun. Kristyn Wong-Tam on Twitter. 
     
    ———
     
    "So much gratitude to all the women who came forward to share their painful truths about #Ghomeshi. To the court, to the press, to each other." Activist and author Naomi Klein on Twitter.
     
    ——— 
     
    "While many people have analyzed this trial and the events leading up to it in symbolic terms, what we want to say today is deeply personal. We are not speaking as, for or against women, but as members of a close family. It has been extremely painful for those of us who love him. Jian has, however, remained the person we know and love. We hope that Jian and our family will be given the privacy and dignity to heal from a process that has been extremely difficult." Jila Ghomeshi, sister of Jian Ghomeshi, outside the courthouse.
     
     
    "Today, 1 in 4 women experience sexual assault or harassment and yet only 10 per cent report it. It's the fear of not being believed that stops women from coming forward. I believe survivors…" Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, in a statement issued moments before the verdict.
     
    ———
     
    "This is why we don't come forward." Sarah Dunsworth, actress on "Trailer Park Boys" and a friend of complainant, Lucy DeCoutere.
     
     
    "Today I mourn for every single person who has been a victim of sexual abuse and been too afraid to come forward." "Corner Gas" actress Tara Spencer-Nairn.
     
    ———
     
    "We know Justice Horkins, we have a great deal of respect for him, he's an experienced jurist, but we just received the judgment. We're going to have a chance over the long weekend to take a look at it, consider our position, but that's all we have to say today." Crown attorney Michael Callaghan.
     
    ———
     
    "Ghomeshi guilty!" Topless protester outside the courthouse amid the Crown's remarks before being tackled to the ground and handcuffed by police. 
     
     
    GHOMESHI'S VERDICT HIGHLIGHTS WHAT'S WRONG WITH JUSTICE SYSTEM:EXPERTS
     
    TORONTO — Legal experts and women's groups say the verdict in the Jian Ghomeshi sex assault trial shines a spotlight on everything that's wrong with the system designed to find justice in such cases.
     
     
    They say that Justice William Horkins had little choice but to acquit the former CBC star on all charges, since testimony from all three witnesses was effectively destroyed in court.
     
    University of Toronto law professor Brenda Cossman says witnesses are held to unrealistic standards to prove their cases in the current court system.
     
    Nicole Pietsch of the Ontario Coalition of Rape Crisis Centres agrees, saying society needs to keep re-evaluating its pre-conceived notions of what's acceptable in a sex assault case.
     
    Amanda Dale of the Barbara Schlifer Commemorative clinic say she's optimistic that advocates will see the verdict as further reason to fight for changes to the justice system.
     
     
    The former CBC radio host had pleaded not guilty to four counts of sexual assault and one count of overcoming resistance by choking involving three women.

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