Supreme Court orders new manslaughter trial for accused in death of Cindy Gladue
WARNING: This story contains graphic details that may be disturbing to readers
The Ontario trucker accused of killing Cindy Gladue will face a new trial for manslaughter, reviving a case that unleashed public outrage over how the Indigenous victim was treated by Canada's criminal justice system.
The Supreme Court of Canada was unanimous Friday in ordering a new trial for Bradley Barton, but justices were split 4-3 on whether he should face trial for manslaughter or first degree murder.
The court found that the justice system failed to protect Gladue and that so-called "rape shield" laws were not followed during Barton's trial, when the jury heard evidence of Gladue's past sexual activities before holding a separate hearing.
Gladue was found dead in the bathtub of a motel bathroom in Edmonton eight years ago, after engaging in paid sex with Barton for two consecutive nights. She bled to death from an 11-centimetre wound to her vaginal wall.
The Crown had argued the wound was caused by a sharp object, but no weapon was ever found.
Barton insisted the sex, which included inserting his fist into Gladue's vagina, was rough but consensual.
Justice Michael Moldaver, writing for the majority, said judges must do more to fight stereotypes against Indigenous victims of violence.
"As an additional safeguard going forward, in sexual assault cases where the complainant is an Indigenous woman or girl, trial judges would be well advised to provide an express instruction aimed at countering prejudice against Indigenous women and girls," he wrote.
Barton was acquitted of first degree murder and manslaughter in 2015, but that decision was later overturned by the Alberta Court of Appeal.
'Her life mattered. She was valued'
Moldaver said the justice system failed Gladue and wrote that all individuals deserve to be treated with dignity, humanity and respect.
"Her life mattered. She was valued. She was important. She was loved. Her status as an Indigenous woman who performed sex work did not change any of that in the slightest," he wrote.
"But as these reasons show, the criminal justice system did not deliver on its promise to afford her the law's full protection, and as a result, it let her down — Indeed, it let us all down."
At trial, Barton argued that he had an "honest but mistaken" belief that Gladue had consented to the sexual activity, which involved inserting his fist in her vagina.
The Supreme Court found the judge also erred in failing to "inoculate the jury against mistake of law masquerading as mistakes of fact."
In the dissenting opinion which said Barton should face trial for first-degree murder, Justices Rosalie Abella and Andromache Karakatsanis said the failure to filter Gladue's sexual history without any warning to the jury left the jury with an unchallenged version of Barton's interactions with the deceased.
"This was the narrative's frame in which the victim's conduct was portrayed and the accused's credibility was assessed, creating an image of the deceased that was unfair and would have permeated the whole trial and the jury's deliberations on both murder and manslaughter," the decision reads.
Qajaq Robinson is a commissioner for the National Inquiry Into Murdered and Missing Indigenous Women and Girls, which intervened in the case. She called today's developments at the Supreme Court a "tremendous step forward."
"I think it's a step forward that the court has recognized that in cases of sexual assault against Indigenous women and girls, that there's an obligation on courts, on judges, to be gatekeepers, to ensure that bias, prejudice, racism and sexism do not form part of the evidence, are not what juries and judges rely on to make their decisions," she said.
Sexual past deemed relevant in trial
Section 276 of the Criminal Code, known as the "rape shield law," prohibits the admission of evidence about a victim's sexual activity that could suggest the victim was more likely to have given consent, or was less worthy of being believed.
During the Supreme Court's Oct. 11, 2018 hearing on the case, justices posed tough questions about why details of Gladue's sexual past were openly disclosed and deemed relevant in Barton's trial.
Barton's lawyer Dino Bottos told CBC News the defence only presented previous sexual history because the Crown mentioned it in the opening minutes of the trial. He said the evidence also was germane to the case.
"If she consented to the sexual activity on the first night, the same as the second night, Mr. Barton would have a more reasonable belief that she was consenting to the same sexual activity on the second night," he said.
Case highlights social issues
Bottos conceded the case is "tragic" and highlights important social issues.
He said it also presented fundamental questions about the appeals process that overturned Barton's acquittal. Bottos argued the court of appeal erred in allowing the Crown to use its right of appeal to secure a re-trial based on new theories and legal arguments that were contrary to positions the Crown took at trial.
He said Friday the Supreme Court upheld those grounds of appeal.
"We're pretty happy with that, because if the Supreme Court did not correct that, this would have been a serious change in the way acquittals are handled by courts of appeal," he said.