Edmonton Journal

Parties back bid to aid jurors traumatize­d by evidence

- JANICE DICKSON

Federal opposition parties have joined forces to support a private member’s bill aimed at improving mental-health support for jurors traumatize­d by the evidence they see during trials.

St. Albert-Edmonton MP and Conservati­ve deputy justice critic Michael Cooper says people who sit through gruesome trials and who suffer stress, anxiety and even posttrauma­tic stress disorder should be able to seek help from mental-health profession­als.

Cooper said the jury-secrecy rule prohibits jurors from talking about jury deliberati­ons forever, preventing them from seeking help.

“Frankly it’s simply unacceptab­le that jurors who are doing nothing more than their civic duty are not able to get the full mentalheal­th support they require to help cope with their mental-health issues arising from their civic duty, and that needs to change,” Cooper said.

Mark Farrant, who became an advocate for jurors after he developed posttrauma­tic stress disorder during a long murder trial, said he experience­d the challenge of getting health care first-hand.

“It’s one thing to see evidence in movies and in fiction and read about it, but when it’s real it’s a completely different experience. You can’t turn away from it,” said Farrant. “And a juror is silent. You can’t raise your hand and say you’ve had enough, ‘I want to take a break’. You can’t talk. So you have to sit there and ingest all of this detail.”

Many jurors go through the system unscathed, he said, but not all. And he said this bill removes the impediment to jurors receiving post-trial support.

Cooper’s bill is also supported by the New Democrats and he said Liberal MPs have also said they’ll support it. Cooper is seeking support from the government.

Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould said in August that she would consider changes to the very law Cooper wants to change with his private member’s bill.

Wilson said in a letter to fellow Liberal MP Anthony Housefathe­r, chairman of the House of Commons justice committee, that she will find ways to better assist jurors.

The justice committee in May on recommende­d the government amend Section 649 of the Criminal Code, which requires jurors to keep their deliberati­ons to themselves for life.

 ??  ?? Michael Cooper
Michael Cooper

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