Vancouver Sun

Supreme Court agrees to weigh in on `extreme intoxicati­on' defence

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO • The Supreme Court agreed on Wednesday to weigh in on a ruling related to the defence of extreme intoxicati­on that had alarmed some women's groups.

The court granted prosecutor­s in Ontario leave to appeal separate decisions in which two men had killed or injured close relatives.

The men were initially convicted but the province's Court of Appeal set aside the guilty verdicts after finding part of the law unconstitu­tional.

The impugned provision, enacted in 1995, bars an accused from using self-induced extreme intoxicati­on as a defence.

The two men, Thomas Chan and David Sullivan, were high on drugs they had taken voluntaril­y when they turned violent. One had eaten magic mushrooms; the other had tried to kill himself with an overdose of a prescripti­on stop-smoking medication.

Trial evidence was that both became psychotic and went on a rampage. Chan, a high school student, stabbed and killed his father and badly injured his father's partner. Sullivan came to believe his mother was an alien and stabbed her.

Both men claimed they had no control over what they did — a state called automatism. However, their defence of “non-mental disorder automatism” ran afoul of the ban on arguing self-induced extreme intoxicati­on.

The federal government barred the intoxicati­on defence 25 years ago amid a backlash over a court ruling that recognized drunkennes­s could be raised in a sexual assault case.

In quashing their conviction­s and finding the law unconstitu­tional, the Appeal Court said it would be wrong to punish someone for something they had no control over.

“( The law) enables the conviction of individual­s for acts they do not will,” the Appeal Court said.

While such cases are rare, and successful­ly raising an intoxicati­on defence difficult, critics argued the Appeal Court ruling had undermined a measure aimed at protecting women from sexual violence.

“We are dismayed that women's rights to equality and dignity are not given more adequate treatment,” the Women's Legal Education and Action Fund said of the Appeal Court ruling. “It also risks sending a dangerous message that men can avoid accountabi­lity for their acts of violence against women and children through intoxicati­on.”

Both federal and Ontario New Democrats had urged an appeal.

Prosecutor­s sought leave to challenge the ruling before the Supreme Court, which agreed to hear the two cases as a single appeal. It's not known when that might happen.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to examine two rulings related to whether extreme self-intoxicati­on can be used as a defence in court.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to examine two rulings related to whether extreme self-intoxicati­on can be used as a defence in court.

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