Canadian True Crime - Analyzing the Hockey Canada trial [4]
Episode Date: October 4, 2025In the final instalment of this series, we continue to unpack the confusing timeline of Room 209 - including the controversy around crown witness Brett Howden and the alleged slap and “splits” inc...idents, leading up to the verdicts and how the country reacted to them. At the end, Kristi shares her personal opinion about what likely happened in that hotel room — and why the verdicts would have remained the same anyway. The difference is in how the judge got there. Thanks for your patience with this deep-dive series and for allowing us the time to give it the attention it deserves!(This final part is long and spans two episodes - Part 5 will be available within 24 hours)We’ll also be looking at: Why the court zeroed in on E.M.’s level of intoxication Her supposed motive to fabricate evidenceThe reasons for the judge’s ultimate conclusion that E.M.’s evidence was “not credible or reliable”Why - despite saying rape myths and stereotypes would be avoided, the judge’s written decision reads like the oppositePublic speculation about why this case went to trial at allThe damaging impact of this trial Content Warning: Graphic details of sexual acts.Please note: this series does not dispute the judge’s not guilty verdicts.Our position is that the framing of the evidence in the written decision was unnecessary and damaging, with impact that extends far beyond the trial.More information and resources:WATCH: Team Canada World Junior Trial Verdict w/ Katie Strang | The Steve Dangle Podcast, Youtube, July 29 2025READ: The Hockey Canada trial could have been a reckoning. It was something else - by Dan Robson and Katie Strang, The Athletic, July 24 2025.LISTEN: The Trial of Jacob Hoggard (JB’s story) and Kelly Favro’s StoryIf you or anyone you know is experiencing sexual violence and abuse, help is available at REES Community or Ending Violence Canada - Sexual Assault Centres, Crisis Lines and Support ServicesBeyond The Verdict: www.beyondtheverdict.caLet us know what you think! Follow Canadian True Crime on Facebook and InstagramFull list of resources, information sources, and more: www.canadiantruecrime.ca/episodes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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An additional content warning. You'll hear graphic details of sexual acts. Please take care when
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Earlier in this series, we played a clip from the Steve Dangle podcast, a big name
in Canadian hockey commentary, sent to me by survivors Callie Favreau and J.B., who are both
huge hockey fans themselves.
I liked his discussion about the Hockey Canada trial.
There were two, I don't know if these are what the technical term for them, but the judge
was like, this isn't a thing.
This doesn't count.
one of them was there's a group chat which you're reading an exchange of half a dozen a dozen
whatever it is young men trying to get their story straight and then the judge goes you didn't
read that and i couldn't wrap my head around that the other one that blew my mind the most and
this is how i knew like this this trial is going to be impossible for everyone to understand
thoroughly because it just took place over such a long period of time and there was so much
to take in the brett howden stuff melted my face he showed up in a hoodie yeah on video
call the brett howden stuff is coming up in this the final part of the series we'll take you
through the rest of what happened in room 209 including the alleged slap and the splits incident
We'll look at why the court zeroed in on EM's level of intoxication, her supposed motive to lie,
and why the judge ultimately decided her evidence was not credible or reliable,
while rejecting the idea that a slogan like, believe the victim has any place in a criminal trial.
And why, despite saying rape myths and stereotypes would be avoided,
the judge's written decision reads like the opposite.
why in a high-profile sexual assault case there is only one instance of the word trauma in the
entire 90-page document and why there's so much speculation about why this case went to trial.
And at the end, I'll share my personal opinion about what likely happened in that hotel room
and why, even then, the verdict still, would have been not guilty.
The difference is in how the judge got there and the harm caused by framing EM's evidence
the way she did, because the damage doesn't just stop with this one case, and it's not only
that survivors will be more afraid to report. The real danger is that young men will take
the message the other way, that it's fine to treat women terribly and look away from every red
flag that says they are not consenting. This final part was so long I had to separate it into
two files. The second file will be coming shortly within 24 hours.
And again, thank you so much for your patience and understanding with this series taking so long to produce.
I never intended for this to be taking us through the summer and into October, or to get so into the weeds.
But if you're still listening, you'll know how one thread led to another and another, and for someone like me, there is no way past it but through.
This is the hardest case I've ever covered and translated into audio, and I'm glad to finally be on the other side of it.
Speaking of which, thanks to everyone who is sent in positive feedback, I'll try and respond to
it all when this is finished. And to the other sexual assault survivors we've been hearing from,
it means everything to hear your experiences have been validated through this series.
The concept of fawning, complying or appeasing someone who holds power over us is a common
experience, especially for women. But it's one that our society and the court needs to get up to
speed on. I'd love to hear your fawning stories. If you'd like to share, please message us via
Canadian Truecrime.ca or Facebook or Instagram. Voice messages are welcome too. It'll all be
confidential unless we get your consent to include it maybe in a follow-up. Before we continue,
a quick reminder of our position and why we're covering this trial, Justice Maria Carasier
found all five accused hockey players not guilty of all charged.
This series does not dispute those verdicts or the Crown's decision not to appeal.
I'm not a lawyer, I'm just an ordinary Canadian citizen looking at this case through the
lens of the open court principle and trying to make sense of the outcome.
That's why my brain is fried right now.
Regardless of verdicts, our position is that the way the evidence was presented in the judge's
written decision appears to be unbalanced, unfair to EM and unnecessary.
The players are effectively given a pat on the back and told nothing wrong happened in that hotel room,
while EM is left to absorb the full force of credibility attacks,
and we'll continue to show that if the spotlight had been turned on the accused players in the same way,
it should have raised the same doubts about their credibility.
But somehow, it didn't.
I've based all of this on the judge's 90-page written decision
and daily trial reporting cross-checked from multiple media outlets
including TSN, The Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star and CBC News.
See the show notes for the full list of sources.
And please note, I can't cover every detail, angle or thread in this series.
It would be incredibly grueling for us all, and it's already taken enough time.
But if you do notice anything else, please feel free to send us a message.
It might be good for a follow-up.
So with that said, where we left off, we were deep in the confusing timeline of the two-hour
incident in room 209. Despite trying to get on the same page about telling the truth,
none of these guys can get their story straight. Even players who entered the room at the same time
gave accounts that were wildly different, but there's some solid time stamps to anchor the
incident to. So to recap, at 148 a.m., Michael McLeod,
and E.M. arrived at the Delta Hotel and had consensual sex in room 209.
At 2.10 a.m., MacLeod texted the group chat inviting his teammates for a three-way,
and Carter Hart replied, I'm in. Five minutes later, McLeod texted Witness Taylor Radish saying,
Come to my room if you want a gummer. About seven minutes after that, at 223 a.m., the first players entered the room.
