Showing posts with label charles smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label charles smith. Show all posts

Saturday, September 26, 2009

UP-DATE CHARLES SMITH; COMPLETE JUDGMENT FINDING THAT DISGRACED PATHOLOGIST INTENTIONALLY MISLED COURTS IN ORDER TO SECURE CONVICTIONS FOR THE CROWN;



"I reject the submission that Dr. Smith did not intentionally mislead the Court. The medical evidence provided to the Jury by Dr. Smith was deliberately calculated and directed to secure convictions. That medical evidence was inconsistent with his initial autopsy findings that the cause of death of Paolo Trotta could not be determined. That conclusion veered 180 degrees when Dr. Smith opined in carefully chosen and subsequently proven to be medically-flawed diagnosis, that Paolo Trotta died as a result of a skull fracture and/or was asphyxiated. This diagnosis was misleading, it had no forensic or medical merit, and as Dr. Avis concluded, that diagnosis was not accidental."

Justice A. Sosna; Motion for stay; Regina V. Marco and Anisa Trotta;

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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: In the following decision, Superior Court Justice Alexander Sosna becomes the first judge to rule that now disgraced pathologist Dr. Charles Smith - who may be responsible for more miscarriages of justice than any other individual in Canadian history - "intentionally mislead" courts in a manner that was "deliberately calculated and directed to secure convictions." The existence of a supposedly neutral Crown expert witness - falsely purporting to be a forensic pathologist - who was committed to obtaining convictions for the state, has to be every civilized criminal justice system's worse nightmare. This Blog is pleased to provide its readers with the entire judgment which was released - subject to a publication ban - on July 2, 2009. The ban is no longer in effect.

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"This is the ruling on the stay application for abuse of process. The Applicant, Marco Trotta, seeks a stay of proceedings at his retrial on charges of second degree murder, aggravated assault and assault bodily harm.

The Applicant, Anisa Trotta, brings the same application at her retrial on charges of criminal negligence causing death and failure to provide the necessities of life.

The convictions against both Applicants in 1998 involved the death of their child, Paolo Trotta. Paolo Trotta was eight months old when he died in 1995.

Marco Trotta was sentenced to life imprisonment with no parole for 15 years on a conviction for second degree murder and concurrent jail sentences on convictions for aggravated assault and assault bodily harm. Prior to his release on bail, pending retrial, he had spent nine years in custody.

Anisa Trotta was sentenced to five years in custody and had served her entire sentence prior to bail release pending retrial.

Both parties appealed their convictions to the Ontario Court of Appeal and their appeals were dismissed in 2004.

In 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada ordered a new trial based on fresh medical evidence, which successfully impugned the medical evidence given by Dr. Charles Smith and the evidence of Dr. David Chan, both of whom testified on behalf of the Crown. Both testified as to the medical causation leading to the death of the young child.

Approximately one year after the Supreme Court of Canada ordered a new trial, the Province of Ontario, by order-in-council, established the Goudge Inquiry. Its mandate was to review the systemic problems in the practice and oversight of pediatric forensic pathology in the Province of Ontario and to make recommendations in order to restore public confidence. The catalyst for that inquiry was Dr. Charles Smith.

It was determined by the Goudge Commission that Dr. Charles Smith in a number of trials, had testified and had reached “factual conclusions that were not reasonably supported by the materials available”.

One of those cases included the prosecution of Marco and Anisa Trotta.

Both Applicants submit that given the evidence of Dr. Charles Smith in the Trotta case, and his subsequent history of failures in evidence that he provided in other prosecutions, in light of the failure of other state actors, namely, the Office of the Attorney General, the Coroner’s Office and the College of Physicians and Surgeons, all of whom are associated with the Province of Ontario, it would be an abuse of process to proceed with a new trial as ordered by the Supreme Court of Canada.

Specifically, both parties submit that a retrial amounts to an unfair and oppressive treatment of them and disentitles the Crown to continue the prosecution.

Anisa Trotta also submits that given the dated history of this prosecution, she is unable to make full answer in defence to the charges she is facing. She submits that her present memory has become frail regarding the events alleged.

In the alternative, Marco Trotta submits that if the charges are not stayed, that the Court exercise its discretion to reduce the charge from one of second degree murder to one of manslaughter since the medical evidence the Crown intends to lead at the retrial cannot establish the medical cause of death of Paolo Trotta.

Both Applicants further submit that if the charges are not stayed, that the Court prohibit the Crown from introducing the evidence of Dr. David Chan as the Supreme Court of Canada has found his evidence at the first trial to be unreliable.

Lastly, Anisa Trotta submits that if the stay is not granted, the Crown application to read into evidence the testimony of Dr. Edward Glazier, not be permitted.

Legal Tests to be Applied

The Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Ryan has set out the test to be met in an abuse of process application seeking a stay of proceedings. Only in the clearest of cases will a stay of proceedings be granted if the following criteria are met:

1) The prejudice caused by the abuse will not be manifested or perpetuated through the trial proceedings or by its outcome. In this context, a small residual category of abusive action exists which may not affect trial fairness, but would still undermine the fundamental justice of the system. In this limited residual category, a stay of proceedings is only appropriate when the abuse is likely to continue or to be carried forward. Only in exceptional cases will past conduct be so egregious that proceeding with a new trial would be offensive.

2) No other remedy is reasonably capable of removing that prejudice.

3) When the Court is uncertain whether the ground submitted are sufficient to warrant a stay, a third criteria is considered. The interest that would be served by granting a stay of proceedings are to be balanced against the interest that society has in having a final decision on the merits.

A stay of proceedings is a prospective rather than a retroactive remedy.

In this application, counsel agree that the onus lies on the Applicants, on the balance of probabilities, for the Court to order a stay.

The Applicants’ Submission

Both Applicants submit that Dr. Charles Smith and Dr. David Chan, in 1998, provided false and misleading evidence as to the medical cause of death of Paolo Trotta. This evidence was pivotal in the Jury finding both Applicants guilty. At the time of providing his evidence, Dr. Chan was considered to be a leader, if not the foremost expert in investigations of suspicious child deaths.

Over the years, after the Trotta trial, Dr. Smith’s reputation began to erode and was publicly questioned due to flawed medical advice and evidence he provided in a number of subsequent pediatric death investigations and full prosecutions. Even though public concerns began to grow over Dr. Smith’s competence, he continued to testify before the courts on behalf of the Attorney General in pediatric death cases, and continued to receive the unflinching support of his superiors at the Office of the Chief Coroner. Criticism of Dr. Smith escalated. In 2008, the Province of Ontario established the Goudge Inquiry to review systemic problems in pediatric forensic pathology in Ontario. Dr. Smith was the catalyst for this inquiry.

The Applicants submit that from the date of convictions in 1998 to 2007, when the Supreme Court of Canada ordered a new trial, the Office of the Attorney General obstructed efforts to have Dr. Smith’s findings reviewed. As a result, the Applicants remained in custody until granted bail by the Supreme Court when a new trial was ordered.

The Applicants submit that given this history, the discredited medical evidence provided at trial assumes greater and more significant prejudice, not only to the Applicants, but to the entire administration of justice. On this basis, the Applicants submit that the Court exercise its discretion in favour of a stay of proceedings.

Testimony of Dr. Smith at the Trotta Trial

Prior to trial, Dr. Smith provided a report concluding that the cause of death of Paolo Trotta could not be determined. At trial, he abandoned this disgnosis and opined that after exhumation of the body, he observed a skull fracture, which was missed by Dr. Chan in the original autopsy. This skull fracture took on significant importance in Dr. Smith’s evidence. He testified that the skull fracture occurred within ten minutes and at a maximum of two days prior to Paolo’s death. He then linked observations of forehead bruising to evidence of a swollen brain within the skull, the weight of the brain being 30 to 37 percent above normal. Dr. Smith testified that these three factors were consistent with evidence of an impact to the head of the child, culminating in the skull fracture. He then provided the Jury with two opinions as to the cause of death. He stated that the child possibly died of a head injury, which was presumably non-accidental. Secondly, he opined that the child died of an asphyxial event. The asphyxia could have been caused by the head injury, or as a result of neck compression or smothering of the child.

He outlined to the Jury the means by which an infant could die by asphyxia. This included manual strangulation, or placing a film or dry cleaning bag over the face of the child, smothering the child with a pillow, rolling the child on his face while in bed, or pinching the nose and mouth to stop the flow of oxygen. There was no physical and forensic evidence to support these theories.

The Crown embraced the evidence of Dr. Smith as to his diagnosis, with reference both as to the cause of death, and the means by which death occurred. The Crown urged the Jury to accept this medical evidence. The Jury accepted this argument and convicted Marco Trotta of second degree murder, assault bodily harm and aggravated assault. Anisa Trotta was convicted of criminal negligence and failing to provide the necessities of life to their child, Paolo Trotta.

On October 13, 2005, at the request of the Coroner’s Office, Dr. Michael Pollanen, the Chief Forensic Pathologist for the Province of Ontario, prepared a report on Paolo Trotta’s death. By that date, significant press and public concerns had grown as to questionable medical evidence that Dr. Smith had provided in other prosecutions of child pediatric deaths.

In his report, Dr. Pollanen rejected the finding that the skull fracture observed after Paolo Trotta’s body was exumed was recent. Dr. Pollanen found this diagnosis to be erroneous and flawed. The skull fracture was not recent but well healed. Contrary to Dr. Smith’s findings, this skull fracture had not occurred with ten minutes or to at a maximum within two days of death.

At the request of the Applicants, a second opinion was provided by Dr. Simon Avis, the Chief Medical Examiner for the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador. Dr. Avis also concluded that the skull fracture found by Dr. Smith was not recent, but “a remote fracture showing unquestionable evidence of healing”. Dismmissing the significance of this fracture, as found by Dr. Smith, Dr. Avis stated, “To examine Paolo Trotta’s skull to see the fracture and to opine that the fracture is from ten minutes to utmost two days old, simply boggles my mind. I am at a loss why an acute fracture was even a consideration in determining the cause of death in this case.”

