Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ontario Man's Sexual Assault Convictions Quashed Over Misremembered Evidence About Couch Cushion

The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2016 12:01 PM
    TORONTO — An Ontario man's convictions in a sexual assault case involving two young boys have been overturned over misremembered evidence about the placement of a couch cushion.
     
    The Ontario Court of Appeal said in a ruling released this week that the trial judge's "main articulated reason" for rejecting the accused's account was the belief that he had changed his evidence during cross-examination.
     
    At issue was the man's recollection of watching movies on the couch with the boys, then seven and nine, and their grandmother.
     
    Under cross-examination, the accused said one of the boys would lie down and put his head on a cushion in the man's lap.
     
    The Crown suggested he had not mentioned the cushion in his examination in chief — a "mischaracterization" the appeal court said heavily informed the trial judge's decision.
     
    In fact, the three-member panel said, the man had referenced the cushion in his earlier testimony.
     
     
    "The trial judge concluded, based primarily on the misapprehension of the evidence about the cushion, that the credibility and reliability of the appellant's testimony was undermined," the panel wrote.
     
    "The main issue for the trial judge was credibility. His conclusion as to the credibility of the appellant was tainted by an error of fact. The error infected the core of his reasoning on the credibility of the appellant," it wrote.
     
    "Consequently, the convictions cannot stand."
     
    A new trial may be ordered at the discretion of the Crown. 
     
    The man, who was renting a room in the home belonging to the boys' grandmother, was convicted in 2014 of two counts of sexual assault, two of sexual interference, and one of invitation to sexual touching.
     
    The brothers alleged he had touched their genitals and buttocks and, on one occasion, showed them pornography. They cannot be identified due to a publication ban.
     
    Court documents say that though there had been a confrontation about the allegations at the house in 2011, nothing was reported to authorities until two years later.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Investigate Spray Painting Of Racial Slurs On Nova Scotia Home

    Police in Antigonish say the graffiti appeared on a house and shed in Monastery on Tuesday night.

    Police Investigate Spray Painting Of Racial Slurs On Nova Scotia Home

    B.C. Drivers, Your ICBC Driving Records Are Just A Mouse Click Away

    B.C. Drivers, Your ICBC Driving Records Are Just A Mouse Click Away
    British Columbia drivers can now find their driving history and insurance records online.

    B.C. Drivers, Your ICBC Driving Records Are Just A Mouse Click Away

    WorkSafeBC To Appeal Decision Favouring Mike Singh's Asbestos-Removal Company

    WorkSafeBC To Appeal Decision Favouring Mike Singh's Asbestos-Removal Company
    Seattle Environmental Consulting Ltd., owner Mike Singh and his son Shawn Singh face hundreds of workplace violations dating back to 2007, with fines exceeding $200,000.

    WorkSafeBC To Appeal Decision Favouring Mike Singh's Asbestos-Removal Company

    UBC Announces Members Of Panel To Develop Sexual Assault Policy After Complaints

    UBC Announces Members Of Panel To Develop Sexual Assault Policy After Complaints
    The University of British Columbia has announced the members of a committee that will develop a sexual assault policy, after students complained the process for reporting attacks was broken.

    UBC Announces Members Of Panel To Develop Sexual Assault Policy After Complaints

    Indo-Canadian Students From UBC To Protest In Support Of JNU Students

    Indo-Canadian Students From UBC To Protest In Support Of JNU Students
    Indo-Canadian students, the faculty and staff from Univeristy of British Columbia, Canada, would hold a rally in solidarity with Jawaharlal Nehru Univeristy (JNU) on March 3

    Indo-Canadian Students From UBC To Protest In Support Of JNU Students

    Judge Finds ICBC Liable For Malicious Prosecution, Awards Refugee Woman Nearly $400,000

    Judge Finds ICBC Liable For Malicious Prosecution, Awards Refugee Woman Nearly $400,000
    A British Columbia judge has awarded a woman who "experienced the wrath" of the province's insurance corporation nearly $400,000.

    Judge Finds ICBC Liable For Malicious Prosecution, Awards Refugee Woman Nearly $400,000

    PrevNext