Monday, June 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Spotlight Set To Fall On Jian Ghomeshi Case As Judgment Looms

IANS, 22 Mar, 2016 12:13 PM
    TORONTO — More than a month after the sexual assault trial of Jian Ghomeshi captured the country's attention, the spotlight is set to fall once again on the disgraced broadcaster and his accusers as an Ontario judge delivers his decision this week.
     
    Regardless of the outcome, a number of observers believe Ghomeshi's case has already had an impact on the reporting of sexual assaults and the public's understanding of how they are prosecuted.
     
    "People were talking about something quite serious that our society needs to learn more about," said Constance Backhouse, a University of Ottawa law professor who researches sexual assault legislation. "It's really important to have conversations to discuss issues of sexual assault, consent, the role of the criminal law in assessing this ... Here we brought all of these things to the fore."
     
    Ghomeshi — the once popular host of CBC Radio's "Q'' — pleaded not guilty to four counts of sexual assault and one count of overcoming resistance by choking.
     
    He didn't testify in his own defence, leaving the bulk of evidence at the trial to come from the three women whose allegations formed the bedrock of the case.
     
    The first complainant testified that Ghomeshi suddenly yanked on her hair when they were kissing in his car in late 2002. A few days later, she said he abruptly pulled her hair while they were kissing in his home and started punching her in the head.
     
    The second complainant, actress Lucy DeCoutere — the only woman who can be identified in the case — testified Ghomeshi suddenly pushed her against a wall, started choking her and slapped her face when they were kissing in his bedroom in the summer of 2003.
     
     
    The third woman testified that while kissing Ghomeshi on a park bench in 2003, he suddenly bit her shoulder and started squeezing her neck.
     
    Each woman had her testimony methodically dissected by Ghomeshi's high-profile defence lawyer, Marie Henein, who ultimately accused all three of lying under oath.
     
    While Henein's cross-examination led to some dramatic moments, most observers agreed she was going about her job without fault.
     
    "Within the parameters of our existing law, her cross-examination was an excellent one," said Backhouse. "The parameters of our existing law, our presumptions and our focus on women as false testifiers, do I think that's fair? No, I don't. But within the parameters of the law I'm not going to fault Henein."
     
    With the first complainant, Henein produced friendly emails, including one with a bikini photo that the woman sent to Ghomeshi after the alleged assaults, asking the broadcaster to contact her. The woman said she didn't remember the emails when she spoke to police, but said she sent them as "bait" so she could confront Ghomeshi about the alleged assaults.
     
     
    In DeCoutere's case, Henein showed the court an email DeCoutere sent Ghomeshi hours after the alleged incident in which she expressed a desire to have sex with him. Henein also produced a hand-written letter the actress sent him days later that ended with the words: "I love your hands." DeCoutere emphasized the correspondence didn't mean the alleged assaults didn't happen.
     
    The third complainant acknowledged she deliberately misled investigators by not initially telling them she had a sexual encounter with Ghomeshi a few days after the alleged assault. She said she was embarrassed and didn't think it was relevant, but told police about it days before she testified.
     
    Henein also revealed that the third woman and DeCoutere exchanged thousands of messages in which they discussed their allegations and their shared contempt for Ghomeshi.
     
    The reams of correspondence between the third complainant and DeCoutere in particular appeared to undermine the prosecution's case, one legal observer said.
     
    "The independence of witnesses is paramount in any trial, and Lucy and the other complainant, by them speaking so much and the sort of gratuitous comments like 'we got him,' takes away the legitimacy of the allegations," said lawyer Marcy Segal. "There should never be collusion. There did not need to be that type of in-depth communication between them."
     
    Segal also warned against concluding that Crown prosecutors failed to adequately prepare for the case as much of the complainant's post-alleged-assault contact with Ghomeshi was only revealed once the trial had begun.
     
     
    "The expectations of the public towards the Crown, in my view, were unfair," she said, noting that the legal system in general could improve to better prepare complainants for what's expected of them and could move to require police to check in with complainants about a month before trials.
     
    For those who routinely deal with victims of sexual assault, however, the trial — with its intense scrutiny on the women —was seen as one which will deter future complainants from coming forward.
     
    "It's going to make women feel even more reluctant than they already feel about reporting to police or proceeding to a criminal trial and that's unfortunate because in our society, the ultimate accountability for this kind of behaviour is to be found through the criminal law," said Pamela Cross, legal director at Luke's Place Support and Resource Centre for Women.
     
    "The present criminal process is not appropriate for cases of sexual assault."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Assisted Suicide Debate Should Fuel Changes To End-of-life Care, Say Advocates

    Assisted Suicide Debate Should Fuel Changes To End-of-life Care, Say Advocates
    OTTAWA — The escalating debate over doctor-assisted death could be the perfect chance for Canada to fix its broken system of palliative care — a "dark secret" that health advocates say has been quietly deteriorating in the shadows for decades.

    Assisted Suicide Debate Should Fuel Changes To End-of-life Care, Say Advocates

    Cow Dung Patties Selling Like Hot Cakes Online in India

    Cow Dung Patties Selling Like Hot Cakes Online in India
    With the holiday season in full swing, Indians are flocking to the online marketplace in droves. But there’s one unusual item flying off the virtual shelves: Online retailers say cow dung patties are selling like hot cakes.

    Cow Dung Patties Selling Like Hot Cakes Online in India

    Family Of Drowned Syrian Boy To Arrive In Canada As Refugees

    Relatives of a Syrian boy whose lifeless body was photographed on a Turkish beach are expected to land in Vancouver this morning to begin a new life. 

    Family Of Drowned Syrian Boy To Arrive In Canada As Refugees

    'Problematic' Group Doesn't Reflect B.C.'s Korean-Canadian Community: Ambassador

    'Problematic' Group Doesn't Reflect B.C.'s Korean-Canadian Community: Ambassador
    Consul General Kie Cheon Lee is speaking out about a long-standing power struggle over who leads the Korean Society of B.C. for Fraternity and Culture,  and said the dispute reflects poorly — and unfairly — on the community as a whole.

    'Problematic' Group Doesn't Reflect B.C.'s Korean-Canadian Community: Ambassador

    'Dementors' Stalk Addicts On Alberta Reserve At Front Lines Of Fentanyl Crisis

    'Dementors' Stalk Addicts On Alberta Reserve At Front Lines Of Fentanyl Crisis
    LEVERN, Alta. — "Dementors" are leaving a trail of death and destruction on the sprawling Blood reserve in southwestern Alberta.

    'Dementors' Stalk Addicts On Alberta Reserve At Front Lines Of Fentanyl Crisis

    Manitoba Woman Who Wanted Inquiry Into Asbestos-tainted Insulation Dies

    Manitoba Woman Who Wanted Inquiry Into Asbestos-tainted Insulation Dies
    Raven ThunderSky grew up in a home on Poplar River First Nation with asbestos-laced insulation and lost several family members to related illnesses.

    Manitoba Woman Who Wanted Inquiry Into Asbestos-tainted Insulation Dies