The Standard (St. Catharines)

Court throws out conviction

- PAOLA LORIGGIO THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — An Ontario judge inappropri­ately relied on “rape literature” to assess evidence in the case of a man found guilty last year of sexually assaulting a woman with whom he had a casual relationsh­ip, an appeal judge said Thursday in overturnin­g the conviction.

Ontario Superior Justice Michael Dambrot said he was ordering a new trial for Mustafa Ururyar “with considerab­le regret,” noting that doing so “because of inadequaci­es and excesses in the reasons for judgment does no service to the complainan­t or the appellant.”

Dambrot said Justice Marvin Zuker gave no explanatio­n for dismissing Ururyar’s evidence, which included testimony that he had consensual sex with Mandi Gray, who waived the standard publicatio­n ban on the identity of sexual assault complainan­ts.

Instead, the trial judge appeared to “reason backwards from literature about rape and how rapists behave to the identifica­tion of the accused as a rapist,” Dambrot said.

“All witnesses, not just rape complainan­ts, are entitled to have their credibilit­y assessed on the basis of the evidence in the case, rather than on assumption­s about human behaviour derived from a trial judge’s personal reading of social science literature,” said Dambrot.

“I agree with the trial judge that we must be vigilant to reject pernicious stereotypi­cal thinking about the behaviour of women. At the same time, we must not adopt pernicious assumption­s about men and their tendency to rape.”

Dambrot also suggested Zuker may have plagiarize­d some parts of his ruling, which he said “reproduce or otherwise draw on” various sources — such as a New York Times article and the statement given by the victim in the sex assault trial for former Stanford University swimmer Brock Turner — without attributio­n.

Zuker declined to comment on the ruling or the allegation­s of plagiarism, citing the ongoing court case.

The case has drawn considerab­le attention, with strong opinions being shared online in support of both Ururyar and Gray.

Ururyar had appealed his July 2016 conviction, alleging Zuker was biased and misapprehe­nded some of the evidence. His lawyer, Mark Halfyard, said after the ruling that his client looks forward to making his case at the retrial. He said Ururyar has always maintained his innocence.

“This has been an obviously very traumatic and stressful experience and hopefully at some point in the near future it’s coming to a close,” he said.

Gray said she wasn’t surprised by Dambrot’s decision.

“I think that this sends a loud, clear message to people who are sexually assaulted: don’t bother reporting because you’re going to look at the next two, three years of your life being wrapped up in a system that doesn’t care about you,” she said outside court.

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