Both Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis dismissed Dr. Smith’s findings that Paolo Trotta died because of a head injury or asphyxiation. Dr. Avis found Smith’s diagnosis of manual strangulation to be irresponsible. He opined that evidence of petechial hemorrhages in the thymus and lungs of the infant were not consistent with manual strangulation as found by Dr. Smith. Dr. Avis concluded, “There is no evidence in fact – he can’t have said it accidentally.”

Dr. Pollanen not only rejected Smith’s diagnosis as to the cause of death, he also was highly critical of Dr. Smith’s florid and graphic language in describing to the Jury how a child could be asphyxiated. He viewed this evidence to be inappropriate and pejorative, particularly in the use of the term “coup de grace” to describe the final act of smothering the child, leading to his death.

In 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada discredited the evidence of Dr. Smith and ordered a new trial. The fresh evidence provided by Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis was central in this determination.

Findings of the Goudge Commission

The Applicants submit that the discredited medical evidence of Dr. Smith in the Trotta case takes on greater significance when examined in the context of the findings made by the Goudge Commission.

In the Goudge Commission Report, Dr. Smith’s rise and fall as a leading expert in pediatric pathology was detailed. Over two decades commencing in 1981, Dr. Smith’s reputation as a leader in pediatric pathology grew and received recognition not only in medical but also legal circles. Having worked with the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto in 1992, Dr. Smith was appointed Director of the newly established Ontario Forensic Pathology Unit at Sick Children’s Hospital. As noted by Justice Goudge, Dr. Smith, “...eventually came to dominate pediatric forensic pathology in Ontario. His experience seemed unequalled, and his manner broached no disagreement. He was widely seen as the expert to go to for the most difficult criminally suspicious pediatric deaths. In many of these cases, his views of the cause of death were the critical opinion, and figured prominently in the outcome.”

Before and after the Trotta case, the police and Crown placed significant reliance on Dr. Smith’s medical findings to initiate investigations of suspicious pedicatric infant deaths, and thereafter to commence prosecutions of those investigations. In a number of those cases, Dr. Smith’s medical opinion was found to be suspect and unreliable. As a result, homicide charges that were laid were withdrawn.

Trial evidence provided by Dr. Smith in pediatric death cases also drew public criticism and concern. It was not only the flawed evidence in the Trotta case, but also questionable evidence provided by Dr. Smith in a number of other pediatric death prosecutions that led to the formation of the Goudge Commission. Its mandate, as noted, was to review and report on the systemic problems in pediatric forensic pathology in Ontario. However, Dr. Smith again, as noted, was the chief catalyst for that review.

The failings of Dr. Smith were laid bare in the findings of the Goudge Commission. Although this Court is not bound by these findings, they are of assistance in assessing the merits of the Applicants’ Stay Application.

Amongst other things, Justice Goudge concluded that:

Dr. Smith violated a cardinal rule of scientific expertise especially when it is engaged by the justice system. The expert must be aware of the limits of his or her expertise, stay within them, and not exaggerate them to the Court. Dr. Smith did not observe this fundamental rule. Dr. Smith failed to understand that his role as an expert was not to support the Crown. The evidence also showed that, rather than acknowledging the limits of his expertise, Dr. Smith sometimes misled the Court by overstating his knowledge in a particular area. Dr. Smith sometimes failed to provide a balanced view of the evidence. He presented his opinion in a dogmatic and certain manner when the evidence was far from certain. There are instances where Dr. Smith offered opinions that were speculative, unsubstantiated, and not based on pathology findings. Dr. Smith did not always testify with the candor required of an expert witness. In some cases, he made false and misleading statements to the Court.

The Crown, in opposing the stay application, acknowledges that Dr. Smith made errors in his expert opinion in the Trotta case. The Crown concedes that Dr. Smith was demonstrably wrong with respect to his diagnosis of the cause of death. The Crown admits that Dr. Smith had gone beyond his expertise and engaged in speculative conclusions. The Crown concedes that Dr. Smith failed to make correct findings of fact. However, the Crown argues there is no evidence to suggest that Dr. Smith fabricated his evidence and committed perjury. At most, Dr. Smith was negligent, even grossly negligent, in his findings, but his errors were not a calculated fabrication.

Failed Oversight of Dr. Smith

In the late 1990’s, although Dr. Smith’s reputation publicly unravelled, he continued to perform autopsies. The concerns and criticisms from both the press and the public were ignored by those responsible for the oversight of his work. This oversight was the responsibility of Dr. Michael Young, Chief Coroner and Dr. David Cairns, Deputy Chief of the Ontario Coroner’s Office. As a physician, Dr. Smith was also overseen by the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons.

The findings of the Goudge Commission determined that the oversight of Dr. Smith from both bodies, failed. Both supervising bodies were more concerned with protecting their institutional reputations, than heeding and correcting Dr. Smith’s work.

A disciplinary hearing was held before the College of Physicians and Surgeons, reviewing alleged flawed medical opinion that Dr. Smith had provided in an investigation of a suspicious child death in 1995. Dr. Smith determined that the child had died of a blunt head injury. He advised CAS he was 99 percent sure that the child’s death was non-accidental, being caused by the mother.

Dr. Smith’s diagnosis was reviewed and subsequently disputed by two expert pathologists. Ultimately, the Crown over a two-year period determined that there was no reasonable prospect of conviction and no charges were laid.

The family of the suspect subsequently retained a further opinion from a noted pathologist who opined that Dr. Smith’s conclusion about the suspected death exceeded the boundaries of scientific and forensic evidence.

As a result, a complaint was launched by the family to the College of Physicians and Surgeons.

After four years, the hearing concluded by verbally cautioning Dr. Smith, but not calling for any further investigations, sanctions or prohibitions.

The College explained their actions to the Goudge Commission by submitting that had they received complaints about Dr. Smith from the Hospital for Sick Children and the Coroner’s Office, in addition to the private complaint being reviewed, a shorter and differently focused investigation may have been possible. However, since they received no complaints from the Coroner’s Office or the Hospital for Sick Children, a more expedited review was not available.

Further, the Goudge Commission found that the Ontario Coroner’s Office provided the Crown and Defence with misleading information regarding their review of Dr. Smith’s questionable practice in other pediatric death prosecutions. In October 2001, Dr. James Cairns, in correspondence to the Crown which was forwarded to defence counsel, made the following three representations:

1) Twenty of Dr. Smith’s cases had been reviewed;

2) There was no suggestion that Dr. Smith was incompetent or negligent in those cases; and

3) Dr. Smith was competent to conduct autopsies and was returned to the Autopsy Roster in June 2001.

As found by Justice Goudge, none of these representations were correct.

Subsequently, in July 2002, Dr. Cairns reported to the Crown that he had personally reviewed the Trotta file and determined there was a complete consistency between Dr. Smith’s opinion and that of other medical experts. He saw no contradictions and had no concern about the autopsy report or medical findings. In his opinion, nothing would be served by doing anything further or seeking any other opinions. The Goudge Commission found this report to be misleading. Dr. Cairns’ opinion was of little value since he later admitted he was not a pathologist and thus, not qualified to render any opinion as to Dr. Smith’s competence in pathology.

With the Trotta appeal pending before the Ontario Court of Appeal, the Defence in 2002 requested a further updated report from Dr. Cairns to consider the merits of an application for the introduction of fresh medical evidence. On September 27, 2002, Dr. Cairns provided his report. In a one-page report he concluded, “I have no concerns regarding the opinion by Dr. Smith and see no reason whatsoever for our office or the Crown Attorney to hire another expert.” In response to the Crown on October 2002, the Defence advised that, “I have received the brief opinion of Dr. Cairns. We will not be tendering fresh evidence unless something comes up that postdates this letter.”

As public and private concerns over Dr. Smith’s practices escalated, Dr. Young, the Chief Coroner for the Province of Ontario steadfastly supported Dr. Smith. As found by the Goudge Commission, this support was misguided. The purpose of this support was not to protect the public, but to protect the reputation of the Ontario Coroner’s Office:

As the end neared, Dr. Young was more concerned with the possibility of the adverse publicity that Dr. Smith might bring to OCCO than about the possible impact of Dr. Smith’s shortcomings on OCCO’s responsibility for high-quality death investigations. He gave no thought as to whether the office might have played a role in past wrongful convictions as a result of Dr. Smith’s work. Finally, as the last act played out, Dr. Young continued to defend the indefensible in the name of saving the reputation of the OCCO. In the end, as Chief Coroner, Dr. Young, must bear the ultimate responsibility for the failure of oversight. When he finally did act it was to protect the reputation of his office and not out of concern that individuals in the public interest may have already been harmed. Sadly, the defacto oversight of Dr. Smith that resulted was far too little, far too late.

Conduct of the Attorney General’s Department

The Applicants further submit that their ability to investigate and appeal the findings of Dr. Smith were thwarted and obstructed by the Office of the Attorney General. The Applicant, Marco Trotta, submits that these efforts culminated in Crown Counsel misleading the Supreme Court of Canada in 2007 in her submissions during the fresh evidence appeal.

The Crown vehemently denies any misconduct by the Attorney General’s Office. The Crown submits that these allegations are without foundation and manifestly spurious. The Crown argues that throughout the trial, and thereafter during the appeal periods, the Crown acted in good faith, unaware of Dr. Smith’s deficiencies until fresh medical evidence was provided by Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis. Contrary to the submissions of both Applicants, the Crown submits that it had no knowledge of the earlier concerns, criticisms and negative findings made by Mr. Justice Dunn with reference to expert medical evidence provided by Dr. Smith in the prosecution of R. v. M.S. in 1991.

In 1985, M.S., a 13-year-old was charged with manslaughter involving the death of an infant she was babysitting. The central issue in that case was the cause of the death alleged to be a violent shaking of the child.

During the course of the police investigation, Dr. Smith provided the authorities his opinion that the infant died at the hands of the babysitter when the child was violently shaken. That diagnosis was pivotal to laying the charge of manslaughter and central during the trial. At trial, Dr. Smith testified that the cause of death was a violent shaking of the infant. This diagnosis was challenged by several defence medical experts, and ultimately rejected by the trial Justice.

In acquitting the young person, Justice Dunn did not find that the M.S. case was one of conflicting expert evidence, that given the burden of proof he determined had to be resolved in favour of the Defence. Rather Justice Dunn made highly critical findings as to the credibility and reliability of Dr. Smith’s trial evidence.

