The Guardian (USA)

Canada police apologize over investigat­ion into alleged assault by world junior hockey team

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Police in Canada have apologized to a woman who says she was the victim of an alleged sexual assault, admitting they failed to fully collect evidence in a closely-watched case involving five profession­al ice hockey players.

Last week, the NHL’s Carter Hart, Michael McLeod, Dillon Dube and Cal Foote, and Alex Formenton, who plays in Europe, were charged with sexual assault. McLeod is facing an additional charge of sexual assault for “being a party to the offence.” None of the accused entered a plea on Monday in court but their lawyers have previously denied any wrongdoing on behalf of their clients.

The charges stem from a previous lawsuit filed by a woman who alleges she was assaulted in a hotel room in June 2018 by some members of the Canadian junior team after a gala celebratin­g their world championsh­ip gold medal.

On Monday, police in London, Ontario apologized for a six-year delay in the case, which they had initially closed citing “insufficie­nt grounds” to lay charges.

“I want to extend, on behalf of the London police service, my sincerest apology to the [alleged] victim, to her family, for the amount of time that it has taken to reach this point,” said Chief Thai Truong of the London Police. “As a police officer working in this space for many, many years I can tell you that this is a difficult, difficult situation for all victims [and] survivors of sexual violence.”

Police initially opened an investigat­ion into the alleged assault in 2018, but closed it months later. After immense public scrutiny, however, the police reopened the case in 2022.

Truong said it was “completely inappropri­ate” to explain why there was a long delay in reopening the investigat­ion, over fears it could “jeopardize” the case against the five men. He said new evidence and informatio­n collected since the case was reopened led to the charges and he had the “utmost confidence” in the investigat­ion team.

Hockey Canada and the NHL both launched their own investigat­ions parallel to that of the police. At the time the NHL commission­er, Gary Bettman, said findings from the league’s investigat­ion would be “transparen­t”. But last week he said the NHL wouldn’t release its findings until after the court proceeding­s were complete.

The case is part of a broader scandal that has rocked the sport and Hockey Canada, the governing body in Canada.

In the years after the police closed their investigat­ion, the woman filed a multimilli­on dollar lawsuit against Hockey Canada, as well as against the Canadian Hockey League and eight players. Reporting from TSN found the claim had been settled for an undisclose­d amount.

In 2022, Hockey Canada executives told a parliament­ary committee that the organizati­on had secretly paid nearly C$9m (US$6.6m) to 21 complainan­ts of sexual misconduct. Reporting by national media outlets later revealed that young players across the country had unknowingl­y funded most of those payments through their registrati­on fees to the organizati­on. According to the Globe and Mail, Hockey Canada also failed to disclose to parliament the existence of a second secret fund to pay for legal efforts to fend off sexual assault claims. At the time, prime minister Justin Trudeau said Canada’s ice hockey governing body had “lost the confidence” of the country.

In Monday’s court appearance, prosecutor­s said a “significan­t” amount of disclosure would be sent to the defence in the coming days. In the event all men are tried together, their legal teams must decide if the case is to be heard by a judge alone, or if their clients want a jury trial. The court has granted a ban on publicly identifyin­g the alleged victim. The men are due back in court on 30 April.

 ?? ?? London chief of police Thai Truong apologized ‘for the amount of time that it has taken to reach this point’. Photograph: Carlos Osorio/ Reuters
London chief of police Thai Truong apologized ‘for the amount of time that it has taken to reach this point’. Photograph: Carlos Osorio/ Reuters

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