Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Nude Judge' Misconduct Case To Start Anew With Sex Photos Off-limits For Now

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 Nov, 2014 01:24 PM
    TORONTO — A second hearing into whether a senior Manitoba judge should be kicked off the bench is finally set to start in Winnipeg on Monday but sex photos central to the allegations against her will be off-limits — at least for the time being.
     
    The three-person panel of the Canadian Judicial Council had wanted to view the images of Associate Chief Justice Lori Douglas but her lawyers won an 11th-hour stay of that decision on Friday.
     
    In ordering the stay, Federal Court Judge Richard Mosley stressed it would be up to another hearing to decide whether the images should be permanently sealed. That judicial review is slated to happen Dec. 9 in Ottawa.
     
    "(Douglas) points to the emerging social consensus in Canada that intimate images should not be disclosed or disseminated against the will of the persons they depict, unless it is absolutely necessary," Mosley said in written reasons.
     
    "If the stay is refused and (Douglas) subsequently succeeds on the merits of her application for judicial review, the court will have condoned unnecessary disclosure of such images."
     
    Douglas faces three allegations:
     
    — The photographs could be seen as "inherently contrary to the image and concept of integrity" of the judiciary and undermine public confidence in the justice system;
     
    — Douglas failed to disclose information about the pictures when she applied to become a judge in 2004;
     
    — She altered her personal diary after learning the council was probing her conduct.
     
    The committee has set aside 10 days for the Winnipeg hearing. It expects testimony from 23 witnesses. It's not clear how its inability to view the images might affect the proceedings.
     
    This is the second panel to hear the case.
     
    The first hearings collapsed after a few weeks in 2012 amid accusations levelled by Douglas that the five-judge committee was biased against her. The committee's independent counsel resigned, followed by the resignation of the panel itself a year ago.
     
    The issue of bias became part of a legal fight currently headed to appeal after Federal Court ruled there was none.
     
    The Canadian Judicial Council — essentially comprising the country's chief and associate chief Superior Court justices — has drawn scathing criticism for its handling of the case, especially its contention that it does not answer to the courts.
     
    That issue is also headed to appeal after Federal Court firmly rejected that notion.
     
    In March, the council appointed a new panel, comprising two male judges and a female lawyer. Also appointed was a female lawyer to act as independent counsel to the panel.
     
    The complaint against Douglas arose after her now-late husband, Jack King, took photos of her and posted them on the Internet without her knowledge or permission in 2003.
     
    King would later describe his behaviour as "bizarre, ridiculous, stupid, self-indulgent, grotesque."
     
    Years later, King's client Alexander Chapman again posted the images on the Internet in violation of an agreement to return or destroy them.
     
    The current committee dropped an allegation that Douglas had sexually harassed Chapman.
     
    Douglas's lawyers have argued passionately the proceedings have only served to revictimize a woman already victimized by the non-consensual distribution of the intimate photographs, an act the federal government is seeking to criminalize.
     
    "This was classic revenge porn," lawyer Sheila Block told Mosley in Toronto last week. "Suppose the judge was raped and somebody put it on YouTube?"
     
    The judicial council could recommend Douglas's removal from the bench but only Parliament can fire her.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Theft Prompts Vancouver Police Warning Over Drug That Caused Rash Of Overdoses

    Theft Prompts Vancouver Police Warning Over Drug That Caused Rash Of Overdoses
    Vancouver Police are warning drug users to be careful about their purchases after the recent theft of a powerful drug that resulted in 31 overdoses last month.

    Theft Prompts Vancouver Police Warning Over Drug That Caused Rash Of Overdoses

    Workers Relighting Gas After Evacuation Lifted In Lumby, B.C.

    Workers Relighting Gas After Evacuation Lifted In Lumby, B.C.
    LUMBY, B.C. — Residents of a small community west of Lumby, B.C., were allowed back into their homes last night after a major gas line rupture that also knocked out power and closed a highway.

    Workers Relighting Gas After Evacuation Lifted In Lumby, B.C.

    Mounties Arrest Pipeline Protesters In BC, Enforcing Court Injunction

    Mounties Arrest Pipeline Protesters In BC, Enforcing Court Injunction
    Anti-pipeline activists camped out on a mountain near Vancouver clashed with police Thursday, as the RCMP enforced a court injunction ordering protesters to clear an encampment and allow work related to a proposed expansion project by Kinder Morgan.

    Mounties Arrest Pipeline Protesters In BC, Enforcing Court Injunction

    Calgary Provides Braille Plaques To Help Residents With Vision Loss Sort Garbage

    Calgary Provides Braille Plaques To Help Residents With Vision Loss Sort Garbage
    The city is providing braille plaques so that people who read the raised dots can tell the difference between their garbage and recycling carts.

    Calgary Provides Braille Plaques To Help Residents With Vision Loss Sort Garbage

    Mounties arrest pipeline protesters in B.C., enforcing court injunction

    Mounties arrest pipeline protesters in B.C., enforcing court injunction
    BURNABY, B.C. — Anti-pipeline activists camped out on a mountain near Vancouver clashed with police Thursday, as the RCMP enforced a court injunction ordering protesters to clear an encampment and allow work related to a proposed expansion project by Kinder Morgan.

    Mounties arrest pipeline protesters in B.C., enforcing court injunction

    Canadian Mining Company Nevsun Says Allegations Of Human Rights Abuses Unfounded

    Canadian Mining Company Nevsun Says Allegations Of Human Rights Abuses Unfounded
     A Vancouver-based mining company says allegations of human rights violations at the Bisha open pit mine in northeastern Africa are unfounded and it will defend itself from a civil suit filed this week in B.C. Supreme Court.

    Canadian Mining Company Nevsun Says Allegations Of Human Rights Abuses Unfounded