Years later, Justice Goudge in his findings observed that the M.S. decision was “a harbinger of things to come” and “prophetic”, concluding “most of the weaknesses that Justice Dunn identified in Dr. Smith’s forensic pathology, reappeared in Dr. Smith’s work in criminally suspicious cases over the next decade.”

In January 1992 after the acquittal of M.S., representatives from the Hospital for Sick Children, Dr. Smith, and Crown counsel involved in the M.S. prosecution met to discuss Justice Dunn’s Reasons for Judgment. The meeting ended with all parties concluding that Justice Dunn acquitted M.S. because he did not understand the shaken baby syndrome as diagnosed by Dr. Smith. As a result, no further steps were taken to investigate, correct, and if necessary oversee the practices of Dr. Smith.

The Applicants submit that the Attorney General’s Department should have become aware, should have known, or should have at a minimum investigated and heeded the concerns raised by Justice Dunn. Yet, no further action was taken.

In the alternative, the Applicants submit that given the importance of Justice Dunn’s decision as early as 1992, the Attorney General’s Office should have disclosed this judgment to the defence bar. Having failed to do so, the defence at trial was prejudiced to be able to make full answer and defence to the charges.

I find the Applicants’ submission on these two issues to be of marginal, if any weight. In retrospect, given Dr. Smith’s discredited evidence in other prosecutions after both the M.S. decision and the Trotta case, the M.S. decision in 1992 takes on “prophetic” importance as found by Justice Goudge. However, in 1992 Dr. Smith was still cloaked with his esteemed and virtually bullet-proof reputation as an expert pathologist. Opinions of other experts who testified in the M.S. case were then disregarded. They may have raised a reasonable doubt, but raised no concern given Dr. Smith’s then unblemished reputation.

I further agree that the Crown has no obligation to conduct legal research for an accused party. The judgment of Mr. Justice Dunn was in the public forum. It was a released judgment and available for counsel to access. In any event, although in the public forum, there is no evidence to conclude that the trial Crowns in the Trotta case were aware of the Ruling of Justice Dunn and its criticisms.

Therefore, the 2009 Supreme Court of Canada decision of R. v. McNeil, (2009), S.C.C. (3), obligating the Crown to inform the Defence of potentially relevant evidence pertaining to credibility or reliability of witnesses, has no applicability to the relief sought in this matter.

Furthermore, the submission of Marco Trotta that an adverse inference may be drawn that the Appellate Crown obstructed the Defendant’s efforts for appeal before the Ontario Court of Appeal, is also rejected. Equally, the submission that the Appellate Crown misled the Supreme Court of Canada in her submissions, is rejected.

Prior to the Court of Appeal hearing in 2004, the Appellate Crown refused the Applicants’ production application for the release of Coroner’s and prosecution files involving Dr. Smith. This opposition was made on the basis of relevance, privacy, and confidentiality of third parties. This position was arguable and not without merit.

Before the Supreme Court of Canada, the Appellate Crown responded to an inquiry from the Court submitting that Dr. Smith’s trial evidence did not touch on any medical diagnosis regarding previous injuries to the infant child. Having reviewed and considered Crown Counsel’s submissions to the Supreme Court, I conclude the statements of the Appellate Crown not to be misrepresentations, but amount to no more than misstatements which had little or no bearing on the final decision rendered by the Supreme Court.

Finding of the Court Re: Stay Application

Dr. Smith was the catalyst for the Goudge Inquiry. He was also the catalyst who provided critical medical evidence that led to the convictions of both Applicants. Lastly, he was the catalyst whose evidence the Supreme Court discredited in ordering a new trial.

As previously noted, the Crown submits that although Dr. Smith was clearly wrong in his evidence, he did not lie or intentionally mislead the Court in the Trotta trial. Therefore, any flaws in Dr. Smith’s evidence do not demonstrate that his errors constitute “the clearest of cases” where the integrity of the judicial system would be irreparably prejudiced or where prejudice arises to the accused if a stay of proceedings is not granted.

I reject the submission that Dr. Smith did not intentionally mislead the Court. The medical evidence provided to the Jury by Dr. Smith was deliberately calculated and directed to secure convictions. That medical evidence was inconsistent with his initial autopsy findings that the cause of death of Paolo Trotta could not be determined. That conclusion veered 180 degrees when Dr. Smith opined in carefully chosen and subsequently proven to be medically-flawed diagnosis, that Paolo Trotta died as a result of a skull fracture and/or was asphyxiated. This diagnosis was misleading, it had no forensic or medical merit, and as Dr. Avis concluded, that diagnosis was not accidental.

The Applicants were convicted because both the Crown and the Jury erroneously relied on Dr. Smith’s then esteemed reputation and misguided diagnosis. This diagnosis was subsequently discredited by Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis.

Dr. Smith’s discredited conduct and evidence cannot be viewed in the isolated prism of the Trotta case, as submitted by the Crown. Similar discredited and flawed medical findings were made by Dr. Smith, both before and after the Trotta case as in the M.S. decision and subsequently in a number of other pediatric death prosecutions, some of which have been determined to be unlawful convictions. Tragically, Dr. Smith’s flawed evidence in all of these cases mirrors his discredited evidence in the Trotta case. Therefore, contrary to the Crown’s position, Dr. Smith’s evidence in the Trotta case was not an anomaly, but consistent with his history of securing convictions in suspicious pediatric deaths, notwithstanding medical evidence to the contrary.

As public and press concerns escalated over the practices of Dr. Smith, the Ontario Coroner’s Office sheltered and protected him. It did so for the sake of preserving the institutional reputation of its organisation at the cost of keeping the public in the dark, while permitting Dr. Smith to conduct autopsies and provide evidence before the courts. The cost of this protection was the loss of public confidence both in the Coroner’s Office and the administration of justice.

The totality of these circumstances has a bearing in determining whether the stay of proceedings is granted or not. As observed in R. v. Conway:

Abuse of process acknowledges that the courts must have the respect and support of the community in order that the administration of justice properly fulfill its function. Consequently, where the affront to fair play and decency is disproportionate to the societal interests in the effective prosecution of criminal cases, then the administration of justice is best served by staying of proceedings.

However, the same Court continued:

It must always be remembered that the stay of proceeding is only appropriate ‘in the clearest of cases’ where the prejudice to the accused’s right to make full answer in defence cannot be remedied, or where irreparable injustice would be caused to the integrity of the judicial system if the prosecution was continued.

Regarding the issue of prejudice to the accused’s right to make full answer and defence, the Crown submits that at the retrial, it will not call Dr. Smith as a witness, or make any reference to him in evidence. The Crown will make available the evidence of both Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis who will testify, unlike Dr. Smith, that the medical cause of death of Paolo Trotta cannot be determined. The Crown submits that by focusing the prosecution in this fashion, any prejudice to the Applicants will either be negated or greatly minimised. The Crown submits that this “remedy is reasonably capable of removing prejudice” and a stay is not required.

I agree with the Crown’s proposition on this point.

Regarding the second question, even if trial fairness is not affected, would the continuation of the prosecution still cause irreparable prejudice to the integrity of the justice system. As already noted, it is necessary to determine this question on the entire history of Dr. Smith’s findings, in addition to the flawed medical diagnosis provided by him in the Trotta prosecution.

As previously noted, the stay of proceedings is a prospective rather than retroactive remedy. In Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Tobias, 118 C.C.C. (3d) 442, S.C.C. at paragraph 91 the Court observed:

A stay of proceedings does not redress a wrong that has already been done. It aims to prevent the perpetuation of a wrong that if left alone will continue. The mere fact that the state has treated an individual shabbily is not enough to warrant a stay of proceedings. It must appear that the state misconduct is likely to continue or the carrying forward of the prosecution will offend society’s sense of justice. There may be exceptional cases in which past misconduct is so egregious that the mere fact of going forward in light of it will be offensive. But such cases should be relatively rare.

The Supreme Court of Canada has already discredited the evidence of Dr. Smith in the Trotta trial. The Goudge Commission further discredited evidence Dr. Smith provided in other pediatric death prosecutions. Dr. Smith’s conduct in the Trotta case was not an anomaly, it was not an isolated incident. In this context the state through the evidence of Dr. Smith has mistreated the Applicants.

However, the Crown submits that in a retrial that mistreatment will not be perpetuated since it does not intend to call Dr. Smith to testify. In lieu of Dr. Smith, the Crown intends to make available the balanced evidence of Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis for the Jury to consider.

Although this court is greatly disturbed by the stain that Dr. Smith and his superiors have left on the administration of justice, this past conduct is not so egregious that “irreparable injustice would be caused to the integrity of the judicial system if the prosecution was continued”.

It must be kept in mind that although this abuse of process application is largely focused on Dr. Smith, the retrial is not about Dr. Smith, but about the deceased, eight-month-old Paolo Trotta.

At a retrial even absent medical evidence of causation of death, the Crown still has an evidentiary basis to proceed with the prosecution.

Dr. Pollanen aptly set out the distinction between the lack of medical evidence as to cause of death, and the legal test to be applied in these circumstances:

On this basis the best cause of death of Paolo Trotta is unascertained. My definition of the cause of death as unascertained is that there is not emperical/medical evidence that allows a pathologist to decide on a definitive cause of death. Logically this implies that both natural and unnatural causes of death are possible based on the emperical facts evidence. This applies to the death of Paolo Trotta. Whatever inferences can or should be made about an unlawful killing in the Trotta case does not flow directly from the unascertained cause of death. However, the fact the death occurred after chronic child abuse may be relevant in making a judgment about an unlawful killing. Of course making a judgment about an unlawful killing is not the duty or responsibility of the pathologist; that duty rests solely with the trier of fact.

A stay of proceedings is truly a drastic remedy. A stay of proceedings is tantamount to an acquittal in that it effectively brings the criminal proceedings to a final conclusion in favour of the accused because of state misconduct both in the past and anticipated to continue in the future. As already found, past misconduct will not be revisited in the retrial. Further, the evidence presently available even absent proof of medical causation of death still provides a basis on which to continue the prosecution.

It is incumbent on the court to consider the compelling public interest in having allegations of criminal conduct determined on their merits. All criminal allegations are serious, particularly so when they involve the death of an infant child.

