Calgary Herald

Crown seeks to overturn acquittal of couple in toddler son’s death

Appeal alleges judge wrongly influenced by medical examiner’s way of speaking

- BILL GRAVE LAND

The Crown is asking the Alberta Court of Appeal to overturn the acquittal of a couple charged in the death of their son.

David and Collet Stephan were accused of not seeking medical attention sooner for 19-month-old Ezekiel, who died in 2012. The couple testified they thought their son had croup and that they used herbal remedies to treat him.

Last September, a Court of Queen’s Bench judge found them not guilty of failing to provide the necessarie­s of life in their second trial on the charge.

Justice Terry Clackson accepted the testimony of a defence expert, who said the toddler died of a lack of oxygen, not bacterial meningitis as reported by Dr. Bamidele Adeagbo, the original medical examiner.

Crown prosecutor Rajbir Dhillon told the Appeal court on Thursday that Clackson showed a reasonable apprehensi­on of bias for “insulting and improper” comments throughout the trial about the verbal skills of Adeagbo, who was born in Nigeria.

“This ground is about whether the way a witness speaks should influence the weight of their evidence or their ability to participat­e in our court system,” Dhillon said.

“The trial judge’s comments suggest that it should have an influence. But a witness should not be judged on their elocution and they should not have their evidence prejudged based on the way they speak.

“There is a reasonable apprehensi­on that the trial judge did both of these things with regard to the evidence of Dr. Bamidele Adeagbo.”

Dhillon said Clackson made it clear that he would give less weight to the evidence because he had difficulty understand­ing Adeagbo’s testimony.

In his decision last September, Clackson noted that Adeagbo spoke with an accent and was difficult to understand.

“His ability to articulate his thoughts in an understand­able fashion was severely compromise­d by: his garbled enunciatio­n; his failure to use appropriat­e endings for plurals and past tenses; his failure to use the appropriat­e definite and indefinite articles; his repeated emphasis of the wrong syllables; dropping his Hs; mispronoun­cing his vowels; and the speed of his responses,” Clackson wrote.

The judge also called out Adeagbo for “body language and physical antics ... not the behaviours usually associated with a rational, impartial profession­al imparting opinion evidence.”

Dhillon said those comments would lead a regular observer to think that it’s more likely than not that the judge consciousl­y or unconsciou­sly did not treat Adeagbo’s evidence fairly.

A jury convicted the Stephans in 2016, but the Supreme Court of Canada overturned the verdict and ordered a second trial.

After Clackson’s verdict, dozens of medical and legal experts filed a complaint with the Canadian Judicial Council against him, alleging he made comments about Adeagbo that could be perceived as racist.

Dhillon said the judge also erred in forcing the Crown to prove whether timely medical treatment would have saved Ezekiel’s life, instead of the fact the couple believed he had some form of meningitis and failed to act.

“They put him at risk of death,” he said.

The Canadian Press

 ?? TED RHODES/FILES ?? David and Collet Stephan enter court in Lethbridge, where they were found guilty in 2016 of failing to provide the necessarie­s of life for their 19-month-old son Ezekiel.
TED RHODES/FILES David and Collet Stephan enter court in Lethbridge, where they were found guilty in 2016 of failing to provide the necessarie­s of life for their 19-month-old son Ezekiel.

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