Witnesses Radish and Boris Kachuk.
They were gone before the next players entered at 2.42am,
witnessed Brett Howden,
followed by Carter Hart and Alex Formenton minutes later
with some additional players.
About 10 minutes after that,
MacLeod picked up the food delivery from the lobby.
At some point, Hart received oral sex.
Formenton went into the bathroom with EM
and had vaginal sex,
followed by oral sex.
At 3.13am, Dylan Dubay entered room 209 with witness Tyler Steenbergen and some additional players.
Dubay received oral sex.
And now we get to the alleged slap.
EM testified that while she was performing oral sex on one of the men,
she felt slapping on her butt that she did not consent to.
She recalled multiple men taking turns to hit her as hard as they could.
It started to hurt, and she told them to stop it.
Carter Hart was the only one of the accused players who testified at trial,
and he said he did not see anyone slap E.M.
But the slap was witnessed by others in the room and attributed to Dylan Dubay,
witness Brett Howden's evidence was that this slap was what caused him to nope out of room
209. A week after the incident, Brett Howden sent a message to fellow witness Taylor Raddish.
Howden wrote,
Dude, I'm so happy I left when all the shit went down. Ha ha. Man, when I was leaving,
Duber was smacking this girl's ass so hard. Like, it looked like it hurt so bad.
That same year 2018, Howden told Hockey Canada investigator Danielle Robatai that as he was leaving
room 209, he heard E.M. crying or weeping, though he said he didn't actually see it. He did not
mention anything about a slap. But curiously, Howden told Robitai that a few days after the
incident, two players called him and asked him not to mention them to her.
One of them was Dylan Dubay, who asked Howden not to mention details and to leave his name out of it.
In 2002, Howden told Robatai he witnessed Dylan Dubay Slap E.M.
He called it a smack, and it drew a line for him.
That was the moment he decided to leave the room.
The following year, Howden confirmed to police that he witnessed the slap.
He said it sounded like it was skin to skin.
didn't sound like E.M. had any clothes on at the time. Houghton told the police he didn't remember
E.M. saying anything when she was allegedly slapped, but, quote, I know she didn't ask for that.
He said the slap was basically the thing that pushed him out the door. At trial, Brett Houghton
was of course subpoenaed by the Crown to testify about what he saw and heard in that hotel room,
including the alleged slap, which he was clearly present for.
One reporter in the courtroom noted,
When Howden speaks, I sense anger radiating from the gallery,
particularly from the McLeod's,
that he has already broken some sort of code,
but on the witness stand, he is uncooperative.
That's Ariela Garmez in a piece for the walrus.
It appears the Crown anticipated that Howden's testimony
would align with his previous statements.
Instead, it became a point of tension in the courtroom
and effectively made Brett Howden the butt of everyone's jokes.
Howden testified that he heard a slap but never saw it.
He also testified that he remembered Dylan Dubay spanking EM.
On cross-examination, he said he couldn't remember any of the details.
The Crown asked him if he remembered where in the room it happened.
He said he didn't remember.
Was E.M. clothed or unclothed?
Don't remember.
What was she doing?
Don't remember.
Was there a sound?
Yes, but that's all I remember.
Do you recall if she reacted?
Don't remember.
Brett Houghton couldn't even remember how he felt
when Dubey allegedly slapped E.M.
He testified he only remembered wanting to leave and get out of there
because the whole situation was awkward and made him feel uncomfortable.
The Crown was frustrated after this and argued that Howden was faking his memory loss,
pointing out that he remembered some details,
but when it came to anything that could hurt his friends or teammates,
he conveniently didn't remember.
It's clear that Howden's testimony diverged sharply from what the Crown likely expected,
so prosecutor Megan Cunningham took the unusual step of asking to cross-examine their own witness.
something Justice Carossier allowed on a limited basis.
Haldon was asked about his 2003 police statement,
where he said he saw EM being slapped.
It sounded like skin to skin and was basically the thing that pushed him out the door.
In the witness box, Houdon said he no longer remembered the slap
but believed his earlier statement was true.
And as for it being the last straw,
he testified he felt uncomfortable with the situation,
but also because EM was asking the men to do things, which was awkward.
As for the phone call with Dylan Dubay in the days after the incident,
Houdin testified he had no memory of it now,
except being asked to leave Dubay's name out of things.
He said that it was difficult to do at the time.
I'm an honest person. I didn't lie. I just didn't bring his name up.
And about his past statements that he heard E.M. crying or weeping, Howden told the court he no longer
remembered that either. Howden testified remotely from Las Vegas, where he plays for the Vegas
Golden Knights. The press noted he was seen on screen wearing an olive-colored hoodie with
dishevelled hair. He broke down at one point when he spoke about his family and how hard it was
to tell his father about what happened.
The defense argued that Brett Howden's memory issues were not feigned or fake, as the Crown suggested.
He was nervous, seven years had gone by, and he suffered a concussion in recent years.
A number of memorable comments came from Carter Hart's lawyer, Megan Savard,
who formerly represented disgraced musician Jacob Hoggard.
Of Brett Howden, she announced,
This witness is clearly unsophisticated.
He didn't come to court dressed for court.
He's inarticulate, careless with words.
He's prone to overstatement.
Then retraction...
If Houdin was feigning his memory loss, Savard said,
it would have been clear from his testimony
that he was trying to help the defence,
his former teammates.
But, quote,
If anything, we may all say at the end of the day,
this witness is generally useless,
but certainly not helpful to the defence.
Crown Prosecutor Megan Cunningham pushed back,
pointing out that Howden may have suffered a concussion in 2022,
but in 23, he still remembered details in his police interview
that were consistent with his original statements,
including details he testified he now had no memory of.
Justice Carousier acknowledged that Howden's memory had faded,
but did not find it unreasonable given the passage of.
of time. She rejected the Crown's argument that Howden was feigning memory loss, and she
emphasized that Howden was effectively adopting or agreeing with his prior statements, even if
he couldn't recall the details independently. The judge charitably recognized Howden's
inconsistencies and memory gaps without attributing them to deception or bad faith.
But one piece of evidence was treated differently. The text message Howden's
sent to fellow witness Radish a week after the incident.
Dude, I'm so happy I left when all the shit went down.
Ha ha.
Man, when I was leaving, Dubur was smacking this girl's ass so hard.
Like, it looked like it hurt so bad.
The crown described it as crucial corroboration of E.M.'s testimony.