Having considered all of the submissions, and giving full measure of the gravity of Dr. Smith’s flawed and misguided conduct, I am satisfied that the community sense of fair play and justice would not be offended by ordering a new trial. Accordingly, the Applicant’s application to stay of the proceedings for abuse of process is dismissed.

The interests of the community and the administration of justice are not undermined by having a jury properly instructed be given the task to consider the evidence and decide the case.

Application to Reduce the Charge to Second Degree Murder

Marco Trotta submits that the Court exercise its discretion in this stay of proceedings application, to reduce the pending charge of second degree murder to manslaughter. The Applicant argues that the charge of manslaughter is the appropriate offence to put to the Jury since the Crown concedes that it cannot prove the medical cause of death of Paolo Trotta.

On the basis of R. v. Nette, (20020, 158 C.C.C. (3d) 486 at paragraph 77 S.C.C., I dismiss the Applicants argument:

The Crown is not required to establish the medical cause of death in a homicide case although it almost inevitably does so. Nor is the Crown required to demonstrate that a specific act or event caused the death, although the Crown usually attempts to do so. The Crown must prove that the death was caused by an unlawful act and that the accused is responsible for that act.

Mr. Justice Doherty cited this principle in dismissing the Applicant’s relief to quash the homicide related counts as being unreasonable. He found in paragraph 31 of his judgment:

There was cogent, if not overwhelming evidence that P.T. was a battered child and that M.T. was his abuser. On the evidence, the jury could find that the physical abuse escalated during P.T.’s life and continued until very shortly before P.T.’s death. On the totality of this evidence, a reasonable jury could conclude that the pattern of abuse of P.T. by M.T. culminated in P.T.’s death at the hands of M.T. This finding was available even if the jury could not decide the exact nature of the final assault.

In 2007, the Supreme Court of Canada in ordering a new trial came to the same conclusion, in dismissing the Applicant’s argument that they be acquitted on the counts of murder and criminal negligence causing death. The Court stated in paragraph seven:

We are satisfied that acquittals would at this stage be inappropriate, since we are not prepared to say that there remains no evidence upon which a properly instructed jury, acted reasonably, could find the Appellants guilty to homicide related offences of which they were convicted at trial.

Application to Prohibit Dr. Chan from Testifying at the Retrial

The Applicants submit that the Court exercise its discretion to prohibit the Crown from calling Dr. Chan at the retrial because the Supreme Court of Canada found his evidence to be unreliable.

The trial transcript confirms serious flaws in the autopsy performed by Dr. Chan, since he failed to preserve evidence that may rule out both natural and unnatural causes of death. Both Dr.’s Pollanen and Avis have concluded that the original autopsy was not performed properly, even given the standards of the time.

After completing the autopsy, Dr. Chan concluded that Paolo Trotta died as a result of SIDS, Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. No criminal charges were laid at that time against the Trottas.

Subsequently, after the body was exumed and re-examined by Dr. Smith, Dr. Chan abandoned his original diagnosis and acceded to the diagnosis made by Dr. Smith. As events later proved, Dr. Smith’s diagnosis was seriously flawed.

Having abandoned his original diagnosis of SIDS, Dr. Chan testified that Paolo Trotta died as a result of a head injury or asphixia. To the extent that his autopsy findings contradicted this evidence, Dr. Chan was openly critical of his own autopsy and unquestionably deferred to the findings made by Dr. Smith.

Given Dr. Chan’s errors and contradictions, the Supreme Court of Canada found him to be an unreliable witness. Anisa Trotta submits that it would be unfair to permit him to testify. She submits that if Dr. Chan were permitted to testify, she would be forced to discredit him by using the evidence of Dr. Smith. To put her in the position of adducing the evidence of Dr. Smith to discredit Dr. Chan would be improper since no jury for any purpose should ever hear the opinions of Dr. Smith.

In R. v. Buric, 28 O.R. (3d) 737, the trial justice found that a Crown witness was tainted. He determined that the admission of that tainted testimony would render the trial unfair. Rather than grant a stay of proceedings, the trial justice ordered that the tainted witness be prevented from giving evidence at trial. The accused was acquitted, and the Crown appealed.

The Court of Appeal found:

The admission of evidence, which may be unreliable, does not per se render a trial unfair. It is for the jury to assess the quality of the evidence. The trial judge erred in concluding that the tainting was a question of admissibility of evidence rather than its weight.

The nature and extent of any cross-examination of Dr. Chan is within the discretion and control of the defence. Reference to Dr. Smith, although an unhappy choice to make in cross-examination, is for the defence to assess and make. It is then open for the jury to assess the credibility or lack thereof of the witness being cross-examined.

In the Buric decision, the Court of Appeal found that the exclusion of the evidence of the tainted witness would have the same practical effect as a stay of proceedings. In the present matter, the absence of Dr. Chan’s testimony would terminate the prosecution of all charges. This result would have the same practical effect as a stay of proceedings, which the Court has already declined.

Anisa Trotta’s Application for Stay Because of Loss of Memory

Anisa Trotta submits that a stay of proceedings be granted because she is unable to make full answer and defence to the charges she is facing. The Applicant submits that 16 years have passed since the death of her child. Over that time her memory has faded as to events that had occurred. Although she chose not to testify at the first trial, that decision was made in light of the nature and strength of the case that as presented.

Other witnesses who did choose to testify presently have the ability to review their trial evidence. The Applicant submits she has been deprived of that choice.

The Court recognises that a delay of 16 years may affect and erode memory. However, other than the general submission, there has been no affidavit or viva voce evidence introduced to support the argument proposed.

Should the Applicant choose to testify at her retrial, as with every other witness, the weight of her evidence would be assessed by a jury. A less than perfect memory after 16 years is a factor the jury may consider to be either favourable or contrary to the credibility of the Applicant. That determination is best made by the trier of fact.

Accordingly, Anisa Trotta’s application on this argument is also dismissed.

Lastly, Anisa Trotta’s submission that the Crown not be permitted to read into evidence the testimony of Dr. Edward Glazier at the retrial is more appropriately to be determined by the trial justice.

For all the aforementioned reasons, the Applicant’s relief on all grounds as sought is dismissed"

Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Thursday, June 11, 2009

JURYGATE: HOW FAR WILL PROSECUTORS GO TO WIN? CALLING TAINTED EXPERTS? ORDERING POLICE TO SECRETLY SCREEN POTENTIAL JURORS; VICTORY AT ANY COST?



"Critics warn the controversy could unleash a flood of defence challenges in Ontario, and a possible class-action lawsuit against police and the province.

"All these previous jury trials may be re-opened, just like it happened in the Dr. (Charles) Smith pediatric pathologist case, where they reopened all those trials where he gave testimony," said Greg Goulin, one of the defence lawyers in the Windsor mistrial.

"If it's found that it was done in other jury trials, it's possible that they could be reopened.""

THE CANADIAN PRESS;
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The Canadian Press reports that Ontario information and privacy commissioner Anne Cavoukian has launched a probe of secret jury screenings conducted by Ontario police forces, including the Ontario Provincial Police, at the request of prosecutors;

The story runs with a Toronto Star photo of Cavoukian at the Ontario legislature last year.

"MILTON – Ontario's privacy czar launched a probe today into secret background checks on potential jurors, a practice which critics say could jeopardize court cases across the province," the story begins;

"The investigation will focus on whether privacy rights were violated when police used confidential databases to probe the background of would-be jurors for Crown prosecutors, said Information and Privacy Commissioner Ann Cavoukian," it continues;

"The probe is also necessary because the practice seems to be more widespread than the government had first indicated, she added.

"Initially, the attorney general advised that this practice was restricted to one courthouse in Simcoe County," Cavoukian said in a release.

"Since then, we have learned that the practice extends to at least one other courthouse, and possibly others. As a result, we will be conducting our own investigation into this matter."

The review will try to gauge how far the practice has spread, as well as examine what kind of personal information was collected, why it was gathered, who saw it, and whether it was adequately protected.

The controversy began last week in Barrie, where two jury panels were sent home before selection started after the defence argued that the Crown had tainted them by enlisting police to conduct background checks.

The practice also prompted counsel for Ibrahim Yumnu and two others who were convicted of first-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder to ask Ontario's top court to re-open their appeal.

Then on Tuesday, a Windsor judge declared a mistrial in a first-degree murder trial – after two months of hearing evidence – because of jury vetting.

Ontario Superior Court Justice Bruce Thomas told jurors that he found the process in their case "to be offensive."

There's also a case in Thunder Bay where an "extensive check" was done, but wasn't used in selecting the jury and both parties agreed to proceed to trial, Attorney General Chris Bentley said Wednesday.

Under Canadian law, background checks on jurors are supposed to be conducted only for the most serious convictions. The Crown or defence counsel are only supposed to know the name, address and occupation of prospective jurors.

Critics warn the controversy could unleash a flood of defence challenges in Ontario, and a possible class-action lawsuit against police and the province.

"All these previous jury trials may be re-opened, just like it happened in the Dr. (Charles) Smith pediatric pathologist case, where they reopened all those trials where he gave testimony," said Greg Goulin, one of the defence lawyers in the Windsor mistrial.

"If it's found that it was done in other jury trials, it's possible that they could be reopened."

The province called a public inquiry into the disgraced pathologist's work, which criticized Smith last October for ``irresponsible" testimony in a series of child death cases. Many of them were overturned in court.

In the Windsor case, city police provided the Crown with detailed information about potential jurors, including dropped charges and criminal convictions that should have been sealed, Goulin said. Two jurors were noted as "disliking" police.

The defence was provided with a jurors list that only included names, addresses and jobs, he said.

The information, obtained from a police database that is supposed to help them enforce the law, was used to "give the Crown an edge in picking a jury," Goulin said.

A large number of convictions are now in doubt and Bentley has to come clean about how long this practice has been going on, opposition parties said.

NDP justice critic Peter Kormos wants the matter to be investigated by the province's ombudsman, while interim Progressive Conservative leader Bob Runciman says it may require a full-blown inquiry.

"One fear is that it's a practice across the province," said Kormos.

"The attorney general was dancing a fine dance when he tried to leave the impression that it only happened in Barrie and that it had been curtailed some time ago – clearly, that's not the case."

