A lawyer for the Crown says a court application asking for a stay of proceedings against those arrested at old-growth logging protests on Vancouver Island is flawed and has no chance of succeeding.
Nick Melling told the B.C. Supreme Court that charges were never recommended against most of the clients represented by one of the lawyers who is part of the application. Only one of the six applicants has alleged mistreatment by police, he said Thursday.
The RCMP have arrested over 1,000 people since last May for allegedly violating an injunction against blockades in the Fairy Creek watershed northwest of Victoria and about 400 of them were charged with criminal contempt, Melling said.
Neither charged nor uncharged applicants are making any allegations about police, Melling told Justice Douglas Thompson.
“To be clear, not only are the applicants not saying that they suffered mistreatment at the hands of police, but no other third party is alleging that the applicant is providing a factual foundation that any of the applicants suffered police mistreatment.”
Members of a group called the Rainforest Flying Squad filed an application last month asking for a stay of proceedings against those charged with contempt of court, claiming that alleged RCMP misconduct amounts to an abuse of process.
Melling told the court that in addition to 11 affidavits in the case that are irrelevant, others are inadmissible, including seven that are based on hearsay involving people who compiled the accounts of others, which doesn’t allow them to claim a breach of their own rights.
Lead Crown counsel Lorne Phipps said what lawyers for some of the applicants are proposing would be a “radical break” from any case that’s come before the court because they’re relying on allegations of police misconduct related to others and trying to apply them to “an entire class of alleged contenders.”
“The analogy is if there’s a town where police forces are making systemic mistakes in impaired driving allegations, so everyone who was charged with impaired driving in that town and convicted should have their conviction set aside, even if those mistakes weren’t present in their case. It’s simply not the way justice is done,” Phipps said.
The original injunction prohibiting logging blockades expired last September. Thompson denied an application by logging company Teal Cedar Products Ltd. to extend it by one year. That decision was overturned by the B.C. Court of Appeal last month when it extended the injunction until September.
Lawyers for Teal Cedar Products were also scheduled to make arguments later on the application in court.