'Disgusting' court backlog may free hit and run accused - Action News
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British Columbia

'Disgusting' court backlog may free hit and run accused

The family of a young mother killed in a hit and run is outraged that the case against the alleged driver is among thousands in B.C. at risk of being thrown out because of a huge court backlog.

'My kids don't have a mom,' man says after wife's death

The family of a young mother killed in a hit and run is outraged that the case against the alleged driver is among thousands in B.C. at risk of being thrown out because of a huge court backlog.

"We were told it could possibly get thrown awaybecause of time delay," said the victims father Colin Ogilvie. "That is one of the concerns of the Crown.

"Its disgusting. Its absolutely disgusting," said the victims husband Dan Reaveley.

Charlene Reaveley, a 30-year-oldmother of four young children, was one of two women killed by an alleged drunk driver in a horrific hit and run a year ago. The two were struck while standing at the side of the road at the scene of an earlier minor accident in Coquitlam, B.C.

"My kids dont have a mom. They have to grow up without a mom," said Reaveley. "Im not much of a father right now either so, you know, they are kind of losing two parents."

The Reaveleys had stopped to help Lorraine Cruz, 26, and her boyfriend, Paulo Calimahin, after their vehicle hit the median. As they stood at the side of the road, the driver of an SUV careened right into them and kept going.

Husband watched wife die

Reaveley and Cruz were killed instantly and Calimahin was seriously injured. Reaveley was standing with his wife when she was hit.

The loss of his wife has left Dan Reaveley raising four children alone. (CBC)

"Theres at least six months [afterward] where you pretty much cant think of anything," he said. "You are pretty much useless."

The accident happened in February 2011, but the trial for the alleged driver, 38-year-old Cory Sater a convicted criminal who was on probation at the time wont happen until at least two years after he was charged.

Case law dictates thatwhen a case drags on more than 18 months without a trialbecause of Crown delays or court backlogits in danger of being thrown out before trial because of "unreasonable delay."

Last year, 109 cases were tossed out of B.C. courts twice as many as in 2010. Many of those involved impaired driving.

More than 2,500 pending cases have now passed that 18-month mark into what lawyers call the "danger zone" of being tossed.

Delay 'too long'

Saters lawyer Tony Serka said the case was delayed right from the start, when it took months to get an accident report from the RCMP.

Charlene's father, Colin Ogilvie, left, and husband, Dan Reaveley, said they are disgusted by the possibility there could be no trial. (CBC)

"It was too long," Serka said. "An unreasonable delay [stay of proceedings] is a fundamental right that may or may not be the question in the Sater case."

He said he hasnt decided if he will ask the judge to stay the case because of delays butit is possible.

"Its not the fault of the accused. There are many people who are charged who come to court and have to keep adjourning it over and over. That accumulates. Then you have a full list. A list that judges cant handle because its too much," said Serka.

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"My client would like to have a trial as soon as possible too."

When asked if the victims family has reason to be concerned the case may be thrown out, Serka said, "Oh, of course they do. They suffered a terrible loss.

"[The backlog] has never been like this. Not even close to it. The onus is on the government to do something," he added. "Its very serious. It needs allocation of funds to fix these problems."

The B.C. Crown Counsel Association agreed the crisis is reaching a point where criminal cases involving death will be tossed along with the more minor ones.

"On every case its a possibility," said president Samiran Lakshman.

'Frustrating beyond belief'

"Theres not a doubt that the range of cases is getting more serious daily, as to the type of trials that are just getting too long in the toothits frustrating beyond belief."

Cory Sater is at home in Coquitlam while awaiting trial for allegedly causing the death of two women. (CBC)

In addition to the 2,500 cases now in the "red zone," Lakshman said another 5,000 including Saters are about to enter that stage, because they are between a year and 18 months old.

"We have a giant wave of [delayed] cases," he said. "There are many sex assaults among those. There are many serious cases among thoseand you cant turn back the clock. The damage has already been done."

Lakshman said the provinces recent appointment of nine new judges is welcome, but he said the provincial court still needs an additional nine to 13 more judges and the justice ministry is facing a $6million budget cut.

"[Police and Crown] are fighting for justice with one arm tied behind their backs," said Lakshman.

The Canadian Bar Association agreed the backlog is at a serious, crisis level.Sharon Matthews, thepresident of the B.C. branch, said a key problem is the increasing number of people appearing in court without a lawyer, which slows everything down.

"Its the worst weve seen," said Matthews.She said the courts need more money for legal aid and more staff throughout.

"Human misery is being caused by this. People who have a right to a day in court are sitting in jail waiting for that time to come. People with children and families in crisis are waiting to have those issues resolved and are struggling to do it without representation."

More pressure coming

Shesaid thattax dollars are wasted every time a delayed case gets tossed. She also predicted it will get worse if and when the omnibus federal crime bill becomes law because people facing mandatory minimum sentences will have no incentive to plead guilty and will choose to go to trial.

Sater's lawyer Tony Serka said he hasn't decided yet if he will ask for a stay of proceedings because of delays, but it's possible. (CBC)

"There will be more cases going through the system, and the system cant handle the volume we have going through now," said Matthews.

B.C. Premier Christy Clark has responded byinitiating a review of the court system to getat the root of the problem.

"I share the frustration that every British Columbian feels when we see delays and when we see stays in the justice system. It's not right. It's not working. I'm really frustrated about that," said Clark.

"Case loads are falling, crime is falling, more money has gone into the system, and yet delays and stays are increasing. The thing is, it just doesn't add up."

Charlene Reaveleys father and husband said theyve lost faith justice will be served if and when Sater does go to trial.

"I expect him to either get off or maybe get a couple of years, If Im lucky," said Dan Reaveley. "I dont expect much. At the end of the day theres no justice nothings thats going to satisfy me unless, obviously, if my wife was back."

"Somethings broken," said Ogilvie. "Its just a big huge case of emptiness and missing [her] and wishing it could be different."