Both Bentley and Premier Dalton McGuinty say the background checks are unacceptable and steps have been taken to stop the practice.

"They have been happening, obviously, in some cases, and all that we can do at this point in time is to make sure that they stop," McGuinty said.

The province's chief prosecutor has sent a directive to all 54 Crown offices telling them they must follow the rules and has phoned each one to find out if such background checks were conducted, Bentley said.

If there any such lists for any ongoing cases, the Crowns have been instructed to disclose them to the defence and take "all necessary steps, including asking for new jury panels," he said.

"It was clear from the call-around that this was not a widespread practice," Bentley added.

However, he acknowledged that a virtually identical directive was sent out in March 2006.

Bentley said he welcomes the privacy commissioner's involvement and will co-operate fully with her investigation.

The Ontario Provincial Police also said it welcomed the probe.

"The OPP takes the privacy of information in our possession very seriously. We will work co-operatively with the information and privacy commissioner towards developing sound policies and practices to protect the confidentiality of personal information," said Commissioner Julian Fantino in a statement."

Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

JURYGATE: HOW FAR WILL PROSECUTORS GO TO WIN? CALLING TAINTED EXPERTS? ORDERING POLICE TO SECRETLY SCREEN POTENTIAL JURORS; VICTORY AT ANY COST?



"UNDER CANADIAN LAW, BACKGROUND CHECKS ON JURORS ARE SUPPOSED TO BE CONDUCTED ONLY FOR THE MOST SERIOUS CONVICTIONS. BUT AMONG THE COMMENTS WRITTEN BESIDE PROSPECTIVE JURORS' NAMES, PROVIDED TO THE CROWN BY A WINDSOR POLICE DETECTIVE, WERE "DISLIKES POLICE.""

COURTS REPORTER PETER SMALL: TORONTO STAR;

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Why didn't Ontario prosecutors examine Dr. Charles Smith's qualifications a bit more closely over the years, pay more attention to court decisions suggesting he was biased towards the Crown and that that his opinions were seriously flawed - or at least share the existence of these decisions with the defence?

The answer, according to this humble Bloggist, is that the prosecutors cared more about winning the case than the possibility that an innocent person might be convicted;

Skeptics might respond that this is a cheap shot because in Ontario's criminal justice system a prosecutor is an officer of the court who is required to protect the rights of the accused.

I suggest that our readers can make up their own minds as to whether prosecutors occasionally look the other way when calling an expert such as Smith - whose very involvement in a case was enough to cause innocent persons to plead guilty to horrific crimes they did not commit - after reading the following story in today's Toronto Star by my former colleague Peter Small;

The story runs under the heading: "Secret jury screening spreads to Windsor" and the sub-heading: "A Windsor judge has declared a mistrial in a murder case because the Crown had the police do secret background checks on jurors."

A second sub-heading reads: "Lawyers demand action as mistrial shows practice isn't limited to Barrie."

"WINDSOR – A judge here has declared a mistrial in a murder case because the Crown had police do secret background checks on jurors – a development that has lawyers predicting a flood of defence challenges," the story begins.

"The ruling shows that the secret screening of potential jurors isn't confined to Barrie, which saw a recent mistrial and the dismissal of two jury panels last week," it continues;

"Attorney General Chris Bentley said yesterday he still does not believe the practice is widespread.

But Greg Goulin, one of the defence counsel in the Windsor trial, predicted a rush of inquiries by members of the defence bar.

"There is no question that for every case under appeal, perhaps for every case where a jury sat, there's going to be probably letters going from the counsel that appeared in those cases to Crowns and prosecutors in those cases saying, `Did you vet the jury in this case?'" he told reporters.

Frank Addario, president of the Criminal Lawyers' Association, urged Bentley to address the issue head on.

"In our view, the attorney general should not let this fester," said Addario. "That just creates suspicion and uncertainty."

Peter Kormos, the provincial NDP justice critic, said that Bentley has not been straightforward about the extent to which "these highly inappropriate background checks have been taking place."

Kormos said Bentley has created a scenario where a large number of convictions are now in doubt.

He said it's imperative that Ontarians know how long this "illegal" conduct has been going on, and who has been doing it.

Bentley said yesterday that the province's chief prosecutor, John Ayre, has issued a directive to stop wide-ranging background checks and is phoning all Crowns' offices as a follow-up.

Where pre-existing lists of such broadly screened jurors do exist, Crowns are instructed to disclose them to the defence and "take whatever steps are necessary, including starting with a new panel," Bentley said in an interview.

In Windsor's Superior courthouse yesterday, after two months of hearing evidence in the first-degree murder trial of Richard Zoldi and Shane Huard, Ontario Superior Court Justice Bruce Thomas dismissed the jurors, informing them that he had declared a mistrial because of jury vetting. Thomas told jurors that he found the process in their case "to be offensive."

Under Canadian law, background checks on jurors are supposed to be conducted only for the most serious convictions. But among the comments written beside prospective jurors' names, provided to the Crown by a Windsor police detective, were "dislikes police."

Other jury candidates were cited as having criminal associates.

There were references to marijuana and other criminal charges (but not convictions), young offender records, provincial offence tickets, and people with conditional discharges or pardons for criminal offences.

The judge said he doubted that citizens who had dealings with the Windsor police contemplated that the Crown would be using their information when they were called up for jury duty.

Jury vetting beyond serious criminal checks has been condemned by critics as an invasion of privacy and, if not illegal, incorrect.

Under Canadian law, all Crown or defence counsel are supposed to know are the name, address and occupation of prospective jurors.

Under the Juries Act, the local court Sheriff must keep lists of jurors under "lock and key" until 10 days before jury selection.

But in three cases in Barrie challenged by defence counsel in recent weeks, the Crown has had the lists several weeks before jury selection and has been asking Ontario Provincial Police detachments and some local police forces in Simcoe County to conduct background checks on candidates.

The controversy led OPP Commissioner Julian Fantino to make a statement Monday stressing that the force has stopped the practice since the story first broke on May 25 and has been reviewing its policies "to ensure that OPP policy reflects the privacy rights of individuals."

In the Windsor case, Huard, 27, a former amateur boxing sensation, and Zoldi, 31, are accused in the 2006 shooting death of Windsor drug dealer Troy Hutchinson, 28.

Goulin, who represented Huard, and Kirk Munroe, acting for Zoldi, challenged the fairness of the jury selection after the issue came to light.

The background information, obtained from Windsor police databases, was not disclosed to the defence and was used by prosecutors in rejecting prospective jurors, the judge found.

Jury selection with new panels resumes in the murder trial July 6.

"What was done here just went overboard," Goulin told reporters, adding that it breached their rights to privacy, freedom of association and expression.

Munroe said that juries are supposed to be a buffer between the state and citizens.

The whole process of police vetting juries attacks this principle, he told reporters. "It's frightening what they did."

It appears the practice has been going on in Barrie for at least four years.

It was cited by Toronto lawyer Greg Lafontaine as a new ground of appeal over the 2005 jury selection in the first-degree murder trial that led to the conviction of his client, Ibrahim Yumnu.

The appeal is being watched closely by the attorney general's ministry and Ontario's information and privacy commissioner.

James Morton, a defence lawyer and past president of the Ontario Bar Association, said he believes that defence lawyers will now focus on this case more intensely and several will seek to re-examine old cases.

But he too said he does not believe the broad Crown-initiated jury screening is widespread. "It's not proper," he said."

With files from Betsy Powell and Tracey Tyler

The story can be found at:
http://www.thestar.com/news/ontario/article/648347

Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;

Sunday, June 7, 2009

TORONTO STAR PERSPECTIVE ON FORMER CHIEF CORONER DR. JAMES YOUNG; ROLE HE PLAYED IN CHARLES SMITH TRAVESTY; YOUNG RESIGNS FROM COLLEGE; CAIRNS TOO;


"YESTERDAY, AN OVERHAULED CORONERS ACT WAS GIVEN ROYAL ASSENT TO ENSURE SUCH TRAGEDIES NEVER HAPPEN AGAIN. THE LEGISLATION REQUIRES, FOR THE FIRST TIME, THAT THE PROVINCE’S CHIEF CORONER BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE TO AN OVERSIGHT COUNCIL. AND IT PAVES THE WAY FOR THE CREATION OF A COMPLAINTS COMMITTEE THAT WILL TRACK COMPLAINTS ABOUT CORONERS AND PATHOLOGISTS.

THE NEW LEGISLATION COINCIDES WITH YOUNG’S RESIGNATION AS A MEMBER OF THE COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS OF ONTARIO. EFFECTIVE THIS PAST MONDAY, IT MEANS HE CAN NO LONGER PRACTISE MEDICINE IN THE PROVINCE...

THE BAD NEWS FOR YOUNG DIDN’T END WITH THE INQUIRY. GOUDGE’S REPORT WAS FOLLOWED BY THE REVELATION THAT YOUNG IS BEING INVESTIGATED BY THE COLLEGE, THE REGULATORY BODY FOR DOCTORS. THE COLLEGE ONLY INVESTIGATES DOCTORS FOR ALLEGATIONS OF PROFESSIONAL MISCONDUCT AND INCOMPETENCE. SHOULD CASES GO BEFORE A DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE, PENALTIES CAN RANGE FROM A REPRIMAND TO A LICENCE REVOCATION. THE INVESTIGATION IS ONGOING DESPITE YOUNG’S RESIGNATION FROM THE COLLEGE. INCREDIBLY, JUST SIX YEARS AGO, THE COLLEGE HAD HONOURED YOUNG WITH ITS PRESTIGIOUS PRESIDENT’S AWARD FOR HIS HANDLING OF THE SARS CRISIS. (THE COLLEGE IS ALSO INVESTIGATING SMITH AND CAIRNS, THE LATTER OF WHOM, LIKE YOUNG, RESIGNED THIS WEEK FROM PRACTICING MEDICINE.)"


STAFF REPORTER THERESA BOYLE: THE TORONTO STAR;" PHOTO: STEVE RUSSELL;
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The Toronto Star has become the first Canadian newspaper to examine the role played by former Chief Coroner Dr. James Young in the problems which plagued Ontario's forensic pediatric pathology system during the Charles Smith years and led to so many devastating miscarriages of justice.