But when Houdam was questioned, he was vague, sometimes saying he couldn't be sure that
what he wrote was accurate, other times insisting he had no reason to love.
lie. He just didn't remember. The defense argued this text message should not be admitted as
evidence, as it amounted to hearsay, words on a screen that couldn't be tested since he no longer
remembered it. Justice Carousier agreed, saying that although Howden testified he wasn't trying
to lie when he sent that message, he did not testify that the message was true. He was
uncertain and inconsistent. The judge noted that Howden was under stress, talking about events that
occurred when he was drunk, and was worried about himself when he learned that Hockey Canada
was investigating the alleged incident. For those reasons, Justice Carasier concluded this was
a casual message Howden sent to a friend. It wasn't a statement made under oath, and the court
shouldn't have to speculate about its reliability.
This text message evidence was ultimately ruled inadmissible.
During my interviews with survivors Callie Favro and J.B. about this trial,
they mentioned a few moments that really stood out to them.
This is one of them.
So in lieu of Brett Howden's own opinion about the text message he,
he sent. Cali is willing to share hers. The court might not have had to speculate about its
reliability, but we absolutely can. He is Callie. He sends a text bragging about how hard EM is being
slapped that night and like genuinely bragging, not concern, not remorse, not confusion. He writes
it like it's a highlight of the evening for him. He's not really talking about a person. He's
describing a thing that's being used and hurt and passed around. And there's zero recognition
for what happened that could have been considered non-consensual. And that kind of language shows
just how deeply normalized and celebrated abusive behavior is in some circles, and specifically
pro-athlet ones. So this is essentially like locker room banter that's been turned into evidence
at a sexual assault trial, and we're still being told, eh, boys will be boys. Let's circle back to
hockey commentator Steve Dangle via his SDPN YouTube channel.
Somehow, he and his co-hosts have managed to be fans of the game of hockey
without turning into sycophantic, unpaid hype men for players accused of legal or moral
wrongdoing.
This is what they mean by positive role models and sports.
If only we'd seen some of that in Room 209 that day.
Here's Steve Dangle, clip edited for brevity.
Howden's recollection was so poor.
that Cunningham accused him of feigning memory loss to protect his former teammates.
The defense jumped in, bringing up the multiple head injuries Howden has suffered in his hockey
career as a plausible reason why he wouldn't be able to even recall the text message he sent
describing Dubet slapping EM's buttocks. And then that text of him telling a friend,
here is what I saw
was ruled to be inadmissible.
And also his appearance in court
in terms of what he wore.
He showed up in a hoodie on video call.
I don't know if this is a proper way to say this,
but they were like, you know, this guy's just too dumb.
Like, it's how they frame.
That is paraphrasing, but...
That was co-host Adam Wilde there at the end.
And it is paraphrasing,
but it's not far off the words
defense lawyer Megan Savard actually did use
to describe Brett Howden.
Was Howden aware he'd be painted this way? Who knows?
But it's almost as though the defence was walking a careful line
of not outright calling Howden a liar
because that would have perjury implications,
but instead portraying him as sloppy and unreliable enough
in the hope it might make the evidence disappear.
Another clever legal strategy,
although it did feel unnecessarily mean-spirited
and overshoot to the point of seeming a little performance,
but it worked. So Savard, insisting that Howden was generally useless and not helpful to the
defence, ended up being quite helpful to the defence. Howden's memory gap was enough to get a text
message thrown out as hearsay, evidence that could have corroborated EM's testimony. The judge
explained away Howden's memory gaps as the product of stress, intoxication, a concussion, and the passage
of time, but when EM had memory gaps, there was no such grace.
Here's Kelly Favreau again with a few thoughts about the double standards inherent at sexual
assault trials. Please note that when she uses the term survivor, she's not referring to
EM specifically, but to sexual assault victim complainants in general who testify at trial.
The justice acknowledges his memory issues and rules that there's no evidence.
that he was lying or intentionally being forgetful.
But the court doesn't hold him accountable or press him further.
The court gives him a pass.
Meanwhile, their survivor has to defend every single word, every single pause,
every single reaction under a microscope.
And the same leniency is never given survivors.
Because again, we are not seen as victims.
We are witnesses to our own crimes.
And yet somehow our voice as a witness doesn't hold as much weight
as the others who take the stand as witnesses.
So, yeah, there's a double standard.
And it's not subtle, it's structural.
And until we stop treating survivors,
like unreliable narrators of their own trauma,
and stop metting men casually contradict themselves without consequences,
these trials are never going to be about justice.
They're going to be about reserving the reputations of men
who brag about hurting women.
Brett Houghton was not the only hockey player who recounted a slap and being asked not to tell anyone about it.
We'll be back in a moment.
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Back to the slap.
Witness Tyler Steenbergin testified that he was trying to have a conversation with Jake Bean,
but he remembered observing Dylan Dubay slapping EM's buttocks.
He described it as a small slap, not hard but not soft either,
and he did not hear any reaction from EM.
Steenbergen also testified that the slap didn't happen while E.M. was performing oral sex
as she testified, but in between two instances of oral sex. On cross-examination, he agreed that
the slap looked like foreplay. It was not abusive and the mood was playful at the time.
Steenbergen also testified he had a phone call later with Dylan Dubay, who asked him not
to tell anyone what he did, because he was going to explain it himself.
when he met with Hockey Canada.
Steen Bergen said he assumed Dubay's comment
could only have been about the slap
because that's all he saw in relation to Dubay.
He says he did not see the oral sex.
As for Dubay, he didn't testify at trial
and he didn't mention anything about a slap
in his 2018 police interview.
He only mentioned oral sex.
When Hockey Canada compelled him to be
interviewed by investigator Robatai, Dylan Dubay did admit that he slapped EM on the bum once or
twice. But that statement was not admitted into evidence. The same with Alex Forminton's
interview with Robitai. He told her he didn't see anyone slap EM, but four days later,
he had a second interview where he admitted that Dylan DuBay had asked him to lie about the incident.
According to Robatai's notes, Alex Formenton said that Dylan Dubay
walked up and tapped EM on the butt and walked away. It was a tap but loud enough to hear.
Again, this wasn't admitted into evidence. The defense pointed out that it would make no
sense for Dylan DuBay to have admitted to the police that he received oral sex, but left out
a more minor contact like a slap. The Crown asked why then would Dylan DuBae to have admitted to the police
Dylan Dubay asked Howden and Steenbergen to lie about it.
Theirs, of course, was the only evidence of a slap the Crown could refer to, because
the other evidence was inadmissible, including Howden's text message about Dube smacking
EM's butt so hard.
Justice Carousier concluded that while she accepted the slap took place, she did not accept
that Dylan Dubay was one of several men who took turns slapping EM as hard as they could,
as she performed oral sex on one of them.
