Medicine Hat News

Politician­s should be expected to support right to bail: Virani’s office

- STEPHANIE TAYLOR -- with files from Paola Loriggio

The public should expect politician­s to support their right to bail and to be presumed innocent, the office of Canada’s justice minister says, warning that “immediate” and “uninformed reactions” only worsen matters.

On Sunday, a jury found Umar Zameer not guilty of first-degree murder in the death of a Toronto police officer who was run over in an undergroun­d parking garage in July 2021.

While prosecutor­s in the high-profile trial alleged Zameer chose to drive dangerousl­y with Const. Jeffrey Northrup and his partner, both plaincloth­es officers, nearby, his defence said he didn’t know they were police and felt his family was in danger when two strangers ran up to his vehicle.

A spokespers­on for Justice Minister Arif Virani says the office knows the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Northrup’s death have inflicted “deep wounds” on everybody involved.

The minister’s office says it extends its condolence­s to Northrup’s family and also recognizes the “emotional turmoil” that Zameer and his family had to endure.

After the jury delivered its verdict, the judge took the rare step of apologizin­g to Zameer for all he experience­d since first being charged.

That included several months in detention until he was granted bail in a decision that sparked outrage from Toronto’s mayor and Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

It was not until the jury was sequestere­d that the bail decision showing how weak the Crown’s murder case was could be made public.

Ford told reporters on Tuesday that he only had “limited informatio­n” when he initially called Zameer’s release on bail “completely unacceptab­le” and an example of the justice system needing “to get its act together.” He also said Zameer was “the person responsibl­e.”

John Tory, Toronto’s former mayor, also said he had learned a lesson, according to a report from the Toronto Star. Virani’s office says the public should be proud of the fact someone’s guilt or innocence is decided by “impartial” juries and judges.

“Canadians should expect politician­s to support the fundamenta­l rights that underpin our justice system including the presumptio­n of innocence and the right to reasonable bail,” Chantalle Aubertin, a spokespers­on for Virani said in a statement late Tuesday.

“Rarely are all the facts of a case known. Immediate, uninformed reactions can make things worse in situations where people are already hurting.”

The Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n and Criminal Lawyers’ Associatio­n both say the case of

Zameer underscore­s how essential bail is to the justice system and should serve as a lesson as to why political leaders would be best to refrain from weighing in on such decisions.

Shakir Rahim, who directs the criminal justice program with the civil liberties group, says without being granted bail, Zameer, an innocent man, would have spent the past few years behind bars.

Politician­s who criticize bail decisions run the risk of “inflaming public opinion” towards an individual, which raises concerns about their right to a fair trial.

And, Rahim says, the case against Zameer highlights how a charge can be laid against anyone and that innocent Canadians need the protection offered by bail.

Last year, the federal Liberals introduced a suite of tougher bail measures after widespread concern from the Opposition Conservati­ves, premiers and police chiefs that it was too easy to access for repeat violent offenders.

Virani, who shepherded the bill through Parliament after former Montreal MP David Lametti was shuffled out of the justice minister role, defended the reforms as targeting those with violent criminal histories.

But justice advocates warn it risks contributi­ng to the overrepres­entation of Indigenous, Black and other marginaliz­ed people in pre-trial detention.

 ?? CP PHOTO CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV ?? Umar Zameer and his lawyers walk away from the courthouse following his not-guilty verdict in Toronto on Sunday.
CP PHOTO CHRISTOPHE­R KATSAROV Umar Zameer and his lawyers walk away from the courthouse following his not-guilty verdict in Toronto on Sunday.

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