The superb article, by Staff reporter Theresa Boyle, who reported the Goudge Inquiry for the Star, bears the following preface: "The Swissair Flight 111 crash. The Walkerton E. coli crisis. The SARS outbreak. Over the course of his illustrious career, Dr. James Young presided over all of them with deftness and aplomb. But then, just when his star was at its brightest, a cloud appeared – on his watch."

Toronto Star photographer Steve Russell's photograph of Dr. Young is accompanied by a cut-line which says: "James Young, former chief coroner of Ontario, is seen outside his home near Barrie. Young left the public service in 2007 after a stint in Ottawa, though he still does consulting work on pandemic preparedness."

The article, published on June 6. 2009, under the heading "In the face of disaster", can be found, with Links to other Smith-related videos and stories, at http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/article/646616.

It is accompanied by Dr. Young's resume, as follows;

"James Young is best known for being Ontario's chief coroner for 14 years. Other career highlights:

Leadership

• President of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences

• President of the International Association of Coroners and Medical Examiners, and associate professor of forensic science at the University of Toronto

• Led international teams investigating politically sensitive deaths in Nigeria, Colombia, Kazakhstan; gave expert advice on cases in Canada, the U.S., New Zealand, Bermuda, England, Israel, Japan and Thailand

Teaching

• Gave lectures to the Law Society of Upper Canada, the Ontario Crown Attorneys' School, the Ontario Provincial Police, the New York State Police Academy, the FBI National Executive Institute and Israeli police

Awards

• Received the President's Award from the College of Physicians and Surgeons for his role in the SARS outbreak response

• Was given the John R. Hunt Award from the American Academy of Forensic Sciences for outstanding contributions to the field;

"Wearing a bow tie and black tuxedo, Dr. James Young stood beaming at the foot of the grand staircase at Queen’s Park. It was the evening of Sept. 20, 2005, and Young was receiving the province’s highest honour - the Order of Ontario," Boyle's article begins;

"The night marked the pinnacle of an illustrious public service career that spanned 23 years and included a long list of impressive appointments," the article continues;

“Dr. James Young has had to do tasks over the years that others may find gruesome. But as Ontario’s former chief coroner and commissioner of emergency management, it goes with the job,” exclaimed Joan Andrew, secretary general of the Order.

She spoke of how Young had ably co-managed the SARS crisis, and how he had helped identify victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in New York, the Swissair plane crash in Nova Scotia, the Asian tsunami and the Bali terrorist bombings.

On this night, Young’s star was at its brightest. He was being lauded as Canada’s man at some of the worst disasters in modern history. And as incoming president of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences, he was a respected figure in the international forensic scene. He was also a leading authority in pandemic preparedness.

But life was about to change for this accomplished man. While Young had been busy travelling from crisis to crisis, one brewed in his own backyard - one partly of his own making. Young would be found to have contributed to major miscarriages of justice that shattered public confidence in pediatric forensic pathology and seriously compromised Ontario’s criminal justice system.

The scandal, which rocked the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario, saw family members and caregivers wrongly implicated in the deaths of children because of flawed pathology. The casualties included William Mullins Johnson, 38, who spent 12 years in jail after being wrongly convicted of first-degree murder of his 4-year-old niece. Other cases where mistakes had been made are now in various states of appeal.

The province is looking at compensation for the victims, which could leave taxpayers on the hook for millions.

Yesterday, an overhauled Coroners Act was given royal assent to ensure such tragedies never happen again. The legislation requires, for the first time, that the province’s chief coroner be held accountable to an oversight council. And it paves the way for the creation of a complaints committee that will track complaints about coroners and pathologists.

The new legislation coincides with Young’s resignation as a member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Effective this past Monday, it means he can no longer practise medicine in the province.

Young’s downfall serves as a cautionary tale in failed accountability and the dangers of putting too much stock in a single individual.

In November 2005, a major review began into the work of a rogue pathologist, who, for years, had been under Young’s watch. Dr. Charles Smith, the probe would eventually reveal, had erred in investigations into the deaths of 20 children. In some cases, parents and caregivers were wrongfully prosecuted and siblings of dead children were put up for adoption.

The public inquiry that followed in 2007-08 would find that Smith lacked expertise in forensic pathology and that Young and his deputy, Dr. Jim Cairns, failed in their obligation to oversee him. The two de facto supervisors were blind to Smith’s inadequacies partly because they also lacked any specialized training in forensic pathology.

What’s worse, the pair played a major role in building Smith’s reputation as the most eminent pediatric forensic pathologist in Ontario. Young and Cairns had a “symbiotic” relationship with Smith whose stature reflected well on the coroner’s office, states the final report of the inquiry, released last October. They actively protected Smith from critics who had identified his shortcomings as many as 17 years earlier.

As Young accepted extra responsibilities in government, the office of the chief coroner suffered and an environment that fostered miscarriages of justice flourished. But instead of considering if the coroner’s office had played a role in wrongful convictions, Young was more concerned about the adverse publicity that Smith might attract, the inquiry found.

“Dr. Young was the last to see the writing on the wall,” wrote inquiry commissioner Justice Stephen Goudge. “With the additional burdens imposed by his new responsibilities, Dr. Young’s inattention to day-to-day administration was a recipe for a failure of oversight.”

Problems with oversight and accountability were compounded by misconceptions over Young’s expertise with even his political bosses assuming he had more credentials than he did.

Young, 60, declined to be interviewed, but in an email he wrote that he didn’t realize he had done anything wrong: “With the benefit of hindsight, I would have made some decisions differently, but at the time I believed I was doing what was right.”

He added: “The inquiry has provided valuable lessons for individuals and institutions. While I may not agree with some aspects of the Commission’s report, debating these differences will not in my view advance the cause of building a better system for the future.”

The bad news for Young didn’t end with the inquiry. Goudge’s report was followed by the revelation that Young is being investigated by the college, the regulatory body for doctors. The college only investigates doctors for allegations of professional misconduct and incompetence. Should cases go before a disciplinary committee, penalties can range from a reprimand to a licence revocation. The investigation is ongoing despite Young’s resignation from the college. Incredibly, just six years ago, the college had honoured Young with its prestigious President’s Award for his handling of the SARS crisis. (The college is also investigating Smith and Cairns, the latter of whom, like Young, resigned this week from practicing medicine.)

Young grew up in east-end Toronto and had ambitions in medicine as far back as high school. The notation beside his Grade 13 photo in the 1968 yearbook from Monarch Park Secondary School says he desired to become a “successful physician.” (It also states his nickname was “Cuddles,” that he liked girls and that an alternative to becoming a doctor was to become a “back-seat contortionist.”)

Young attended the University of Toronto for pre-med and medical school. While there, he wrote part-time on sports for the Globe and Mail.

After earning his medical degree in 1975, Young became chief intern at Scarborough General Hospital, responsible for a team of 12, the first of many leadership positions.

The following year, he moved to Elmvale - outside Barrie - to become a small-town doctor with a general practice. He married a nurse, Eileen, with whom he had four sons.

In 1977, Young became an investigative coroner for Simcoe County. He was appointed regional coroner in 1982 and returned to Toronto. This marked the start of a full-time career in public service.

Young eventually became deputy chief coroner and in 1990 he got the top job in the coroner’s office.

The Ontario coroner’s office on Grenville St. is just a couple of blocks from Queen’s Park. It’s a grey bunker of a building that receives as many as 2,000 bodies a year. While many have died of natural, but not readily apparent, causes, others are victims of accidents, suicides and homicides.

Young’s office was on the second floor; it was known to be cluttered with stacks of paper scattered about. Smith’s office, over at the Hospital for Sick Children, was also known to be chronically messy.

Young admitted that attending to details and paperwork wasn’t his strong point. He told the Hamilton Spectator in 2003 that he didn’t have a computer in his office and didn’t keep files.

“I like big challenges. I’m not big on routine. I actually get quite bored with routine. So I’m much better with a little bit of chaos and a little bit of tension.”

The falls of both Young and Smith are rooted in the confusion over roles and qualifications of players in Ontario’s nascent death investigation system.

Coroners, like Young, are medical doctors who lead death investigations, making the ultimate determination of how someone died, using information provided by police, families, medical records and forensic pathologists.

Pathologists, like Smith, are doctors with specialized training who work in labs and, for example, diagnose cancerous tumours. “Forensic” pathologists have further training, learning to conduct autopsies and testify in court.

Young was sometimes mistaken for a forensic pathologist. And Smith was hailed as Ontario’s top pediatric forensic pathologist, even though he had no formal forensic training.

Canada is decades behind Britain and the United States in formally training forensic pathologists. Pathologists doing forensic work here have traditionally been self-taught and informally trained, like Smith. In recent years, more of them have been educated abroad and the first homegrown forensic pathologists are expected to graduate later this year.

Smith began working as a pathologist at the Hospital for Sick Children in 1981 and by the end of the decade, he began doing work for the coroner’s office, conducting autopsies on children who had died under criminally suspicious circumstances.

In 1991, the Ontario pediatric forensic pathology unit was opened at Sick Kids, a creation of the coroner’s office and the hospital. The following year, Smith was appointed director.

“It does not appear that Dr. Young conducted a serious search for other, more qualified or experienced candidates, or that he attempted to improve Dr. Smith’s skills in forensic pathology after recommending his appointment. The need for forensic pathology expertise was simply not appreciated, and Dr. Smith’s appointment was convenient,” Goudge wrote.

Young was named assistant deputy minister of the public safety division of the Ministry of the Solicitor General in 1994. In this capacity, he oversaw the Centre of Forensic Sciences, the Ontario Fire Marshal’s office and Emergency Measures Ontario.

Young’s career began veering toward emergency and disaster response in 1998. That year, he assisted in recovery efforts after Swissair Flight 111 plunged into the sea off the coast of Peggy’s Cove, Nova Scotia. And he helped coordinate relief efforts after a brutal ice storm crippled eastern Ontario.

After 9/11, he was dispatched to New York to lead an Ontario forensic team assisting in the recovery.

Young’s reputation grew with each disaster.