The judge referred to Steenbergin's evidence that the slap was light and playful
and didn't occur at the same time as E.M. was performing oral sex.
And she also referred to Howden's testimony that he couldn't remember the slap
or the sequence of events and that he ultimately left room 209 because he was uncomfortable,
as well as his earlier statement that he couldn't remember if E.M. was clothed.
The judge pointed out that the issue was not that each of the acts happened, but rather
proof of lack of consent. She described it as this one discreet slap that caused no bodily harm
and concluded that it would be wrong of her to single the slap out from her overall
conclusion that Dubay's participation was consensual.
Writing in the Globe and Mail, journalist Robin Doolittle noted cryptically that this was
a surprising conclusion for many.
Survivors like Kelly Favreau and J.B.
Also found it surprising, but deeply upsetting.
EM testified about something that happened to her,
that hurt her, and that she told whoever it was to stop.
And let's be clear, these were six-foot, 200-pound elite athletes.
Young men often seen high-fiving each other with crushing force
and slapping each other on the butt to celebrate goals.
How could anyone judge the impact of that same gesture on a five-foot-four slim woman
and conclude it was harmless that it caused no bodily harm?
Legal definitions of consent under Canadian law require it to be clear,
specific and present at the time of each act.
There is no evidence whatsoever that EM ever asked to be slapped,
knew she was going to be slapped or consented to it.
And what makes the judge's conclusion even more unbelievable
is what's left out of her analysis entirely
that Howden told the police he heard EM crying or weeping
that it sounded like skin to skin
and that EM didn't ask for that.
This was admissible evidence that went directly to the impact of the slap
and to the lack of consent,
yet it's absent from the judge.
judge's analysis.
The evidence that Dylan DuBay asked Howden and Steenbergin to lie about the slap, which suggests
the level of awareness that there was something there that needed to be covered up, was at least
acknowledged, but the judge never returned to the point or commented about it.
Because she had already decided that EM was sexually forward, the aggressor, the logic seemed
to follow that EM had no grounds to complain.
If EM was the one driving things, then the slap just became part of the scene.
And this brings us to one of the starkest imbalances in sexual assault trials, the way evidence is handled.
In this case, some of the most powerful evidence that could have supported EM was ruled inadmissible, things like messages,
corroborating accounts and evidence of multiple inconsistencies and contradictions on the part of the
accused and their teammates. That's because the rules of evidence are designed to protect the
right of the accused to a fair trial, but sometimes that means crucial context is slipped away with
it, as we've seen with the alleged slap. And while the accused has defense lawyers fighting to
keep that evidence out, the victim complainant is nothing more than a crown witness.
Even if EM paid for her own lawyer to represent her interests, which she did, there is no actual
place for that lawyer in the trial. That lawyer cannot object on EM's behalf or argue for
evidence to be admitted or not admitted. I think so many people have the misunderstanding that the
crown does that, and that the crown will stand up and say, objection, that's not how it works.
That's how it works on TV.
That's Survivor J.B. from the Jacob Hogard trial again, and she has some thoughts about
the reality of what sexual assault complainants face during trial.
The fact that they can't talk to anyone about their evidence creates a very lonely experience.
Yeah, it's not like what you see in TV where you have someone like advocating for you.
The crown is there only to present their case.
like it's the defendant versus the crown it's not the defendant versus the victim even if she
hired her own lawyer and they were they were using tactics that weren't allowed um they can't help
you during cross-examination and that's the hardest part of the trial she wouldn't have been
allowed to talk to her lawyer you're not allowed to talk to any of your evidence when in my case
i couldn't speak to anyone who was testifying which were all of my friends um you can't speak to the crown
you can't speak to a detective even your victim support person will not speak to you about evidence
not only that when you're in court and the defendant is sitting next to their lawyer,
they whisper things back and forth all day the whole trial.
And you're sitting there thinking, what are they saying about me?
Like, I wish I had someone that I could whisper to and I could ask, you know, like, can I say this
or are they allowed to do that?
But we're not awarded the same protection that the defendants are awarded.
But then at the same time, we're held to an impossible standard that they're not.
They're not held to.
And I don't know, I don't know how to fix it, to be honest.
I mean, it works how it was supposed to work.
Yeah.
It's not broken.
This is how it was built.
Another imbalance is even more fundamental.
The accused has the right to silence,
but the complainant has no such choice.
As a crown witness, E.M. was required to take the stand
and endure seven days of aggressive cross-examination,
her past statements picked apart for inconsistencies against her testimony at trial.
The result is a process where her credibility is scrutinized under a microscope,
while the accused can sit silently, shielded by legal protections.
And that's the way it's supposed to be.
There's a high burden of proof for a reason,
but there's no denying that it's just another aspect of a sexual,
assault trial that is blatantly unfair to the victim complainant.
And we've seen that go even further with this trial.
Even when the evidence is admitted, that doesn't mean it will be taken into consideration by
a judge in a judge alone trial.
We've pointed out many examples where the judge acknowledged evidence but did not appear
to consider it as part of her analysis.
And in some cases, admissible evidence.
that was highly relevant to the matter at hand, was entirely absent from the written decision.
Of course, a trial of this size involves a huge amount of evidence to sort through.
But it's telling that the relevant, admissible evidence that seemed to slip through the cracks of the judge's analysis
was also evidence that would have benefited EM.
At 3.25am, Michael McLeod filmed the first consent video, the one that showed EM wiping her eye.
As you recall, she testified this was likely after she had been crying, which was corroborated by Brett Howden's evidence that he heard her crying or weeping as he left.
But because E.M. couldn't remember the video being filmed, the judge dismissed any hint of distress as speculation and took E.M.'s smile in the video as reliable evidence of her demeanour that she was being sexually forward.
When Carter Hart testified, he agreed he could be heard on that video saying,
I'll get fabs, meaning a player called Dante Fabro. Two minutes later,
Hart sent Fabro a text message telling him to get to 209.
He testified that he knew Fabro was single.
Fabro never showed up, but the so-called junior hockey Bible literally glorified this exact scenario.
It awarded points for helping a teammate get laid, as if women existed only to be passed around.
Again, there's no evidence that the hockey players knew or were aware of that talk.
But what we see in room 209 lines up almost word for word with it.
There's no evidence at any point that any of them stopped to ask EM if she was okay with
more men being invited. Many of them said they didn't even speak to her. Her consent was not
part of the conversation. They just took McLeod's word that she was willing to offer them all
sexual favors. Her compliance and lack of resistance was,
was an opportunity to see how much further they could push it, how much more they could try
to get out of her.
