The Niagara Falls Review

Two weeks set aside for final remarks in Duffy trial

- — Canadian Press

OTTAWA — The end may be in sight for Sen. Mike Duffy’s longrunnin­g legal and political saga.

Judge Charles Vaillancou­rt agreed Friday that closing arguments in the Duffy trial will be heard Feb. 22 to March 4.

Duffy, 69, has pleaded not guilty to 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery in relation to his Senate expense accounts, a scandal that reached directly into the office of former prime minister Stephen Harper.

The trial at Ottawa’s downtown courthouse a few blocks from Parliament Hill opened last April 7 amid a media circus; i t resumed with explosive testimony in August in the opening days of the long federal election campaign; and testimony wrapped up this week with Duffy himself on the stand during a curiously abbreviate­d Crown cross examinatio­n. In all, the court heard 61 days of testimony.

Vaillancou­rt, in a three-minute scheduling hearing Friday morning, suggested he’s heard enough. The judge asked to see written submission­s from the Crown and the defence in advance of February’s fortnight finale.

“I’m also hopeful that will focus the oral submission­s and we won’t require two weeks,” he noted before adjourning.

Duffy, a nationally known former broadcaste­r, capped the hearings with eight days on the witness stand over the past two weeks.

His defence is that Senate rules were lax, vague or confusing and that Duffy followed the same expense practices as other senators. As for the secret $90,000 cheque he received from Nigel Wright, Harper’s former chief of staff, Duffy testified he was coerced by the Prime Minister’s Office for reasons of partisan political optics into repaying housing expense claims he felt he did not owe.

Duffy left the witness box on Thursday after just two days of Crown cross-examinatio­n without ever being asked about the $ 90,000 Wright payment. That cheque i s the basis of three bribery charges Duffy faces — although Wright, who testified in early August, was not charged with offering a bribe.

Sen. Patrick Brazeau and retired senator Mac Harb are also awaiting trial on Senate expense-related charges. Brazeau has a trial date set for March while Harb’s trial is scheduled to get underway next August.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/ CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sen. Mike Duffy, a former member of the Conservati­ve caucus, arrives at the courthouse for his trial in Ottawa earlier this month.
SEAN KILPATRICK/ CANADIAN PRESS Sen. Mike Duffy, a former member of the Conservati­ve caucus, arrives at the courthouse for his trial in Ottawa earlier this month.

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