Complainant in tears after defence suggests sex-assault testimony was 'scripted'
WARNING: This story contains graphic and disturbing content
A young Halifax woman who was allegedly sexually assaulted by British sailors broke down in tears Friday after a defence lawyer suggested her testimony was "scripted."
Under cross-examination by lawyer Ian Hutchison, the woman agreed she had gaps in her memory of what happened on the night of April 9, 2015, in the barracks of a Halifax-area military base, and that she cannot explain those gaps.
Hutchison suggested that her testimony was "rehearsed."
"It is not," she replied, breaking down on the stand.
Judge orders break
Nova Scotia Supreme Court Justice Patrick Duncan then ordered a break in the proceedings. The woman exited the courtroom encompassed by supporters, sobbing loudly.
Hutchison asked how she prepared to testify at the trial and at an earlier preliminary inquiry.
She agreed she discussed possible "difficult" questions with her psychiatrist and psychologist, and Hutchison suggested she was using those professionals as a "sound board to determine how good your answers would be."
"I would disagree with that suggestion," she replied, now more calm and composed in her testimony.
Positive DNA test
The woman, whose identity is protected by a publication ban, agreed she highlighted portions of her police statement ahead of testifying at the preliminary inquiry, and Hutchison asked her why.
"As a student, you just highlight important passages," she said. "I don't know if I had a specific thought process in mind."
He also asked her questions about what a military police officer told her about the ongoing investigation.
She agreed the investigator called to inform her about the results of a toxicology report, and that a DNA test came back positive for Smalley's DNA.
On Thursday, the complainant testified she woke up face down and naked on a bed in the barracks with at least three men performing sex acts on her.
Repeatedly loss consciousness
The complainant said she went in and out of consciousness three times, and recognized Smalley's voice.
The men were in the area to participate in a naval hockey tournament at the time of the alleged sexual assault.
On the night in question, the woman's friend had invited her on a double date with a British hockey player she had met on Tinder.
They watched a game at the Shearwater rink, and then went back to barracks afterwards.
Testified she didn't feel comfortable
She testified that she later got separated from her friend, and started feeling panicked.
The woman went back to the room they had been hanging out in previously that night, and found the room full of hockey players with a naked man face down on a bed.
She eventually found her friend, but then lost her again. At some point, it was decided they would stay the night. She didn't feel comfortable staying in the barracks, but did not want to abandon her friend.
She said she went to sleep in a bed next to a sailor, and when she awoke, at least three men were sexually assaulting her.
'I would not have consented'
The case once involved four accused, but charges against two other sailors were dropped, and charges against another man were stayed earlier in the trial.
Simon Radford has been in hospital with a serious infection. The charges against him can be reinstituted within one year.