Categories
Law

Reasonable Doubt

There is a golden thread that underlies our criminal justice system. Articulated in the famous English case of Woolmington v. DPP by Lord Sankey, speaking for the House of Lords on an appeal from a conviction for murder, uttered the now famous words; “Throughout the web of the English criminal law one golden thread is always to be seen that it is the duty of the prosecution to prove the prisoners guilt…if at the end and on the whole of the case, there is a reasonable doubt, …the prisoner is entitled to an acquittal. No matter what the charge or where the trial….”

Recent news associated with the Gomeshi sexual assault trial raises questions whether the general public really understand our criminal justice system. The old and well known adage: “Better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer” finds its ancient origins in Genesis. The golden thread of the presumption of innocence is the unwavering principle that guides every criminal prosecution. The accused is presumed innocent unless his guilt is proved beyond a reasonable doubt. in all cases, the accused is entitled to the presumption of innocence. This presumption he carries into and throughout the trial until the verdict is rendered and he is found to be guilty or not guilty.

Some news articles, public reactions and editorial cartoons seems to suggest an antediluvian justice system at work that puts ‘victims’ on trial. How unfair that they are subject to rigorous, intrusive and embarrassing cross examination – so goes the narrative. Such a point of view implicitly presumes the guilt of the accused and portrays the witness as being twice victimized. Such views seem to be peculiar to cases of sexual assault. Yet there are many victims of crime and the criminal justice system operates in the same fashion in all cases. To be clear, if someone is to accuse YOU of a crime, then you will expect that person must take the witness stand and face you and provide the evidence to the court. What would you think, how would your feel, accused of a crime you did not commit and the accusation never tested, the accuser never questioned? It would be a Kafkaesque world. The days are long since gone, in our democracies governed by the rule of law, when the mere allegation of a crime is deemed sufficient to exact punishment. We no longer suffer the perfidy of the Star Chamber when you could be convicted in abstentia, without the right to face your accuser or the court.

Unfortunately, our efforts to be fair to an accused within the system do nothing to protect the person before trial, while still presumed innocent. Today, social media and mainstream media can irrevocably eviscerate a  life in a matter of hours.

Whatever may be thought of Mr. Gomeshi as a human being, he is entitled to the presumption of innocence for the crimes he is accused of. He was not on trial for misbehaviour or even leading a secret life of sorts. He was on trial for very specific matters alleged by very specific individuals.

There is another point worth noting. Two of the three complainants who gave evidence at the trial were afforded anonymity. There was a court ordered publication ban on their identities. Mr. Gomeshi was publicly accused of these unproven crimes many months in advance of trial. He is publicly humiliated and his reputation is trashed. It matters not what the outcome of the trial will be – even if found not guilty, his reputation is irreparably damaged. But what of the complainants – not just in this case but in any case. They may not enjoy their courtroom experience, but in effect they can come forward and make false accusations of sexual assault. The accused faces the loss of reputation, employment, social stigmatization and risks the loss of his freedom – the complainant faces no risk whatsoever. Shouldn’t the public be entitled to know the identity of the complainant as well as the identity of an accused? Such a double standard does not enhance the notion of presumption of innocence.

Categories
Politics

The Holiday

The MacNeil government has gifted a new holiday to all Nova Scotians. The third Monday of February will henceforth and forever be a provincial holiday for Bluenosers. Although originally thought of as a ‘family’day, it is officially designated as Heritage Day with each year a different Nova Scotian of note being the honouree of the day.

There will of course be some kind of competition for the honour of the day name but ultimately the name of the day will be of import to those involved in that process and not to most others. But we didn’t need a holiday to honour the hundreds of former citizens who will be in competition for the position. We could have simply named the day and not make it a holiday.

Our government deserves a big thank you from a grateful citizenry.  Holidays are wonderful – you don’t have to work or if you do you get paid extra. But of course, there aren’t nearly enough of them.  So it makes you wonder. Why don’t we have more of these holidays. And why did it take so long to get this ‘family day’ in place to break up the long winter months? We have been talking about it for at least the last twenty five years.

Well, there is a reason why we don’t have a holiday every week and why it seemed to take forever to obtain this new addition to the lists. Its called the economy. Every holiday affects productivity or the cost of productivity. And as it turns out, when government gives us a holiday, they didn’t actually give us anything. We citizens pay for the holiday. We pay directly because we close our businesses and have to pay to make up the loss of productivity later, or if the business has to stay open then employees are paid extra for working a holiday. This all has an impact on employment and income.

But we also pay increased taxes or more indirectly suffer the knowledge of assuming the greater debt burden accumulated by the province. For public servants – teachers, civil servants, health care workers –  it is paid holiday. Vital work is not being done that day. Schools are closed, government offices are closed. For those services remaining available for citizens, the employees who must work are paid double overtime.

We citizens pay for the lost productivity and the extra wage costs . And there is a cost to lost productivity – we either make it up with additional work performed at some other time – overtime perhaps – or we pay for it on the lost service. Interestingly, one wonders whether the school year will be extended by an additional day. Given the well known correlation between the length of the school year and performance on international testing and the recent tests results of students in this province, it is surely on governments agenda to ensure our students futures do not suffer as a result of this.

What is truly remarkable is that for the past several years a great many words have been uttered and profusion of ink spilled in the collective anxiety ensuing from the publication of the Now or Never Report on the Nova Scotia economy. We are, it is reported, in dire straits. Our demographics, our public debt and our economy are all moving in the wrong direction and the clock is ticking on a kind of doomsday scenario – at least for anyone who wants to live in Nova Scotia twenty years from now. The MacNeil government adopted this report and have been working assiduously to develop a plan to implement a cure for these collective ills.

So how exactly does this new holiday fit with this planning? How will this new time off improve our demograhics, eliminate the public debt, make our civil service more efficient, improve health care, advance student education and test scores, assist small and big business and generally strengthen our economy?