Waterloo Region Record

Woman testified she awoke to sailors touching her

- ALY THOMSON

HALIFAX — A young woman has told the sexual assault trial of a U.K. sailor that she woke up face down and naked on a bed in the barracks of a Halifax-area military base with at least three men performing sex acts on her.

The complainan­t said she went to sleep in a room with four beds in the Warrior Block of 12 Wing Shearwater next to a sailor and when she awoke, two men were performing sex acts on her from the front and one from behind.

“I could see outlines or shadows of people,” she told the Nova Scotia Supreme Court on Thursday of the April 2015 incident. “I heard voices laughing.”

Darren Smalley, 38, is charged with sexual assault causing bodily harm and participat­ing in a sexual assault involving one or more people in a case that once involved four accused.

The woman, whose identity is protected by a publicatio­n ban, said she went in and out of consciousn­ess three times, and recognized Smalley’s voice during the incident.

“I didn’t know what the hell was going on ... I was in shock,” she said, speaking in a soft tone.

She said at one point, someone squeezed her left nipple and it hurt, but she didn’t want to scream out of fear they would do something else to her.

Earlier Thursday, the woman said she reluctantl­y stayed the night in the barracks because her friend was becoming intimate with another member of the team and she did not want to leave her there.

She decided to go to sleep in Simon Radford’s bed because she had met him earlier and had been speaking with him throughout the night.

She testified she gave him a goodnight kiss, as if you say “thank you” for letting her sleep in his single bed, one of four in the room.

When asked if she had consented to sexual activity with Smalley or anyone else, she said: “There was none ... I would not have consented.”

The men were in the area to participat­e in a naval hockey tournament at the time of the alleged sexual assault.

On Wednesday, the woman described feeling scared and uncomforta­ble in a barracks room filled with British navy hockey players, as a naked man lay face down on a bed and other men cheered.

She said she got separated from her friend on the evening of April 9, 2015, after they arrived back at the barracks from a beer run, and she started feeling panicked.

When she couldn’t find her friend, she started knocking on doors and calling out her name. She then realized she was alone in a building full of hockey players.

She said a player asked her if she wanted to go back to his room, but she said no, believing there was more safety in numbers.

Unable to find her friend, she decided to go to a room they were in earlier in the night, but another player she encountere­d in the hall told her, “You don’t want to go down there.”

But the complainan­t went anyway, as it was the only familiar room to her in the barracks and she felt that her friend may eventually show up there.

She said the room was full of hockey players and a man was naked face down on a bed. An “inappropri­ate” comment — which was not divulged in court — was made to her, and she made a comment in response, the woman testified.

“For me, it was extremely threatenin­g to have a group of people I didn’t know; they’re all together in a small room ... the naked man is next to me and so the more scared I got, the more aggressive and assertive I became as well,” the woman said in testimony on Wednesday.

“Nothing seemed out of place to the hockey team. They seemed like this is how they would normally spend a Thursday. They were comfortabl­e. They were cheering at the player who was face down as if this is common practice.”

She said there was “laughing, cheering, snickering. They seemed generally amused by the comment and response.”

The woman said she went to the female washroom, and her friend came in. She said Thursday that she can’t quite recall the order of events for the next portion of the evening, but she eventually made her way back to the room she was in previously and the group of men had departed.

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