Top court convicts man despite errors in application of rape shield law
TORONTO — A man who argued misapplication of Canada’s rape shield law had unfairly hamstrung his defence had his conviction restored on Wednesday even though the country’s top court found errors in how judges had applied the provisions.
In a 5-2 ruling, the Supreme Court of Canada decided the accused had been able to defend himself properly at trial given the questions he was allowed to ask the complainant.
“The accused was not precluded from adequately testing the evidence in this case, despite the errors,” Justice Andromache Karakatsanis wrote for the court. “The scope of permissible cross-examination would not have been any broader than the questioning that actually occurred.”
The case arose in the early hours of Canada Day in 2013 during a family camping trip. The 15-year-old complainant maintained her cousin R.V., then 20, sexually assaulted her in the washroom. He denied any sexual contact with her.