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Arguments Over Evidence Puts Duffy Trial On Pause Until Next Week

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2015 11:23 AM
    OTTAWA — Mike Duffy's trial has been put on pause while lawyers argue over the admissibility of a Senate report.
     
    Justice Charles Vaillancourt will hear arguments Monday in what is called a voir dire, basically a mini-trial within the main trial.
     
    Donald Bayne, the suspended senator's lawyer, wants to treat a 2010 Senate committee report as fact during the course of the trial.
     
    The report was based on an audit of senators' office expenditures and service contracts.
     
    The Crown does not want the  report treated as fact, but rather as opinion — an important distinction when the judge later reviews all the evidence laid out in the trial.
     
    The unplanned break further delays the fraud, breach of trust and bribery trial, which is already expected to exceed its 41-day schedule by weeks.

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    Family MDs group pushes Ottawa for home-care strategy, plan to end child poverty

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    Two young men dead in crash of small plane in central Ontario

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    Mobile devices, video streaming doubling Canadians' time spent online: comScore

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    Ottawa projects $1.9B surplus for 2015

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    Canada's spy agency needs 'certainty' on overseas terror tracking, feds argue

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    OTTAWA — The Canadian Security Intelligence Service has been left in the dark about the legality of tracking Canadian terror suspects overseas, the federal government is telling the Supreme Court.

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