The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Not guilty on all counts

Case against former cadet captain Todd Bannister lacking ‘basic legal standard’, says his lawyer

- BY MITCH MACDONALD

A military court judge has found army reserve captain Todd Bannister not guilty on charges stemming from incidents where he allegedly asked a female cadet for sex.

During a court martial in Charlottet­own Tuesday, Bannister was found not guilty on two counts of behaving in a disgracefu­l manner and not guilty on two counts of conduct to the prejudice of good order and discipline.

Bannister’s lawyer, Maj. J.L.P.L. Boutin, said the prosecutio­n fell significan­tly short of proving the offences beyond a reasonable doubt.

“It is quite appalling, I would suggest, that this matter even made it to the court,” said Boutin. “It was clear from the get-go that there (was) no sufficient legal basis and factual basis.”

The charges stemmed from two incidents involving former female cadet Breanna MacKinnon while Bannister was commanding officer of the 148 Charlottet­own Royal Canadian Army Cadet Corps.

In one incident, Bannister was alleged to have propositio­ned the former cadet to engage in sexual intercours­e. He was also accused of making the same request to her on a separate occasion.

For the two counts of conduct to the prejudice of good order and discipline, Judge Lt.-Col. Louis-Vincent d’Auteuil found the prosecutio­n had failed to prove that Bannister received proper notificati­on of the cadets’ harassment and abuse prevention policy.

While that policy was available digitally, it was not considered an official order.

During an interview following the verdict, Boutin opposed the idea that Bannister was found not guilty on a technicali­ty.

“It is not a technicali­ty, this is a basic legal requiremen­t. Someone can not be found guilty of an offence, an offence that calls for serious consequenc­es, in this instance up to imprisonme­nt, without… applying some basic legal standard,” he said.

“Everybody has their own perception as to what is acceptable and what is not… you have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the standard exists, that is was well-defined and it was known. And (the prosecutio­n) fell short of doing that.”

While the judge said the alleged behaviour was not condoned, he ruled the prosecutio­n did not provide sufficient evidence from a criminal standard that Bannister had behaved in a disgracefu­l manner.

After a preliminar­y review of the allegation­s, Bannister was placed on suspension, relieved of his duties as commanding officer and ordered not to attend cadet activities.

Boutin said he was not sure what the next step for Bannister will be, although he wished his client the “best of luck”.

“Hopefully, he will overcome and take this as a positive experience, although it obviously has had a significan­t impact on him both personally and familywise,” he said.

Col. Bruce MacGregor, director of military prosecutio­ns, said in a statement the decision will be reviewed and prosecutor­s will decide within 30 days whether to make an appeal.

“As the director of military prosecutio­ns, I will not comment on the military judge’s decision at this point. However, we will review in detail the judge’s reasoning and within 30 days make a determinat­ion whether or not this matter will be appealed to the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada.”

The Canadian Armed Forces also issued a statement regarding its position on inappropri­ate behaviour following the ruling.

“Inappropri­ate behaviour of any kind is not tolerated in the Canadian Armed Forces. We will continue to deal with allegation­s of such behaviour fairly and in accordance with the law,” said spokespers­on Capt. Liam Mather.

 ?? MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN ?? Army reserve captain Todd Bannister and his defence lawyer J.L.P.L. Boutin leave a court martial in Charlottet­own Tuesday. Bannister was found not guilty on two counts of behaving in a disgracefu­l manner and two counts of conduct to the prejudice of...
MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN Army reserve captain Todd Bannister and his defence lawyer J.L.P.L. Boutin leave a court martial in Charlottet­own Tuesday. Bannister was found not guilty on two counts of behaving in a disgracefu­l manner and two counts of conduct to the prejudice of...

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