Michael McLeod's version of events came from his police statement and he mentions nothing
about EM being naked on the floor or anything about a bed sheet at any time, nor does
he mention any slap.
Here's another clip from his police interview.
And remember, consent under...
Canadian law must be specific.
She looked like she was kind of leading the way and kind of asking for it, like asking for
what did you see that brought to you that?
Um, she just seemed like, like excited and she wanted to do stuff with guys and what was she
saying?
I, she just said stuff like this, yeah, like, I want to do this.
Like, this is what I want to me, stuff like that.
And then she got on the bed naked and said, okay, who's going to have sex with me?
According to McLeod's police statement, E.M. called them pussies and was upset that no one would have sex with her.
He said he had to calm her down by telling her it was only because no one wanted to have sex in front of nine other guys.
He said she felt better after that.
McLeod told the police that E.M. eventually offered oral sex,
which he received along with Carter Hart and possibly Dylan DuBay.
He called the whole situation weird and unexpected.
Part of E.M.'s testimony included an incident related to golf clubs and golf balls.
The hockey players were, of course, in London, Ontario for a weekend of hockey Canada events
to celebrate their World Junior Championship win, and one of those events was a golf tournament.
There were golf clubs and balls in the hotel room.
EM testified that during the two-hour incident,
some of the players were joking and wondering out loud if they could put a golf ball inside her,
or even a whole golf club into her vagina.
Dylan Dubay told the police that at one point he had a golf club in his hands, and it was
beside her not really. He said E.M. asked him something like, are you going to play golf or
fuck me? When the detective asked Dubey whether anyone suggested putting the golf club in E.m's
vagina, he said, no, not at all. He also said he never felt at any point that E.M. did not
want to be there or that she wanted to leave. He said it felt like she wanted to be there more than
the guys. This statement was admitted into evidence. But in Dubay's statement to Hockey Canada
independent investigator Robatai two years later, which was not admitted into evidence for reasons
we've explained, Dube said that not only did he slap EM on the bum once or twice,
but at one point he said he was standing over the top of EM with a golf club.
in his hand. He conceded he, maybe, touched her buttocks with the golf club.
This was corroborated by Alex Formenton, who told Robitai that he saw DuBay with a golf club
when EM was on all fours on the ground. According to Robitai's notes about what
Formenton said, I did not see contact with EM Plus Club, but saw Dube hold golf club in right
hand and make putting practice motions and swing towards her butt.
Neither of these statements were admitted into evidence.
The judge notes that Foreminton told the police he did not hear any comments about
golf clubs, and neither did McLeod.
E.M. testified that the comments were threatening and made her feel scared and fearful
because she didn't know these men. On cross-examination, the did. The
defense pointed out that her testimony was inconsistent with her original police statement.
EM only mentioned the men joking about inserting golf balls or clubs into her vagina.
She didn't say anything about feeling intimidated or frightened because of those comments
until a few years later when she launched her civil claim.
E.M responded by saying it took a couple of years to process her fear.
The defense suggested this wasn't reflected.
of her honest memory and spun it as though EM thought everything was fine and jokey at the time
and only later reframed it as something that caused her to be fearful.
That argument leans directly on a rape myth that if the complainant doesn't immediately name it
as a rape and articulate their fear, then it must not have been real and they're lying.
And as we discussed last episode, decades of trauma research shows that were
the brain's defense circuitry activates during perceived threat or trauma, everything changes,
thinking, memory, attention, even how the body responds. The fact that EM says it took a while to process
her fear fits squarely within this pattern. This is one of many reasons why sexual assault
remains the most underreported crime in Canada. This phenomenon of minimizing is so common it has a name,
Unacknowledged rape
Multiple studies show that women and girls who have experienced something that legally counts as rape
don't always label it that way, especially at first.
Complaintants might instead think of it as bad sex, a mistake or a miscommunication,
something they must have done to bring it on.
They might feel their experience wasn't violent enough to qualify as rape,
and they might not want to cause trouble for the perpetrator,
because he didn't fit the traditional label of a rapist,
you know, the stranger who attacks in the dark.
The complainant might even put a positive spin on it as a learning opportunity
in an effort to avoid the pressure of having to report it or tell loved ones.
Even if the hockey players were only talking about inserting golf balls or clubs into EM's vagina
as though it was a joke, those are objectively callous and incredibly
insensitive comments made it around the same time that EM was crying.
EM testified that this contributed to her ongoing compliance and attempts to appease them so
she could leave. But this golf club situation was not part of any of the charges related
to sexual assault. Justice Karasea examined it in the context of whether EM was so
fearful that she wasn't able to consent. In legal,
language, was her consent vitiated by fear? The judge concluded,
I do not accept E.M.'s evidence that these comments caused her to be fearful. That evidence is
inconsistent with the way she described it in the first statement to police. Other than the
sexual touching described by E.M., there was no other physical force applied to her by anyone
in the room to cause her to remain there, and certainly no violence or threats of
violence. And now we get to the splits involving the fifth accused player
Kellyn Foote. He did not participate in any explicit sexual acts the same way that his
fellow accused did. The judge estimates that Foote entered room 209 at about 3.30am, just after
the slap and the first consent video was filmed. He performed the act. He performed the act.
that resulted in him being charged with sexual assault and then left.
EM testified that as she lay on the bed sheet on the ground,
the player identified as Callan Foot did the splits right over her face
and was not wearing any pants or underwear.
She said he put his penis right on my face.
And the other men in the room were laughing and making fun of her.
It was gross and degrading, she said.
Alex Forementon had backed up E.M.'s testimony. He remembered Callan Foot taking his pants off
and doing the splits over E.M.'s upper body. He said that she was okay with it. But that was
Alex Formenton's statement to Hockey Canada investigator Robitai, which was inadmissible at trial.
Dylan Dubay also told Robitai he saw Callan Foot do the splits over E.m's face, although he didn't mention
clothing or not. These interviews led Robatai to allege that Foote teabagged EM or placed his testicles
in her face without her consent, according to reporting by Jacques Gallant for the Toronto Star.
Carter Hart was the only one of the accused to testify. He said that foot was fully clothed. It was
only a three-quarter splits, not a full splits. He didn't touch EM, and it was only brief.
Hart did not view it as sexual and described E.M. as laughing along with them.
Witness Tyler Steenbergen wasn't as firm. He testified he only had a partial view of
Callen Foote doing the splits and he couldn't see whether he was clothed or whether Foote made
contact with E.M. All he could say was that he didn't see Foote remove his clothing.
