Calgary Herald

New trial ordered in child porn case

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The Supreme Court of Canada has ordered a new trial in the case of two Edmonton men who made child pornograph­y after videotapin­g two 14-year-old girls performing sex acts.

Donny Barabash and Shane Rollison were acquitted at their 2012 trial of making child pornograph­y because the judge accepted that the so-called private-use exception was available to them as a defence.

The Alberta Court of Appeal overturned the acquittal and convicted the men, but it was not a unanimous decision. One Appeal Court justice said the private-use exception was available because the videos were consensual and for private use.

But the Supreme Court was unanimous in its ruling that the private-use defence cannot be used if it is determined that the girls were sexually exploited.

The high court ruled that the trial judge focused too much on the question of consent, and not the broader issue of whether the girls were exploited.

“The trial judge was also required to holistical­ly assess the nature and circumstan­ces of the relationsh­ip to determine whether sexual activity was rendered unlawful,” wrote Justice Andromache Karakatsan­is for the court.

“By failing to consider whether the underlying relationsh­ip be- tween the complainan­ts and the appellants was exploitati­ve, the trial judge erred in law.”

The saga of two girls, who were 14 at the time, began when they ran away from a High Prairie, Alta. treatment centre and found their way to Edmonton.

One of the girls had fallen into prostituti­on, and they abused crack cocaine and marijuana.

They went to stay with Barabash, then 60, and Rollison, then 41, who supplied them with drugs and a roof over their heads.

The girls also performed explicit sex acts on video, which Barabash kept and never showed them.

One of the girls was asked if she wanted to do what she did, according to the federal attorney general’s factum.

“I wanted the drugs,” the girl replied.

At the time, a 14-year-old could consent to sexual activity but the law has since raised the age of consent to 16.

The trial judge and the one appeal court judge supported an acquittal for the men on the basis that the sex acts and the recording were “ostensibly consensual,” and that the pornograph­y that was created was privately held.

But the Supreme Court offered further clarificat­ion, in a ruling that will guide how the two men are retried, saying that “even if a young person consents to the sexual activity, it may nonetheles­s be unlawful in certain circumstan­ces.”

In its written argument to the Supreme Court, the federal attorney general said the harm that child pornograph­y inflicts on children must be assessed when the privateuse defence is raised.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Supreme Court has ordered a new trial for Donny Barabash and Shane Rollison of Edmonton who videotaped two 14-year-old girls performing sex acts.
ADRIAN WYLD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Supreme Court has ordered a new trial for Donny Barabash and Shane Rollison of Edmonton who videotaped two 14-year-old girls performing sex acts.

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