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Toronto Man Appealing Sex Assault Conviction Says Judge Was Biased

The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2017 12:28 PM
    TORONTO — Lawyers for a Toronto man found guilty of sexual assault are arguing he deserves a new trial because the judge who oversaw his case was allegedly biased against him.
     
    Mustafa Ururyar is appealing his July 2016 conviction in the sexual assault of Mandi Gray, a fellow PhD student at York University with whom he had a casual relationship.
     
    His appeal, which was being heard in a Toronto court Tuesday, also challenges an order that he give Gray — who has waived the standard publication ban on the identity of complainants in sexual assault cases — $8,000 to help cover her legal fees. 
     
    In court documents filed ahead of the hearing, Ururyar's lawyers allege the trial judge "displayed a reasonable apprehension of bias in favour of the complainant," saying Justice Marvin Zuker had decided on a sentence before hearing submissions on the matter.
     
    The Crown, meanwhile, says the defence had no complaints about the judge's behaviour during the trial and only raised concerns about a possible bias once their client was found guilty.
     
    Before the hearing began, Gray said she wouldn't participate in a new trial if one was ordered for Ururyar.
     
    "It's not worth it. I don't have another two years to take off of my life to be doing this," she said outside court. "I just don't have the capacity to continue."
     
    In his ruling, Zuker spoke out against what he called "the myths of rape," specifically stereotypes that affect how those who experience sexual assault are perceived.
     
    Ururyar's lawyers say those comments indicate a lack of objectivity from the judge.
     
    "He assumed the role of advocate, witness and judge and turned the appellant's sexual assault trial into a scathing rebuke of how the trial courts treat complainants in sexual assault prosecutions and so called 'rape myths,'" they argue in the documents.
     
    Zuker's comments were largely based on academic texts that were not opened to submissions and that served to "explain away some of the arguments made that the complainant’s evidence was not credible," Ururyar's lawyers argue.
     
    They also point to the judge's decision to revoke Ururyar's bail pending sentencing and to hand down the strictest possible sentence — 18 months behind bars with three years probation — as signs of bias, noting Zuker made the ruling immediately after hearing sentencing submissions.
     
    Ururyar's lawyers also allege the judge mistakenly framed the issue for the court to decide as whether sexual contact had occurred, rather than whether there was proof beyond a reasonable doubt that it was non-consensual or whether their client mistakenly believed it was consensual.
     
    The Crown contests the allegations, arguing the judge was entitled to comment on the social context surrounding the case and showed no preference for either party.
     
    "None of these alleged errors relate to the trial judge's conduct during the actual trial. They all relate to his comments or conduct related to his finding of guilt and what followed it," prosecutors write.
     
    "The trial judge did not make any comments during the trial which would suggest that he was biased or that he had pre-judged the matter."
     
    The materials Zuker referred to served to highlight some stereotypes already condemned in the case law cited in his ruling, prosecutors say, and did not act as the basis for his findings.
     
    "Is the trial judge entitled to highlight social context like this? Yes. Is he biased for doing so? No," they say.
     
    Also at issue in the appeal is Zuker's decision to award Gray restitution for her legal fees, a precedent-setting move under the recently passed Canadian Victims Bill of Rights. Ururyar's lawyers argued it was an inappropriate interpretation of the law.
     
    But the Crown says Gray had the right to get her own counsel, particularly since the courts have recognized "that victims' privacy and equality rights are often engaged in sexual assault cases," and note that the legislation does not restrict the type of restitution victims of crime can request. 
     
    Gray says she wants to highlight the "social and economic costs" incurred by those who are sexually assaulted.
     
    "I think all of us who have been sexually assaulted can relate to how we bear almost all of the costs of these people's decision to sexually assault us," she says. "If every victim witness was entitled to have a lawyer in the courtroom, things would be very different."
     
    In his ruling, Zuker found Ururyar forced Gray to perform oral sex and engage in sexual intercourse in the early hours of Jan. 31, 2015.

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