Steenbergen also testified to receiving a phone call from Callan Foot.
afterwards, similar to the one he received from Dylan Dubay,
but he could no longer remember anything that was said in that call.
Brett Howden also testified to receiving a phone call from Callan Foot,
who told him to leave his name out of it,
but Howden's testimony included nothing about actually witnessing the splits.
Callan Foote's defense lawyer, Juliana Greenspan, daughter of Edward Greenspan, argued Howden was unreliable
and there were other possibilities for Foote's call to Steenbergen other than a guilty mind.
Greenspan argued that the splits was his party trick, that he was fully clothed, it was done in jest,
the act was not threatening and not sexual and he did not touch EM.
And as for EM, Greenspan pointed out,
that she never told the police that a penis grazed her face, and the trial was the first time
she mentioned that. Therefore, she must have been lying now to bolster her claim.
E.M. testified, I think I can clearly remember having a penis in my face. It would not have been
as shocking in my mind if he had shorts or pants on. She explained that she found it
awkward to tell the police, because she'd never heard of anything like that happened.
before. The judge in her analysis reduced EM's explanation to five words. It was difficult
to say that, which was then dismissed as not making sense because EM clearly had no trouble
describing other men with their penises exposed. But that doesn't seem to be the point that
EM was making at all. It's not that it was difficult to tell the police about another exposed penis.
She's obviously saying it happened while the man was doing the splits over her face,
which she said was awkward to describe since she'd never heard of such an act,
what the defence referred to as a party trick, or as Robotype included, the act of teabagging.
And what makes the whole thing worse is that what EM actually said to the police was misrepresented.
She said the player identified as Callen Foot, quote,
Just did the splits on my face, just to put it in my face, kind of.
What else could it have possibly meant?
So because EM didn't use the precise language of exposed penis in her initial police statement,
the defense was able to weaponize it into an accusation that she must be lying now that she uses it at trial.
And the judge in her written decision rounds the whole thing out by four.
flattening EM's nuanced explanation about awkwardness into a hollow soundbite.
It was difficult to say that.
Framing it like this, distorted EM's words removed the context and left her looking unreliable.
An EM continued to get it from Foote's defense lawyer Greenspan,
who flipped the script and suggested EM tried to turn an innocent party trick into a sexual encounter by
touching foot as he did the splits.
E.M. pushed back.
I was lying down and my arms were at my side.
He put his full penis and testicles on my face.
It was all there. It was on my face.
The defense suggested that E.M. was only upset because the men were having fun and laughing
without her and she wanted attention.
E.M. pushed back again. They were laughing at her expense.
And of the party trick, she said,
This was not something I asked for.
I got no notice before that happened to me, no.
Justice Carousier concluded that the splits happened,
but she was not satisfied Foote had no pants on,
or that he applied or threatened sexual force without EM's consent,
which is the threshold for sexual assault.
On that basis, she found him not guilty.
The judge did not respond.
recognized the splits as part of a broader pattern of degrading and humiliating behavior towards
EM. It's instead stripped of context and reduced to harmless horseplay, an isolated joke.
Particularly troubling is how the judge represented Carter Hart's testimony. She wrote that
Hart described the men laughing and joking, that EM laughed too, and she then laid back so
foot could do the splits.
The inferences that E.M. knew about it and allowed it to happen.
But Hart's actual evidence did not go that far, according to the same written decision.
He did not say or even infer that E.M. laid back to allow it, as the judge's framing suggests.
This was the pattern throughout. The evidence of the men's conduct was excused and downplayed,
while EM's testimony was cut apart, distorted and framed as unreliable.
Next, the second consent video and what happened when EM left the hotel room.
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Michael McLeod told the police that everyone started leaving at around 3.30 to 4 a.m.
And that EM got up and got dressed and undressed a couple of times and then undressed again.
Much was made in court of the fact that E.M. agreed with the defense's suggestion that she didn't think the men in room 209 would have physically stopped her from leaving.
But again, the actual details in her testimony paint a much more complex picture.
EM testified that she was crying in the room twice,
either because of the comments the men were making or because she was being laughed at.
She recalled moments where she tried to get up, put her clothes on, and leave,
and each time someone would come over and convince her to stay.
Callenfoot's defense lawyer Greenspan made a big fuss about EM.
shoes, suggesting that she never actually put her shoes on all the time she said she was trying
to leave. Therefore, she wasn't being serious about it. Eam explained that she didn't think she got
so far as to put her shoes back on because someone would talk her back to the bed sheet on the
floor. At one point, she described someone putting their arms around her, guiding her back,
trying to convince her they were all having fun. This is one of the reasons she felt,
felt she couldn't leave until they were all satisfied.
And she testified that someone, she couldn't identify who, said,
Oh, she's crying, don't let her go.
In the written decision, the judge noted, quote,
E.M agreed that this was the first time she told anyone that someone said those words to her.
It certainly looks like E.M. introduced new details at trial.
Therefore, she's once again unrued.
But the written decision makes no mention of EM's initial statements to police, where she said
she heard someone say, don't let her go or don't let her leave. It appears that the judge
only honed in on the specific words of, oh, she's crying, don't let her go. That evidence was
discounted. E.M.'s claim was even backed up by Brett Howden. In his earlier hockey candidate,
a interview, which was admitted as evidence, he said he heard teammates tell her,
Oh no, baby, don't leave. We know Howden also described her crying or weeping. And in the same
interview, he said that McLeod showed him the consent video the following day, which he said
was taken after E.M had her little episode. At trial, of course, Howden said he no longer
remembered what happened, but conceded his earlier statement reflected what he knew to be true at the
time. But this information suggests that McLeod's reaction to seeing E.M. was crying, was to get out his
phone to record her saying she consented. McLeod even confirmed to the police that E.M. was
upset, but said it was because no one would have sex with her, so he tried to calm her down. He explained
he decided to film a second consent video to get her consent and to confirm that
EM was not drunk. The second consent video was filmed at 4.26am. That's the 12-second video where
EM is seen standing holding a white towel in front of her body. McLeod tells her to say it.
The judge noted that EM was smiling and looking at the camera and didn't appear drunk when she
replied. Okay, it was all consensual. Are you recording me? McLeod said yes, and she repeated that it was
consensual. McLeod presses her again. What else? She said, would you, you are so paranoid. Holy,
I enjoyed it. It was fine. It was all consensual. I am so sober. That's why I can't do this right now.
McLeod told the police that E.M. mentioned being paranoid because he asked her at least five
times if she was okay with the whole night. E.M. testified that she was saying what he wanted
her to say. She still felt like she was on autopilot at that time.