In 2002, he became commissioner of public safety. In the post 9/11 world, the government wanted to ensure Ontario was prepared to respond to terrorist attacks and other emergencies. Young was the province’s front man in the war against terrorism.

During the 2003 SARS outbreak, Young participated in daily news conferences to update the public on measures to contain the virus. He liked the media and the media liked him; he was friendly, accessible and delivered good sound bites. “We got better ratings than the Edge of Night,” he said in a speech years later. “We became folk stars in our own area.”

On a sunny afternoon in August 2003, Young was snoozing on a chaise lounge in the backyard of his cottage, near Barrie, taking full advantage of his first full days off in months thanks to the SARS crisis.

Understandably, he was none too pleased when the office called about a power outage.

“It’s sunny up here and I really don’t care,” he told the caller.

“You do care.”

“No, I don’t.”

When told the whole province was out of power, he quickly changed his tune. He arranged for an OPP helicopter to pick him up near his cottage, stop in Caledon to fetch then-Premier Ernie Eves, and then head to Toronto.

A state of emergency was declared and stayed in effect for eight days. In playing a lead role in turning the lights back on in the province, Young was at his best: in the eye of the storm, and front and centre in the media.

Young was always ready and willing to take charge and the politicians loved him for it. The provincial Conservatives, who held government from 1995 to 2003, were among his biggest fans. Bob Runciman, currently the party’s interim leader, once referred to him as “the poster boy for public service in the province of Ontario.”

But that stellar reputation was partly built on misconceptions about his expertise.

For example, Liberal MPP Monte Kwinter, who served as community safety minister from 2003 to 2007, thought Young performed autopsies. He revealed this during an interview when explaining how, as a minister, he wasn’t in a position to technically evaluate Young’s work. “How am I supposed to know if he’s doing a good job or not. Am I supposed to go in and say, `Are you sure you dissected that guy properly?’ What do I know?”

Kwinter wasn’t the only political boss to think this. Former federal health minister Pierre Pettigrew said he chose to dispatch Young to the tsunami because, “He’s one of the top pathologists in Canada.” (Pettigrew later explained he didn’t have any records before him when he made the comment and his memory was a little hazy.)

Sometimes the media got it wrong, referring to Young as a pathologist and an expert in DNA analysis. So did government news releases. The one announcing his Order of Ontario award referred to him as “one of Canada’s foremost forensic scientists.”

Despite these misconceptions, Young’s reputation grew, as did his curriculum vitae.

At the inquiry, a section of his CV, titled Papers Presented, came under scrutiny. It lists research studies presented at U.S. conferences on which he is named as an author along with Smith and others. But under questioning, Young revealed he hadn’t, in fact, authored nor presented a number of these papers.

“My name is last because that’s where it deserves to be,” Young said. “I wasn’t writing the paper or generating the research or presenting the paper ..... It’s a way of sort of being able to say ..... this is the body of research that the office is doing right now.”

Dr. John Butt, a highly regarded forensic pathologist who testified about Smith’s errors at the inquiry, has since raised further questions about Young’s bio, in particular a portion that details his involvement in the Swissair recovery. Butt was Nova Scotia’s medical examiner at the time and his office had called Young for assistance.

Butt says he was surprised when he stumbled across Young’s bio on the Internet years later and saw how Ontario’s chief coroner had described his role. What caught Butt’s attention was this excerpt, also contained in Young’s CV: “Provided expert support and guidance to the Chief Medical Examiner of Nova Scotia in managing the entire process required to identify the victims of Swissair flight number 111 ..... Co-ordinated the collection of ante-mortem files, the forensic examination of the remains, and the cross referencing of the information collected so that positive identifications could be made and communicated to next of kin. September through October, 1998.”

Young “exaggerated” his role, particularly the claim that he “coordinated” these different tasks, Butt charges. “He had no unique sectors that he was in charge of,” argues Butt, now a Vancouver-based forensic consultant. He agrees that Young provided him with “expert support and guidance,” but says the “entire process” of identifying victims took more than a year and Young had been there for less than a month.

Butt says that “without question” Young was a big help. He was by Butt’s side much of the time and was a valuable sounding board and an able troubleshooter. “He wasn’t unproductive. I mean, I want to give the guy credit,” Butt says. “I’ll tell you what his forte is. He’s a good leader and he’s got a quick mind.”

Young was stripped of his coroner’s title in 2004 by the Liberal government. “The one issue that we had is that he was both the chief coroner and the commissioner of emergency management. That was sort of a conflict,” Kwinter told the Star in an interview.

It was later that year, after Dr. Barry McLellan moved from deputy to chief coroner, that the whistle was finally blown on Smith. McLellan forced Smith to resign as director of the Ontario pediatric forensic pathology unit, a step he had wanted to take earlier but was vetoed by Young.

McLellan subsequently initiated an internal review of Smith’s work, a move that led to the inquiry.

It struck a discordant note to see Young on the stand. The man, who for 14 years served at the helm of a tribunal that pointed out systemic shortcomings, was now being grilled about widespread deficiencies in his own.

Sitting in the witness box, Young fumbled as he apologized for his role in the debacle: “I ..... it ..... it distresses me tremendously to think that during my watch and during my time that these things happened ..... and it ..... it ..... I really do apologize for the miscarriages of justice.”

Young admitted he should have done more: “I don’t know why we didn’t stop (Smith) doing everything at that time ..... I just don’t know.”

Lawyer Julian Falconer struck a nerve, arguing that Young was not guided by the public’s interest when he took on more senior jobs in government: “I am going to suggest to you that the decision to occupy the position of assistant deputy minister while remaining chief coroner for the province of Ontario was borne out of a professional ambition and resulted in the erosion of the accountability of the office of the chief coroner and had nothing to do with enhancing the credibility or function of the office of the chief coroner.”

Young angrily denied the allegation. “I didn’t make that decision. The government chose ..... asked me to assume that role. I went along with it,” he said. “The government was well aware that I was reporting to myself, but also I was reporting in essence to the deputy minister at a higher level with more detail.”

Young indicated to the inquiry that historical worldly events call for strong leaders: “There are times for certain kinds of leaders in certain places in history. At the time that I was chief coroner and doing the other work, I made a conscious decision to agree with the government to do the other work.”

Perhaps the most damning evidence heard at the inquiry was that Young had ignored warning signals about Smith as early as 1991. At that time Justice Patrick Dunn had acquitted a Timmins girl who at the age of 12 had been charged with manslaughter in the death of a toddler she had been babysitting. Smith had been the Crown’s key witness and Dunn determined Smith lacked objectivity, failed to thoroughly investigate the case, neglected to keep proper records and lacked familiarity with relevant scientific literature.

Young testified he had only learned of the Dunn decision in 2007, shortly before the inquiry started, and was “dumbfounded” by it. But he acknowledged that he had numerous opportunities to learn of it earlier:

An investigator from the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario told Young about it in 1997 while probing a complaint about Smith. But Goudge said Young had not fully appreciated the significance of the complaint because his objectivity was coloured by his belief that Smith was the leading pediatric forensic pathologist in Ontario, by Smith misleading him about the case and by his own misunderstandings about it.

The Dunn decision was cited in a 1999 complaint to the Coroner’s Council, a body that investigated complaints about coroners. But the council had been disbanded only months earlier and the complaint found its way to Young’s desk. Young personally responded to the complaint, saying he had read it “in detail and considered ..... very carefully.” But he told the inquiry he had no recollection of reading the part in question.

In 1999, the CBC’s Fifth Estate also mentioned the Dunn decision. Young said he was away when it aired and didn’t watch it on his return. Nevertheless, he urged the province to pay for part of the lawsuit launched against the CBC by Smith. (Smith eventually dropped the suit.)

In 2001, the Dunn decision was mentioned in a Maclean’s magazine feature about Smith, titled “Dead Wrong.” In a letter to a member of the public who had inquired about it, Young replied that the article itself was “dead wrong” and full of inaccuracies. But when asked about the article and letter at the inquiry, Young said: “I remember reading the article, but ..... it didn’t sink in, that’s all I know.”

Throughout the 1990s, complaints about Smith mounted as coroners, police, Crown counsel and individuals weighed in. Much of the criticism was similar to that raised by Dunn.

Young and his deputy, Cairns, not only failed to rein in Smith, they protected the pathologist from those who could. When the college wanted to investigate a complaint about Smith in 1997, they argued the regulatory body had no jurisdiction over the coroner’s office. In 2000, Young told the media and the attorney general’s ministry that his office would review Smith’s cases to assess his competence, but the idea was later quietly dropped. In 2001, Young asked Smith to stop doing coroner’s cases, not because of concerns about the pathologist’s competence, but because of the negative attention he might attract.

In April 2002, after it was determined the college did have jurisdiction to investigate Smith, Young sent a letter to the regulatory body, defending Smith in response to complaints filed against him. Young sent the letter even though he was aware that serious questions had been raised about Smith’s ethics and judgment. What’s more, the letter had been written by Smith’s lawyers and Young sent it, virtually unaltered.

In his report, Goudge slammed Young, saying the letter “misled” the college. “Dr. Young told the inquiry that he sent this letter in an attempt to be fair to Dr. Smith. He did so, however, at a cost to the public interest ..... The letter was not balanced or objective or candid. It was not a letter worthy of a senior public office holder in Ontario.”

Young made many valuable contributions to the province, but at the end of the day his biggest mistake was failing to mind the store.

“I think the moral coming out of this is that no matter what systems you have in place, personality and individual judgment are ultimately going to be what oversight rises or falls on,” says Lorne Sossin, a law professor at the University of Toronto, who conducted research for the inquiry, authoring a paper on oversight.

But he adds: “I’d hate to see there be a sense that all the ills that led to miscarriages of justice resting on his (Young’s) shoulders because I think that would be unfair.”

Many other factors contributed to the miscarriages, including: an outdated Coroners Act, a shortage of forensic pathologists, inadequate quality control measures, organizational weaknesses, insufficient action by Cairns (who also declined to be interviewed) and a “think dirty” culture that encouraged the consideration of abuse in cases where children had died.

