Defence eyes stay of proceedings in Manitoba doctor's sex assault trial, claiming abuse of process - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 03:44 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Defence eyes stay of proceedings in Manitoba doctor's sex assault trial, claiming abuse of process

The sexual assault trial ofa Manitoba doctor, which has stumbled through delays in its first week, had another on Friday after new evidence was obtained by both the Crown and defence.

Arcel Bissonnette is on trial for 6 charges of assault against female patients

A person in a black winter coat and another in a brown coat enter a building with the words Law Courts inscribed above a set of doors.
The trial for Arcel Bissonnette has been cut short on each day of proceedings this week at Winnipeg's Court of King's Bench. (Darren Bernhardt/CBC)

The sexual assault trial of a Manitoba doctor, which has stumbled through delays in its first week, had another on Friday after new evidence was obtained by both the Crown and defence.

"We're not entirely where we expected to be,"Crown prosecutor Paul Girdlestonetold Court of King's Bench Justice Anne Turneron Friday afternoon in Winnipeg.

Both the Crown andthe defencefor Arcel Bissonnette said they needed additional time to review the new disclosure, which came from police investigators over the past three days. The lawyers requested an adjournment until Monday morning.

Bissonnette has been charged with a total of 22 counts of sexual assault against female patients over the course of 13 years, from 2004 to 2017, when he worked at the hospital and medical centre in the town of Ste. Anne,about 40 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg.

He was initially charged in 2020 with six counts. After those were announcedmore complainants came forward, and 16 more counts were added in October 2021.

The current trial is only dealing with the original six counts.

Hehas pleaded not guilty to all of them.

A man in a parka with grey hair is shown above the waste, standing outside on a snowy day.
Arcel Bissonnette heads into the courthouse earlier this week. He has been charged with a total of 22 counts of sexual assault against female patients over the course of 13 years, from 2004 to 2017. His current trial is dealing with six of those charges. (Trevor Brine/CBC)

Marty Minuk, one ofBissonnette'slawyers, said the most significant piece of the latest disclosure came to the attention of the three-person defence team on Friday morning.

While it needs to be assessed,Minuk advised Turner that unless the new evidence somehow changes the defence team's position, they intendtoseeka judicial stay of the proceedings, which would puta halt to the trial altogether.

"We're reviewing matters for the purpose of our application for a stay of proceedings," Minuk told reporters outsidecourt.

In court, he cited abuse of process, late and missing disclosure, and issues around the Charter of Rights and Freedoms as thegrounds for a stay.

Bissonnette's judge-only trial began Monday, but the proceedings were cut short that day, and againTuesday and Wednesday. It reconvened on Friday afternoon for less than three minutes.

At issue have beenmissing correspondence, reports and notebooks from theSainte-Anne Police Service, and specifically from former officerJacqueline Lawford, the lead investigator on the case betweenAugust 2017 andApril 2019.

Only fragments of disclosure from October 2018 until April 2019 exist, defence lawyer Lisa LaBossiere said on Monday.

The Crown has since provided the defence with a list of items the defence said it needed, except for Lawford's notebooks.

Lawford, who testified brieflyMonday but was not cross-examined,claimed she put those notebooks ina filing cabinet after she leftSte. Anneto take on a job at a different police service.

The notebooks, however,havenot been located and Lawfordsaid she has no idea what happened to them.

LaBossieretold court on Monday shehadsignificant concerns over the integrity of the investigation and, without key evidence like the notebooks, Bissonnette's ability to mount a proper defence.