McLeod told the police that after he filmed that video, he hopped in the shower and then
E.M came in with him and they had sex. In cross-examination, E.M agreed that McLeod got into
the shower alone at first and asked her to join him.
When it was suggested that she made a choice to join him,
she said she still felt like she did not have a choice.
She felt like it was the final thing she needed to do before she could leave.
Britt Howden appears around here as well,
which is strange since he said he noped out after the slap.
It's very hard to pin down what happened in what order and who was there.
But for what it's worth,
Houghton testified that he saw E.M. come out of the ball.
bathroom fully clothed, and she called Mikey by the wrong name. Howden said that McLeod told her
that was not his name and asked, why are you even here? According to Howden, E.M. also kept
saying, I'm too sober for this. He added,
You could tell she didn't want to leave. She made it look like she wanted to, but she didn't want to.
There's no evidence that McLeod showed any genuine care for E.M.'s well-being.
He didn't treat the fact that she cried during the incident as a glaring red flag that she was not consenting.
And neither did the judge.
Justice Carousier pointed out E.M.'s initial statements to the police, where she said she did not think that the men would have physically stopped her from leaving.
Therefore, quote,
There is no evidence that anyone applied force
or threatened to apply force to the complainant
to cause her to remain in the room naked.
Eam recalled that McLeod and his roommate Alex Formenton
wanted to know if she was leaving soon
because they had a golf tournament early the next day.
She agreed that at this point
she began to think that McLeod was a jerk.
She also got upset with him when he asked her
if she was sure she didn't have any STDs. She felt he was being rude. He got into bed to go to
sleep. He did not walk her to the door or call her a cab or an Uber. Defense Sawyer Greenspan
also made a fuss about the fact that after E.M. left the hotel room, she came back, saying she'd left
a ring behind and she wanted to look for it. More proof that she didn't want to leave, apparently.
E.M. testified the men seemed annoyed to see her again. They helped her look for the ring but couldn't find it. She felt silly, burst into tears and left. The defense argued that this is why she was upset when she left the hotel room. Hotel surveillance shows E.M. leaving the hotel at 4.46am. She testified she called herself an Uber, then called her friend because she didn't want to be alone.
She was crying uncontrollably.
When she got home, she turned on the shower and continued crying.
Justice Carousier concluded that in all charges,
the Crown was not able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that EM did not consent.
There was no analysis of whether the accused hockey players took
any reasonable steps to ensure consent was clear, specific and present at the time of each
act, consistent with Canadian law. In this case, informed consent would have only been possible
if Michael McLeod had explicitly asked EM whether she wanted to engage in group sex, before
he messaged his teammates to invite them, and there's no evidence that he asked. The only
evidence that it was EM's idea came from McLeod himself three years later. The judge's conclusion
that EM consented to everything appears to be only based on EM's evidence. But to be thorough
about it, an examination was needed of whether EM's consent may have been caused by something else.
One of those factors was fear. In other words, if she only consented because she was scared not to.
As you'll recall from earlier in this series, EM had testified that after McLeod's teammates
began entering the hotel room without her knowledge or consent, and told her to get on the
bed sheet on the floor, then put their penises on her face and told her to spit on it and suck on
it. She felt unsafe and went into autopilot, complying with their requests to survive and get
out of the room safely. She testified that as she was performing oral sex, she felt someone
spitting on her back, and multiple people took turns slapping her, hitting her as hard as they
could. It hurt, and she told them to stop. She cried at several points during the incident.
There's no inconsistencies between her testimony about this and any of her other statements.
And although EM acknowledged she might have looked like she was enjoying it, she testified
she felt confused after feeling intimidated and bullied into compliance, that she felt like she was
quote, watching my body doing this and acting like I'm liking it and doing what they're wanting to see
from me and it was confusing to know if I was liking the attention or not. And then there's the players
joking about inserting golf clubs and golf balls into her vagina. The only inconsistency there is that
she didn't mention it made her scared until later.
Another aspect of EM's evidence that the judge referred to
in assessing whether her consent was vitiated by fear
was related to that 15-minute window theory we went through last episode.
You'll recall the first players into the room were Kachuk and Radish,
and Kachuk testified that E.M. asked him flirtatiously for a bite of his pizza,
and he ignored her, and McLeod was darting in and out of the hotel room on a recruitment mission.
The defense's theory was that after Cachuk and Radish left, there was a 15-minute window where
E.M. was alone with McLeod, and the fact that she didn't leave suggested she was waiting
for more players to enter the room. We went over how this is not only a rape myth,
but it relies entirely on Cachuk's own problematic estimate of the time he and Radish
left the hotel room, and it's not corroborated by any other evidence.
Justice Carousier referred to it again, noting that because EM didn't leave during this 15-minute
window, she can't have been scared or fearful. Quoting from the written decision,
If I accept EM's evidence that she did not know that the men would be entering room 209,
and if she was honestly fearful once Katchuk and Radish entered the,
the room, there is an interval of about 15 minutes after they left and before the other men
entered the room. During that time, E.M. went to the bathroom where her clothes were located and
according to her evidence, she emerged naked. She did not accept that there was any passage
of time between when the first two men left the room and others entered. That's a bit of a
distortion of what E.M. actually said. It wasn't that she denied any passage of time, and even if she did,
why should she be held against a 15-minute window that amounted to nothing but speculation? The thing that
E.M. disagreed with was that she was alone with McLeod for a period of time before the other men
entered the room. It was her testimony that while Radish and Kachuk was still in the room,
She got up naked, went to the bathroom, and when she came out, still naked, there were more
men in the room. That was a wrong move too, apparently, reframed as another strike against
her credibility. Quoting from the judge's written decision again,
At this point, EM chose to walk into a room full of men while naked. No one directed her to do
this, nor did anyone prevent her from going back into the bathroom and putting her clothes
on. No one had threatened her or applied any force to her. E.M. made no effort to leave the room.
Up until this point, there has been no sexual contact with anyone other than consensually
with Mr. McLeod. E.M. provided no satisfactory answer as to why she chose to do this.
The implication is clear. A real victim wouldn't have done that unless she was forced to or threatened.
But that's another discredited rape myth, just like the idea that she made no effort to leave
the room, or that no one applied force or threats to her to cause her to remain in the room
naked.
And this rape myth shifts the responsibility onto the woman to get herself out, rather than
onto the men who put her in that position and tried to keep her there.
Besides, even when EM did testify to a perception of threats, like later on
on when the players were joking about putting golf balls or a golf club inside her, that was
dismissed.
The judge concluded,
The inconsistencies in EM's evidence regarding her fear, along with the other evidence referred to,
causes me to have reasonable doubt about whether an honestly held fear was the reason for
her participation in the sexual activity.
