Windsor Star

Judge, lawyer subject of mistrial plea had prior ruling quashed

- SARAH SACHELI ssacheli@postmedia.com Twitter.com/WinStarSac­heli

The last time assistant Crown attorney Tom Meehan and Superior Court Justice Kelly Gorman met in a murder trial, it did not end well.

The pair, accused of fraternizi­ng during a recent murder trial in Windsor, were both involved in a 2012 murder trial in Woodstock. The Ontario Court of Appeal recently ruled on that 2012 case, ordering a new trial on a lesser charge.

In the Woodstock case, the appellate court ruled that Meehan was permitted to “invite the jury” to use evidence incorrectl­y. The Court of Appeal said it was up to Gorman to set that straight, but she failed to do so.

The case involved a man named John Douglas Robinson who was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

Robinson lived in Woodstock with his girlfriend, Amy Gilbert. Both were alcoholics who suffered from mental illness.

Gilbert had maintained a casual friendship with her former boyfriend, Clifford Fair. One night, Fair showed up at Gilbert and Robinson’s apartment. After they all had several beers each, Robinson wanted Fair to leave. Saying he only intended to “shoo” Fair from his home, Robinson struck Fair on the head with an aluminum pipe wrapped in a towel. Fair died.

Robinson dug a shallow grave in the backyard and buried Fair. A day or two later, Robinson dug up Fair’s body and buried it in a deeper grave. A day or two after that, Robinson dug up Fair’s body again and dismembere­d it. He covered the body parts in quicklime and buried them in three holes.

The Court of Appeal said Meehan “erroneousl­y invited the jury on more than one occasion” to use Robinson’s after-the-fact conduct as evidence of intent or evidence of planning and deliberati­on.

The judge failed to point out Meehan’s error in her final instructio­ns to jurors and, in fact, “misdirecte­d” them to consider Robinson’s conduct “before, at the time and after the unlawful act.”

The Court of Appeal found “the trial judge erred in law.” It overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial on a lesser charge.

Gorman, who normally presides in London, and Meehan, who works in the provincial Crown’s office in Windsor, met again this year for the Windsor trial of Andrew Cowan, driver of a pickup truck that in October 2012, climbed a curb at an estimated 150 kilometres per hour and hurtled over a ramp-shaped flower bed and into a commercial building in Leamington. Cowan’s best friend, Edward Witt, was in the passenger seat and died.

Cowan’s trial heard he and Witt had made a suicide pact after a night of drinking and heavy gambling losses at Caesars Windsor.

A jury convicted Cowan of second-degree murder. But defence lawyer Patrick Ducharme is calling for a mistrial with the stunning allegation that Gorman was biased against his client by virtue of her “close friendship” with Meehan, the prosecutor in the case.

Ducharme’s mistrial applicatio­n says the Ministry of the Attorney General’s regional director of Crown operations launched an investigat­ion after learning Gorman and Meehan had exchanged text messages and met for drinks and dinner after the jury returned its verdict. The mistrial applicatio­n will be heard next month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada