Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Media Members Outnumber Public As Long-awaited Duffy Trial Kicks Off In Ottawa

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2015 11:17 AM
    OTTAWA — The preamble for the political trial of the 2015 federal election year began in the wee, cold hours before dawn this morning outside an Ottawa courthouse.
     
    Dozens of reporters, producers, camera crews, sound engineers and photographers gathered on a busy downtown street awaiting the arrival of the star of the show: former TV host and now accused fraudster Mike Duffy.
     
    Duffy arrived shortly before 10 a.m., surrounded by a moving throng of reporters and television cameras and saying nothing. His lawyer Donald Bayne would only say they would deliver their message in court.
     
    The senator's trial on 31 charges related to his Senate expense accounts gets underway later this morning under an intense media spotlight.
     
    Startled citizens arriving for their own court dates had to run a gauntlet of cameras and pass a raised platform in front of the courthouse doors where TV reporters were doing live stand ups for a trial that had yet to begin.
     
    Two courtrooms have been set aside for the scheduled six-week trial, including an overflow room where the proceedings will be shown on a video monitor.
     
    However, the immediate public appetite for the show was not in evidence from the lineup outside the courthouse before the doors opened at 8 a.m.
     
    David Cook of Ottawa was one of a handful of civilians mixed among the lineup of reporters, and he likened the trial's opening day to the Grey Cup or the Stanley Cup for politics watchers.
     
    Robert Gaal said he got the court bug during a jury stint last year and said he hopes the Duffy trial leads to a general clean-up of federal politics.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Tables Balanced Budget As It Aims To Slice Its Massive Debt

    Quebec will post a balanced budget this year and tightly control government spending as the province aims to slice its massive debt over the next decade, says Finance Minister Carlos Leitao.

    Quebec Tables Balanced Budget As It Aims To Slice Its Massive Debt

    'Absolutely' Confident: TSB Investigator Says Canadian Flights Are Safe

    'Absolutely' Confident: TSB Investigator Says Canadian Flights Are Safe
    VANCOUVER — The chief aviation investigator for the federal transport watchdog says he's absolutely confident in the safety records of Canadian airlines and the psychological testing administered to their pilots.

    'Absolutely' Confident: TSB Investigator Says Canadian Flights Are Safe

    Ontario Woman's 'Kitty, Kitty' Video Of Encounter With Lynx Draws Awe, Ridicule

    Ontario Woman's 'Kitty, Kitty' Video Of Encounter With Lynx Draws Awe, Ridicule
    This could be the ultimate cat video. A northern Ontario woman who came upon a wild lynx outside her shop captured the encounter on video and posted it to YouTube, drawing both awe and ridicule from online commentators.

    Ontario Woman's 'Kitty, Kitty' Video Of Encounter With Lynx Draws Awe, Ridicule

    Toronto-Area Woman Who Injected Silicone Into Customer's Butts Sentenced To 8 Years In Prison

    Toronto-Area Woman Who Injected Silicone Into Customer's Butts Sentenced To 8 Years In Prison
    TORONTO — A woman who injected industrial silicone into the buttocks of customers as an illegal cosmetic procedure has been sentenced to eight years in prison.

    Toronto-Area Woman Who Injected Silicone Into Customer's Butts Sentenced To 8 Years In Prison

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Feared He Would Be 'Taken Out' By Undercover Officer: Trial

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Feared He Would Be 'Taken Out' By Undercover Officer: Trial
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court jury has heard that an accused terrorist worried for his life and brought along a hidden weapon to meet with a man he thought was helping him in his terror plot.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Feared He Would Be 'Taken Out' By Undercover Officer: Trial

    No Charges For Vancouver Police Officer Involved In Crash With Motorcyclist

    VICTORIA — No charges will be laid against a Vancouver police officer involved in a crash with a motorcyclist last August. The man on the motorcycle broke his arm when his bike ran into the side of the police car.

    No Charges For Vancouver Police Officer Involved In Crash With Motorcyclist