The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Jail guards to stand trial for alleged role in death of Ontario inmate

- BY PETER GOFFIN

Two guards at a London, Ont., jail will have to stand trial for their alleged role in an inmate’s death, Ontario’s top court ruled Monday, reversing an earlier decision to stay charges against the pair due to delayed proceeding­s.

Correction­s officers Leslie Lonsbary and Stephen Jurkus were charged with failing to provide the necessarie­s of life after 29-year-old Adam Kargus was beaten to death by his cellmate at the Elgin Middlesex Detention Centre in October 2013.

A lower court stayed the charges against the two officers in February 2017, ruling that the case against them had eclipsed the 30-month time limit for trials set out by the Supreme Court of Canada.

Crown prosecutor­s appealed that decision, arguing the judge made errors in her analysis of the time-frame rules, which allow certain types of delays to occur without counting toward the 30-month limit.

In a decision released Monday, the Ontario Court of Appeal found in favour of the Crown, saying the lower court judge had miscalcula­ted the total delay in the case.

“There was no unreasonab­le delay,” Justice Michal Fairburn wrote in a decision agreed to by fellow justices Sarah Pepall and Robert Sharpe.

“I would … lift the stays of proceeding­s and remit the matter to the Superior Court of Justice for trial.”

Lonsbary and Jurkus were on duty at Elgin Middlesex the night that inmate Anthony George beat Kargus to death in a jailhouse shower stall.

The beating lasted about an hour and was so loud that an inmate on the floor below could hear “excessive banging,” Fairburn said in her decision.

Kargus screamed for help, but guards did not respond until his body was found the next morning, the justice added.

George pleaded guilty to seconddegr­ee murder last year in connection with Kargus’ death, and was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 10 years.

The appeal court’s decision focused largely on evaluating delays in the case.

Delays that were caused by the defence, and delays that were caused by “exceptiona­l” circumstan­ces – which can include specific incidents or the general complexity of the case – do not count toward the 30-month ceiling for criminal proceeding­s, Fairburn said in her decision.

Among the time not properly taken into account by the lower court judge was a “three-month delay generated by the need for an additional day to complete the preliminar­y inquiry,” Fairburn said.

Two “critical” events occurred that necessitat­ed the extra day of inquiry: the Crown dropped their charge against a third Elgin Middlesex guard who was then added to the prosecutor­s’ list of witnesses, and Lonsbary’s lawyers decided to add their own new witness to the defence list.

“Courts must be prepared to respond promptly and effectivel­y to unexpected or unavoidabl­e delays in criminal trials,” Fairburn said.

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