Lethbridge Herald

Judge denies bid by widow, soldier

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

A Canadian judge wasted precious few minutes on Thursday in refusing to freeze a reported $10.5-million payout to Omar Khadr so the widow of a slain American soldier he was accused of killing in Afghanista­n can have more time to go after the money.

In his ruling, Ontario Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba said he had heard nothing to show Khadr planned to hide assets to thwart possible enforcemen­t of a massive American court award against him.

“People might have a lot of opinions. But this is not a coffee shop. This is a court of law,” Belobaba said during the hearing. “We don’t, thank goodness, in Canada have one law for Omar Khadr and one law for all other Canadians.”

Tabitha Speer, widow of U.S. special forces soldier Sgt. Chris Speer, and a former American soldier Layne Morris blinded in one eye, wanted an injunction freezing Khadr’s assets pending their battle to have a Canadian court force him to pay the US$134.1-million judgment from Utah.

Their Toronto-based lawyer David Winer found himself struggling to persuade Belobaba to hand down what the judge called an “extraordin­ary and very drastic remedy” and a “nuclear weapon.”

Grabbing someone’s property, the judge said, demands solid, credible evidence that the person planned to thwart creditors or flout court orders.

“We’ve got to deal with that,” he told Winer. “If you can’t clear this criterion, we’re done.”

Winer’s evidence, however, amounted to media reports on Khadr’s recent settlement of his lawsuit against Ottawa, announced last week, for breaching his rights during his 10 years as a prisoner at Guantanamo Bay. Sources said the deal with Khadr, 30, included a government payout of $10.5 million — money the Americans want to get their hands on.

In one article, the Globe and Mail cited an anonymous source as saying Khadr had already legally sheltered the money, court heard.

“Everything that he has reported on this matter has so far turned out to be correct,” Winer said of Globe reporter Robert Fife.

“Newspapers get it right a heck of a lot of times; they have great people working for them,” Belobaba allowed. At the same time, he said it was difficult to rely legally on one anonymous source, a point Khadr’s Edmontonba­sed lawyer, Nate Whitling, pressed home during his brief submission­s.

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