The judge concluded there was reasonable doubt that EM's consent was viewed.
by fear. She wasn't fearful. Therefore, that wasn't a reason for her consent. So as we asked in the
last episode, why does it seem like the decades of scientific findings about the impact of trauma
wasn't taken into consideration in this case even once? Well, that's because it literally wasn't.
The Crown submitted that it's well established in law that there's no usual way a person
responds to sexual assault, saying,
Science tells us that when a person is exposed to a threatening situation
that causes extreme fear, stress, or a feeling they cannot escape,
the brain and body can flood with stress chemicals.
In response, Justice Karasi had noted that no evidence was called in the Hockey Canada
trial about what science says on this point.
The word science is put in quotation marks.
As for why no such evidence was called, the judge pointed to an appeal decision from the first
Jacob Hogard trial, that's J.B.'s trial. In that case, the Ontario Court of Appeal had
found that the trial judge erred in admitting expert testimony on the effects of trauma.
Now, I'll be the first to say what I don't know about citing case law could fill a warehouse.
But when I read that appeal decision closely, I was troubled.
about the context that was left out. The error wasn't about the substance of the expert evidence
at all. It was about the purpose for calling the expert in the first place. That expert, Dr. Lorry Haskell,
explained the neurobiology of trauma, how there is no single way survivors of sexual assault
might react and how courts often misinterpret those reactions as unreliability. The appeals court found that
while her evidence was valid, the intent behind calling her was simply to help the jury with their
reasoning, and it ruled that it would have been sufficient for the trial judge to deliver those
cautions directly. And in fact, that's exactly what happened in the first Hogard trial.
The judge repeatedly instructed the jury not to rely on stereotypes or rape myths. So the appeals
Court found that having Dr Haskell as an expert witness as well was essentially double handling.
The issue was not that trauma science is irrelevant or inaccurate. It was that the trial judge's
instructions to the jury already covered the same ground. But in the Hockey Canada trial,
two separate juries were dismissed, resulting in a judge-alone trial. And as the trier of fact,
it was ultimately Justice Karasea's choice about whether to consider the impact of trauma
in weighing the evidence and reaching her verdicts.
It's worth noting that there is only one place in the entire 90-page written decision
that any form of the word trauma appears, and that's the Hogarth reference I've just told you about.
As you'll recall from earlier in this series, the Supreme Court of Canada has repaired,
Heatedly emphasized the need to uphold equality and dignity in criminal law
by addressing myths and stereotypes about complainants and sexual assault cases.
In one recent decision known as R.V. Croc from 2024,
the Supreme Court found that such myths, quote,
jeopardize the court's truth-finding function,
impose harsh and irrelevant burdens,
and undermine a fair trial, which must be fair, not.
only to the accused, but also to the complainant and the public.
The decision also recognised that measures can be implemented to avoid reliance on these myths
without compromising the constitutional rights of the accused.
Justice Carousier even acknowledged this in writing, quote,
The court cannot and will not engage in stereotypical reasoning.
So why does it feel like the independent,
entire written decision for this case read like the very thing the judge said she would not do.
And why, when noting there was no evidence called about the science of how people react
to threatening situations, did the judge choose to put the word science in quotation marks?
As a member of the public, I find this troubling, coming from a judge acting as a trier of fact,
in one of the most complex and high-profile sexual assault cases Canada has ever seen.
Does it mean she doesn't believe in science? Or just that specific field of science,
the neurobiology of trauma? There's no way to know, but either are troubling.
And it defies logic to acknowledge that the court will not engage in stereotypical reasoning
about complainants in sexual assault cases, while simultaneously dismissing the
science that explains why they commonly react the way they do. In the following paragraph of the
written decision, Justice Carousier cites other case law to effectively state that judges are
already equipped to assess the credibility and reliability of witnesses based on their experience
and common knowledge. This is the framework she used to assess the witnesses. But I find this
troubling as well. Trauma responses like freezing, dissociation or appeasement and compliance
and the science behind it are not part of most people's common knowledge or experience unless
they've received specialized training or education. And there has been a strong push for this
kind of education for judges in Canada to give them the tools to recognize patterns of normal
trauma responses rather than interpret them as signs of unreliability.
based on stereotypical reasoning, but it hasn't happened yet.
Sexual assault complainants are likely already aware of the treatment they'll get from the
defense when they walk into a courtroom, but with no mandated judicial training,
they might end up getting that from a judge as well.
It's fair to say the Hockey Canada trial was not trauma-informed.
Once the science of trauma was dismissed, there was no framework to assist the court in
understanding why sexual assault complainants often react in ways that might seem confusing,
contradictory, or even counterintuitive.
Remember, enthusiastic consent is the goal.
If they're crying on and off and seem to be getting angry and frustrated after being
in an objectively humiliating position, that's not enthusiastic consent.
And in a sexual assault trial, when a court discards the inside of
of established trauma research entirely, the end result can only be that the complainant's
behaviour is judged against outdated notions of how a real victim would act.
This is directly at odds with the Supreme Court of Canada's clear direction on courts
striving to eradicate myths and stereotypes from their decisions.
And the conclusion can only be that her evidence is interpreted as unreliable.
And while it might not be the court's role to educate the public about trauma,
rape myths or the nuances of consent, every written decision has ripple effects far beyond the courtroom.
Judges don't just decide cases.
They shape how the public, the media and future courts understand sexual assault.
That means they have an opportunity and arguably a responsibility
to push back against harmful stereotypes and reflect the sexual assault.
the realities of trauma.
This ruling did the exact opposite, erasing trauma altogether, taking away the context of
EM's testimony and measuring it against those same rape myths and stereotypes, that a woman
who doesn't scream, fight or run away must be consenting, that smiling or nervous laughter
equals willingness, that if she didn't use the word fear in her first police statement,
she must not have been afraid.
And that's why we see the onus clearly shifted to EM
to prove she was scared enough or resisted enough
rather than the men not to exploit her.
To be clear, even if Justice Karasea didn't dismiss the science of trauma,
and instead chose to weigh EM's evidence
through a trauma-informed lens,
that doesn't mean the verdicts would have been any different.
It wouldn't have lowered the high burden
of proof required for conviction, but it would have raised the standard of justice and maintained
public trust in the justice system's ability to uphold the rule of law, maintain order and
ensure fairness. The judge could still have found all those hockey players not guilty
while also respecting the humanity and dignity of the complainant, and for some reason she
chose not to.
At this point, the file got too long, so I had to split it into two.
The rest of it will be available shortly. Within 24 hours, thanks again for your patience.
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