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| Injunction
put to constitutional test?
By Tony Gosgnach
There may yet be a glimmer
of hope in the legal situation that has seen Toronto pro-lifer Linda Gibbons
languish in jail for most of the last four years.
Gibbons continues to stay
behind bars at the Metro West Detention Centre in Rexdale, Ont. and refuses
to take steps to defend herself legally. But Milton, Ont.-based Christian
activist Ken Campbell has taken up the torch to challenge the “bubble-zone”
style court injunction that has both prohibited pro-life activity within
specified distances of certain Toronto abortion clinics, and has served
as the legal basis for keeping Gibbons in jail.
Crown attorneys have consistently
avoided giving Gibbons an opportunity to challenge the constitutionality
of the injunction. They have done so by charging her and having her convicted
for obstructing a peace officer and breaching probation. These convictions
have consistently drawn six-month prison sentences, the last such sentence
being levied against her on Dec. 18.
Campbell has similarly had
obstructing a peace officer charges laid against him, resulting in small
penalties such as a $100 fine. In this regard, he has been frustrated because
of his inability to challenge the constitutionality of the injunction.
To do that, he would have had to have had “disobeying a court order” charges
laid against him (which also would have afforded him the opportunity of
a jury trial).
On the latest occasion, Campbell
was arrested along with Gibbons last Sept. 2 and was originally charged
with disobeying a court order following an alleged transgression against
the injunction protecting the Cabbagetown Women’s Clinic on Gerrard Street
East in Toronto.
Sure enough, as has been
their habit, Crown attorneys notified Campbell Nov. 7 of a change in the
charge to one of obstructing a peace officer - once again. The difference
this time was that the Crown attorney indicated to Campbell he would be
free to raise Charter of Rights issues at the trial. Campbell has pounced
on the opportunity and plans to plead not guilty.
“We’re preparing at least
a couple of hours of submissions,” said Campbell, who is working with Brantford,
Ont. lawyer Paul Vandervet. “We believe the injunction violates Charter
provisions guaranteeing freedom of expression.”
The action may be the straw
that broke the camel’s back of the injunction. Although it was put in place
several years ago, the injunction remains officially “temporary” in nature
- probably because its proponents realize they would be unsuccessful in
a bid to make it permanent. As well, the repeated evasiveness of Crown
attorneys in dealing with injunction-related charges head on is a further
indication that the law wouldn’t withstand a serious legal challenge.
Despite the positive development,
a pall has been cast on the latest proceedings by the fact that the Crown
attorney assigned to Campbell’s case is none other than Michael Leshner
- a man whom Campbell describes as a prominent, outspoken lobbyist for
the “militant homosexual fringe” in the Toronto area, as well as an individual
whom Campbell has debated and criticized on his daily radio broadcast.
Campbell suspects it was
more than coincidence that Leshner was assigned to his case and is protesting
what he sees as a transgression against judicial impartiality. “We’re requesting
that he be removed entirely,” he said.
Campbell wrote in protest
to the director of Crown operations in the Toronto region and had his radio
program listeners swamp the director’s office with phone calls and faxes
as well.
“Obviously, the incompatibility
of (Leshner’s) dual public positions as representative of the militant
fringe of the homosexual community and of the Ontario justice system, leaves
us with considerable cause to question whether our expectation of justice
has not been severely jeopardized in my case currently before the courts,”
he said.
Campbell also called for
Leshner to be reassigned to another, less sensitive position within government.
“Surely, he can be removed from his position as senior Crown attorney and
reassigned to a government posting (without loss of salary), which would
assure the preservation of the perception and reality of the objectivity
and fairness of Ontario’s justice system.”
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