In 2005, Young was squeezed out of the Ontario bureaucracy, according to government sources. Julian Fantino’s contract was not renewed as Toronto police chief and there was talk he was going to run in the next election for the provincial Tories. To thwart that, the Liberal government gave Young’s job as commissioner to Fantino. In turn, the government helped Young land a job in Ottawa as special adviser to the deputy minister of public safety and emergency preparedness. The province even paid Young’s salary - $299,000 in 2007 - while he worked for the federal government. Young wasn’t happy about the move, sources say.

He left Ottawa - and the public service - at the end of 2007.

Young, in his email, said he devoted much of his life to public service with the best of intentions:

“I entered public service more than 25 years ago because I believed that coroners’ work could improve the country and the province I love. My assignments were varied, often challenging and in some cases unprecedented. I am grateful to have been given these opportunities. I recognize all those that supported me and especially the sacrifices made by my family. Throughout my career I always acted in good faith and did what I thought was best for the people of Ontario and Canada.”

Young has moved from his Toronto condo to his cottage and is doing consulting work in the area of pandemic preparedness. Although he was once a leading Canadian authority in this area, he has been notably absent from the public arena during the swine flu outbreak, over which there is ongoing global concern about a pandemic.

Until his retirement about a month ago, he had been working occasional shifts at a Barrie after-hours clinic.

For the time being, Young says, he’s taking a break from public service.

“Whether this is temporary or permanent remains to be seen.”"


Harold Levy; hlevy15@gmail.com;

Sunday, May 31, 2009

WORTHY OF FRAMING! NDP JUSTICE CRITIC PETER KORMOS' UNBRIDLED TAKE ON CHARLES SMITH DURING DEBATE OVER REFORMS TO CORONER'S ACT; IT HAD TO BE SAID.




"SMITH DIDN'T WORK IN A VACUUM. WHAT ABOUT THE CORONER? WASN'T THE CORONER'S OFFICE CONCERNED? DURING THE COURSE OF, IF NOT THE FIRST OR THE SECOND OR THIRD OF THOSE 24 YEARS, AT LEAST WELL INTO THE 15- AND 20-YEAR RANGE, WASN'T THE CORONER'S OFFICE A LITTLE CONCERNED ABOUT HOW EFFECTIVE SMITH WAS AT PROVIDING EVIDENCE THAT SUPPORTED THE CROWN'S CASE AND DIDN'T SUPPORT THE DEFENCE ARGUMENT? WHAT ABOUT HIS COLLEAGUES? WHAT ABOUT OTHER PATHOLOGISTS? WHAT ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE IN THE MEDICAL PROFESSION? WHAT ABOUT THE HOSPITAL FOR SICK KIDS, WHO KEPT HIM IN THEIR EMPLOY?
SMITH WASN'T A SOLO OPERATOR, AND ALTHOUGH SMITH HAS BEEN APPROPRIATELY CONDEMNED-I ONLY WISH HE COULD SPEND A PORTION OF THE JAIL TIME HIS VICTIMS HAVE-WE HAVEN'T RECOGNIZED THE CULPABILITY OF OTHER PLAYERS IN THE SYSTEM."...

"WHILE IT WASN'T GOUDGE'S JOB TO INDICT SMITH, HE, IN A VERY CAREFUL AND JUDICIALLY TONED COMMENT, DID AS MUCH. GOUDGE WROTE: "... SMITH WAS ADAMANT THAT HIS FAILINGS WERE NEVER INTENTIONAL. I SIMPLY CANNOT ACCEPT SUCH A SWEEPING ATTEMPT TO ESCAPE MORAL RESPONSIBILITY." IN OTHER WORDS, THE INFERENCE THAT YOU DRAW FROM THAT COMMENT IS THAT GOUDGE SAID THESE WERE INTENTIONAL AND THAT SMITH KNEW FULL WELL WHAT HE WAS DOING IN HIS ZEAL TO CONVICT PEOPLE, IN SMITH'S ZEAL TO PANDER TO HIS BOSSES, IN SMITH'S ZEAL TO BE SEEN AS A CAPED CRUSADER, IN SMITH'S ZEAL TO BE SEEN AS A FRIEND OF THE VICTIM, AND IN SMITH'S ZEAL TO BE SEEN AS A FRIEND OF THE POLICE AND THE PROSECUTION."

PETER KORMOS: ONTARIO LEGISLATURE DURING DEBATE ON REFORMS TO CORONER'S ACT;

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I am a huge fan of New Democratic Party justice critic Peter Kormos;

He has an enormous sense of justice, supreme intelligence, and the ability to articulate succintly to the people of Ontario the aspects of our justice system which trouble him;

Mr. Kormos was in top form when he addressed the legislature during the debate over the third reading of Bill 115 in which the McGuinty government sets out to reform the Coroner's Act because of the abuses committed by Dr. Charles Smith and his protectors - and the findings of the Goudge Inquiry; Here are some of his remarks:

"Look, the elephant in the room is this fellow Charles Smith," Kormos told the legislature;

"The Goudge inquiry was all about this incompetent liar's contribution to the unjust conviction of countless people, many of them parents," he continued;

"I accept the Goudge recommendations. I'm confident because I've heard no criticism of them from the legal community. Members of the defence bar especially, similarly, support the implementation of the Goudge recommendations. But I have serious, serious concerns, notwithstanding what Goudge says. Charles Smith, a liar? Goudge said so. Incompetent? Goudge said so. A bit of a whack and a flake? Goudge said so. Not his words; he used far more judicial language, but I'll put it in language that perhaps we're all a little more familiar with.

This guy Smith, for 24 years, while working for the Hospital for Sick Kids just down the road, lied and bungled his way through countless prosecutions of people charged with injuring and, more tragically, killing children, babies-countless unjust convictions. We're not talking about people who are sentenced to a couple of weekends in the local lockup; we'r e not talking about people who are sentenced to house arrest; we're talking about people who, almost inevitably when you murder a child, are sentenced to penitentiary time, where they do what is called colloquially "hard time." Let me tell you, when you're a baby killer, you're pretty darned close to the bottom of the ladder. Even in protective custody, you're a victim. Some of those people have been successful in having their convictions overturned. None of them will ever be successful at having their losses restored.
What bothers me significantly is how Smith could flourish-he did for 24 years. Was his stellar batting record not of some concern to crown attorneys? Was his stellar capacity to indict and convict people accused of killing children not of concern to the police officers themselves, for fear that they had picked the wrong person to be charged? Was Smith's capacity to find criminal culpability with the named accused not of concern to judges?

Smith didn't work in a vacuum. What about the coroner? Wasn't the coroner's office concerned? During the course of, if not the first or the second or third of those 24 years, at least well into the 15- and 20-year range, wasn't the coroner's office a little concerned about how effective Smith was at providing evidence that supported the crown's case and didn't support the defence argument? What about his colleagues? What about other pathologists? What about other people in the medical profession? What about the Hospital for Sick Kids, who kept him in their employ?
Smith wasn't a solo operator, and although Smith has been appropriately condemned-I only wish he could spend a portion of the jail time his victims have-we haven't recognized the culpability of other players in the system. Smith was supported, nurtured, tolerated, reinforced, aided and abetted by any number of police officers, crown attorneys and judges; I have no hesitation in saying that. And bring on the e-mails, folks, because I have absolute confidence in that observation.
He was giving public testimony. He was appearing in front of judges who have heard case after case after case and who, one presumes, were highly experienced. What I find incredibly frightening about this is that it reveals that tunnel vision of the criminal justice system wherein the presumption of innocence is given but lip service. My fear is that Smith could survive 24 years of lying and cheating and misleading because people in the criminal justice system don't really believe in the presumption of innocence. In fact, the presumption is that if you have been charged, you must be guilty, and if not of the crime you're charged with, at least guilty of something: a very dangerous precedent.

Look at the Attorney General's tinkering with jury panels-"tinkering" is putting it mildly-and the Attorney General's office only stops doing it once it gets caught. Don't think for a minute that the rationale for background checks of potential jurors is so that the crown attorney can find the people who are the most neutral and unbiased. Bullfeathers; the crown attorney is looking for the people who are most likely to convict and wants to exclude those people who might be a little more tolerant and a little more inclined to the defence. If you believe anything otherwise, then you're from some other planet than this one.
While Goudge has addressed procedural means whereby we can incorporate oversight, he didn't address the culture in those Bay Street towers-the Ministry of the Attorney General, amongst others, is over there on that side road; is it Grosvenor where the coroner's office is?- the culture wherein these professionals support each other, cover up for each other, cultivate incompetence.

Mr. Dunlop was there; Mr. Dunlop has referred to some of the heartbreaking stories of families who lost a loved one: daughters, children, partners and parents. They told stories about coroners' offices that were oh, so high and mighty, that dismissed them with a little wave of the hand: "Go away, go away; you're bothering us." Is that a fair observation?

Mr. Garfield Dunlop: Yep.

Mr. Peter Kormos: Mr. Dunlop responds. Of course, they weren't speaking about all coroners. We only heard about the bad ones. Nobody came forward-because people aren't inclined to do that-with good stories about coroners or other officials who treated them with fairness, respect and dignity. We heard about coroners' offices that refused to listen to family members who had lost a loved one, who refused to embark on investigations and subsequent inquiries and who had an aloofness, an attitude of, "We know it all, and you're stupid." That's a dangerous phenomenon that Goudge, of course, didn't address.

While it wasn't Goudge's job to indict Smith, he, in a very careful and judicially toned comment, did as much. Goudge wrote: "... Smith was adamant that his failings were never intentional. I simply cannot accept such a sweeping attempt to escape moral responsibility." In other words, the inference that you draw from that comment is that Goudge said these were intentional and that Smith knew full well what he was doing in his zeal to convict people, in Smith's zeal to pander to his bosses, in Smith's zeal to be seen as a caped crusader, in Smith's zeal to be seen as a friend of the victim, and in Smith's zeal to be seen as a friend of the police and the prosecution.

Unless and until we move beyond this and address the culture in which Charles Smiths can be cultivated and can be nurtured, we are going to have more Smiths -notwithstanding all of the oversights that have been proposed by Goudge."
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The entire debate can be accessed by cutting and pasting:

http://www.ontla.on.ca/web/house-proceedings/house_detail.do?Date=2009-05-28&Parl=39&Sess=1&locale=en#P64_2504

Harold Levy...hlevy15@gmail.com;