Monday, February 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Defence Minister Can Appeal Canadian Soldier's Sex-Assault Acquittal

IANS, 23 Jul, 2016 12:54 PM
    MONTREAL — A Supreme Court of Canada ruling Friday means the defence minister can appeal in the case of a Canadian soldier acquitted of sexually assaulting a female subordinate.
     
    The court ruled unanimously that the country's National Defence Act, which governs the military justice system, is constitutional.
     
    The decision stems from two sexual assault cases involving soldiers.
     
    In one, warrant officer Andre Gagnon was found not guilty in 2014 of sexually assaulting then-corporal Stephanie Raymond in December 2011 at an armoury near Quebec City.
     
    The Crown argued at Gagnon's court martial that Raymond was in a position of vulnerability and had been forced to submit to his sexual advances after a party.
     
    Gagnon's lawyers said the sex was consensual and that she had followed him to the armoury.
     
    Gagnon did acknowledge that Raymond never responded sexually as he touched her, kissed her and undressed her.
     
    Raymond insisted at the proceedings her name not be protected under a publication ban.
     
    The Defence Department appealed the not-guilty verdict and requested a new trial. It stated the military judge committed an error by submitting to the five-men jury the defence that Gagnon had a "sincere but erroneous" belief Raymond had agreed to the sex.
     
    Gagnon then submitted a motion to have the appeal quashed, arguing the National Defence Act is partly unconstitutional.
     
     
    The motion argued that the defence minister's involvement in court-martial cases violates the section of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that guarantees prosecutorial independance and the right to a hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal.
     
    The court martial's appeals court ruled in Gagnon's favour, a decision that prompted the defence minister to ask the country's highest court to rule on the constitutionality of the National Defence Act.
     
    In Friday's decision, the Supreme Court wrote that the defence minister should be considered an independent party.
     
    "The minister, like the attorney general or other public officials with a prosecutorial function, is entitled to a strong presumption that he exercises prosecutorial discretion independently of partisan concerns," the judgment read. 
     
    "The mere fact of the minister’s membership in cabinet does not displace that presumption."
     
    The decision sends the case to the court martial's appeals court, which will hear the appeal.
     
    The 2014 proceedings were handled by a court martial because both Gagnon and Raymond were in the Canadian Forces at the time of the incident.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Electronic Spy Agency Mum On Foreign Info-sharing That Could Lead To Torture

    Electronic Spy Agency Mum On Foreign Info-sharing That Could Lead To Torture
    OTTAWA — Canada's electronic spy agency won't say how often it shares information that could lead to someone being tortured in an overseas prison.

    Electronic Spy Agency Mum On Foreign Info-sharing That Could Lead To Torture

    Government Supports Indigenous Declaration Without Reservation: Wilson-raybould

    OTTAWA — Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould has a message for critics who suggest she is backtracking on the government's pledge to bolster indigenous rights in Canada: she isn't.

    Government Supports Indigenous Declaration Without Reservation: Wilson-raybould

    Demoviction Protesters Removed, Arrested From Burnaby, B.C., Apartment

    Demoviction Protesters Removed, Arrested From Burnaby, B.C., Apartment
    A group protesting so-called demovictions in Burnaby, B.C., has been evicted from an empty apartment building it has been occupying for 12 days.

    Demoviction Protesters Removed, Arrested From Burnaby, B.C., Apartment

    Vancouver-Area Train Derails, Believed To Be On Tracks Servicing Grain Terminal

    Vancouver-Area Train Derails, Believed To Be On Tracks Servicing Grain Terminal
    Burnaby Fire Chief Joe Robertson says a train was running on a private spur line that services a grain terminal on the south shore of the Burrard Inlet when it jumped the tracks.

    Vancouver-Area Train Derails, Believed To Be On Tracks Servicing Grain Terminal

    Fires Set, Windows Smashed In Riot At Youth Jail In Burnaby, B.C.: Guards' Union

    Fires Set, Windows Smashed In Riot At Youth Jail In Burnaby, B.C.: Guards' Union
    BURNABY, B.C. — Officials say a riot at a young offenders jail in Burnaby, B.C., has caused extensive damage.

    Fires Set, Windows Smashed In Riot At Youth Jail In Burnaby, B.C.: Guards' Union

    Feeling Let Down By Universities, Survivors Meet To Fight Campus Sex Assaults

    Feeling Let Down By Universities, Survivors Meet To Fight Campus Sex Assaults
    VANCOUVER — Mandi Gray has lost count of the messages she's received from women who say their universities failed them after they were sexually assaulted.

    Feeling Let Down By Universities, Survivors Meet To Fight Campus Sex Assaults