Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Comments closed.

Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.

Please see our Commenting Policy for more.

Both men in Toronto College Street Bar trial found guilty of gang sex assault

WATCH ABOVE: Former College Street Bar owner Gavin MacMillan and former manager Enzo De Jesus Carrasco have been found guilty of gang sex assault and administering a drug – Dec 2, 2019

Former College Street Bar owner Gavin MacMillan and former manager Enzo De Jesus Carrasco have been found guilty of gang sex assault and administering a drug. 

Story continues below advertisement

The two had been charged with gang sexual assault, forcible confinement and administering a stupefying drug.

The assault allegedly took place Dec. 14, 2016. Both men pleaded not guilty.

They both testified that the sex was consensual. 

After weeks of testimony and closely examining hours of security footage, the jury began deliberating earlier this week and delivered a verdict on Saturday.

Charges of forcible confinement were stayed.

The jury found De Jesus Carrasco not guilty of another sex assault charge connected with the victim. Another charge of sexual assault involving De Jesus Carrasco and the victim at his home the next morning was stayed with jurors deadlocked on their decision.

Story continues below advertisement

MacMillan left the courthouse Saturday afternoon without talking to reporters. He is on house arrest, due for sentencing at the end of January.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

De Jesus Carrasco had his bail revoked. He faces unrelated sex charges. He remains in custody and is due for a bail hearing on Dec. 12.

The identity of the female, who was 24 at the time of the incident, has been protected by a publication ban.

Story continues below advertisement

In October, she testified to having two drinks that night. Things then became hazy. At some point, she accepted a third drink. She also testified to accepting two lines of cocaine from the men and feeling dizzy and sick that night, even blacking out. 

“I remember trying to get out, but I just couldn’t. Because it felt like…it felt like my head and my body were not cooperating,” she said.

Crown Rick Nathanson said he is “not disappointed” in the outcome.

The jury “clearly worked very hard, they took their task very seriously, and most importantly, they had to work through some very difficult and troubling evidence that they didn’t expect necessarily,” he said.

De Jesus Carrasco’s defence lawyer Uma Kancharla told reporters her client maintains his innocence and they are considering grounds for an appeal.

Story continues below advertisement

A sentencing hearing has been set for January 2020.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article