The Mercury News

Jury finds fashion mogul Peter Nygard guilty of 4 sexual assault charges

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Peter Nygard, who once led a women's fashion empire, was found guilty of four counts of sexual assault in a Canadian court on Sunday but was acquitted of a fifth count plus a charge of forcible confinemen­t.

The jury handed down the verdict on the fifth day of deliberati­ons following a six-week trial in Toronto.

Nygard, 82, had pleaded not guilty to all charges, which stemmed from allegation­s dating back from the 1980s to the mid2000s.

Five women — whose identities are protected by a publicatio­n ban — had testified that they were invited to Nygard's Toronto headquarte­rs under pretexts ranging from tours to job interviews, with all encounters ending in a top-floor bedroom suite where four of them were sexually assaulted.

Multiple complainan­ts told the jury similar stories of meeting Nygard on a plane, at an airport tarmac or at a nightclub and then receiving invitation­s to come to headquarte­rs. All five women said their meetings or interactio­ns with Nygard ended with sexual activity that they did not consent to.

One of the complainan­ts testified that Nygard wouldn't let her leave his private suite for some time, which led to the forcible confinemen­t charge. Others also testified about feeling trapped in the suite, describing doors that had to be opened with a keypad code or the push of a button near the bed.

One woman testified that she was only 16 years old when she accompanie­d an older man she was dating at the time to Nygard's headquarte­rs, where she said Nygard

sexually assaulted her and then another woman handed her an emergency contracept­ive pill on her

way out.

Nygard testified in his own defense at the trial and denied all five women's allegation­s, saying he didn't even recall meeting or interactin­g with four of them. He insisted he would never engage in the type of conduct he was accused of, and said no one could have been locked inside his private suite under any circumstan­ces.

At the end of the trial, prosecutor­s argued that Nygard was evasive and unreliable in his testimony and that the similariti­es in all five women's stories showed a pattern in his behavior.

The defense argued that the complainan­ts crafted a “false narrative” about Nygard and suggested their sexual assault claims were motivated by a classactio­n lawsuit against Nygard in the United States.

Nygard is still facing criminal charges in three other jurisdicti­ons.

He is facing charges of sexual assault and forcible confinemen­t in separate cases in Quebec and Manitoba, related to allegation­s dating back to the 1990s. He is also facing charges in the U.S.

Nygard was first arrested in Winnipeg in 2020 under the Extraditio­n Act after he was charged with nine counts in New York, including sex traffickin­g and racketeeri­ng charges.

The federal justice minister at the time had said Nygard would be extradited to the U.S. after the cases against him in Canada are resolved.

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