Brampton man convicted of sexual assault has left the country - Action News
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Toronto

Brampton man convicted of sexual assault has left the country

A man convicted of sexual assault who failed to show up at his sentencing earlier this month has now fled to Pakistan. Moazzam Tariq, 29, was found guilty in October but was allowed to remain free under his bail conditions until his sentencing Dec. 1.

Moazzam Tariq, 29, did not attend his bail hearing and has now fled to Pakistan, Crown says

Moazzam Tariq, 29, was found guilty of sexual assault of a woman he was filmed plying with alcohol in the early morning hours of July 18, 2015. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

A Brampton man convicted of sexual assault and possiblyfacing years in prison has managed to slip out of the country before being sentenced.

Moazzam Tariq, 29, flew to Pakistan from Montreal on Nov.18, a Toronto court heard on Thursday, two weeks before his scheduled sentencing hearing.

In October,Tariq was found guilty of sexuallyassaultinga Toronto woman whowas too drunk to consent to sex.

However, Tariq avoided custody that day and walked freely out of Toronto's Old City Hall courthouse. He was to remainunder his bail conditionsuntil his sentencingon Dec.1.

But Tariq was a no-show for the hearing and a Canada-wide warrant was issued for his arrest. Police were investigating the possibility that Tariq had travelled to Vancouver.

On Thursday, a crown prosecutor informed the court that Tariq has fled to Pakistan.

Tariq surrendered a passport to police after his conviction but the Crown saidhe used a second Pakistani passport to fly to Pakistan from Montreal on Nov. 18.

Tariqwas born in Pakistan and is apermanent resident of Canada.

After his arrest in 2015, Tariq was freed on $10,000 bail posted by his father.

Moazzam Tariq has fled to Pakistan after being convicted of sexual assault. This surveillance tape was submitted to the court as evidence by the Crown. (Trial exhibit)

Has fled before

The Crown also advised the court on Thursday that this is the second time Tariq has left the country after committing a crime, information that the courtwas previously unaware of.

According to the Crown, Tariq fled to Pakistanafter being charged with dangerous driving in Bramptonin 2010.

The Crown told the court Tariq's criminal record was incomplete and did not contain any information about the dangerous driving charge or previously fleeing the country. The Crown informed the court Thursdayat its first opportunity.

Undermines trust in the court

Thecourt builds in several safeguards to force an accused to abide bybail conditions, Toronto criminal defence lawyer Trevin David told CBC Toronto.

David said that it's "extremely rare" for an accused or convicted criminal to flee in the middle of trial or before sentencing.

That's because the court imposes a surety -- in Tariq's case $10,000 paid by his father -- to compel an accused to abide bybail conditions. Tariq's father will probably forfeit that sum, David said.

It also means that Tariqlikely cannot appeal his sentence if he were to return to face it, David said.

But since Pakistan does not have an extradition treaty with Canada, authorities there cannot force him to come back to face justice.

Convicted of sexual assault

On Oct.7, Justice Mara Greene found Tariq guilty of sexual assaulting a Toronto woman who was too drunk to consent to sex.

Tariq and the woman, who was 25 at the time, met at the Everleigh nightclub in downtown Toronto early in the morning of July 18, 2015.

Surveillance camera footage submitted as evidence shows Tariq pouring vodka from a bottle into the woman's mouth several times. At one point, she pushes the bottle away.

Sexual assault surveillance video

8 years ago
Duration 2:47
An Ontario Crown prosecutor used almost half an hour of video surveillance footage to try to corroborate allegations that a Toronto woman was too intoxicated to consent to sex

From there, the pair went to the Thompson Hotel, where Tariq booked a room. Surveillance footage from the hotel's elevator shows the woman having trouble standing up and keeping her eyes open.

Tariq had sexual intercourse with the woman in the hotel room but Greene ruled the victim"did not have the capacity to consent and therefore did not consent" to sex.

The woman woke up alone in the hotel room and reportedthe sexual assaultto police later that day.

At the sentencing hearing Tariq skipped, the woman, whose identity is protected, submitted a victim impact statement that described her feeling scared, embarrassed and likea"completely different person" after the assault.

The Crown is seeking a three-year prison sentenceforTariq.

With files from CBC's Laura Fraser and Adrian Cheung