27 delay motions filed for criminal cases in Manitoba - Action News
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Manitoba

27 delay motions filed for criminal cases in Manitoba

Manitoba defence lawyers in more than two dozen criminal cases ranging from sexual assault to bank robbery have asked for their cases to be stayed, citing unacceptable delays in getting to trial.
People are seen entering the Law Courts building on Thursday morning. A spokesperson for Manitoba Justice said all court appearances are going ahead as scheduled. (Lyza Sale/CBC)

Manitoba defence lawyers in more than two dozen criminal cases ranging from sexual assault to bank robbery have asked for their cases to be stayed, citing unacceptable delays in getting to trial.

The requests comes after a July Supreme Court ruling setting new rules for an accused's right to be tried within a reasonable time.

According to the ruling, cases before superior courts must be completed within 30 months of charges being laid. Provincial court trials must be completed within 18 months of charges being laid, but may be extended to 30 months if there is a preliminary inquiry.

Since the ruling, Manitoba defence lawyers have brought 27 applications for stays of proceedings for criminal cases.

So far, none of the delay motions have been successful.

About half of the applications have been resolved by being dismissed or withdrawn, or after the defendant entereda guilty plea or proceedings were stayed for a reason other than the delay motion.

Delays 'endemic to Manitoba,' defence lawyer says

Scott Newman of the Criminal Defence Lawyers Association said delays have been stacking up in Manitoba courts for some 20 years.

"The only thing that surprises me about the number of delay motions is that there isn't more of them," Newman said on Friday.

"It's an issue that's been endemic for a period of time in Manitoba and the Supreme Court has sent a strong signal that it's not going to be tolerated anymore, and it's incumbent on all of us to deal with the issue now and not pass the buck to others to deal with."
Scott Newman says Manitoba needs more resources to end long waits for trials. (CBC)

He said he wants to see Manitoba Justice bring in more resources, including courtrooms, court clerks, judges and sheriffs, to address backlog and prevent it from building up again.

"That would be the best-case scenario, is we deal with these issues. If we do what Manitoba has done for going on two decades now, we're going to see more and more people sitting in jail waiting for their day in court," he said.

Even if delay motions aren't granted, he said lengthy waits influence trials in other ways, including plea bargains or outright dropping of charges.

Newman added that delays are more problematic in certain jurisdictions. Winnipeg is "not great," he said, but wait times are worse in rural locations such as fly-in areas and remote reserves.

Long waits 'horrendous,' victim advocate says

Karen Wiebe of the Manitoba Organization for Victim Assistance (MOVA) said delays of any type are "horrendous" for families, but she doesn't want to see any cases thrown out as a result.

Wiebe is the executive director of MOVA, which supports families as they go through the criminal justice system following the murder of a loved one.
Karen Wiebe is the executive director of MOVA, the Manitoba Organization for Victim Assistance, which supports families as they go through the criminal justice system following the murder of a loved one. (CBC)

She echoed Newman's call for more resources and said trialscan play an important role in healingfor victims' families.

"As a result of [a trial], at some point, you get to face those people with your victim impact statement and tell them, you know, what they've done, the impact that they've had on you and family and of course, the person that's been lost," Wiebe said.

Wiebe's son T.J. was 20 when he was murdered in 2003. She and her family waited nine months for a trial. Court proceedings are the reason she knows some of the information she does about how her son died, she said.

"You're never done with [grief], but in the preliminary parts of it you don't know anything," she said. "In many cases, if it's a child that's been murdered, you don't know the people involved, you don't know what happened, you don't know why it happened. You don't necessarily even know how they died, and you find all of that out at trial."

With files from Courtney Rutherford