Toronto Star

Duo seek stoppage of rail terror hearing

Men want court to reject applicatio­n for review of overturned conviction­s

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— Two men who were found guilty of terrorism offences in a high-profile case argue there is no need to revisit an appeal court’s decision to order a new trial.

In newly filed legal submission­s, Raed Jaser and Chiheb Esseghaier urge the Supreme Court of Canada to reject a federal applicatio­n for a hearing on whether the lower court of appeal was right to overturn their conviction­s.

Jaser and Esseghaier were found guilty in 2015 of terrorrela­ted charges arising mainly from an alleged al-Qaida-inspired plot to crash a Via Rail passenger train.

Both men appealed their conviction­s. Counsel for Jaser and a court-appointed lawyer for Esseghaier argued the jury that convicted them was improperly constitute­d.

In August last year, the Ontario Court of Appeal ordered a fresh trial. The appeal court said Jaser was improperly denied his preferred option for jury selection. It also said that if Jaser should have a new trial, Esseghaier was also entitled to one.

Following the decision, the Public Prosecutio­n Service of Canada said it would proceed with a new trial, but noted it had 60 days to decide whether to seek permission to appeal from the Supreme Court.

In a subsequent submission to the top court, federal lawyers noted Jaser and Esseghaier were convicted of the most serious terrorism offences in Canadian law after nearly nine months of pretrial motions and a three-month jury trial.

“Overturnin­g these conviction­s on the basis of a technical error that had no appreciabl­e effect on the conduct of the trial is a triumph of form over substance,” the submission said.

“Where, as here, there is no actual demonstrab­le prejudice to the fairness of the trial, the verdict properly reached by the trier of fact after a long and arduous trial should not so easily be set aside.”

The Supreme Court is expected to decide in coming weeks whether to hear the case. Both Esseghaier and Jaser say the court should dismiss the federal applicatio­n and let their new trial go ahead.

“The Crown has failed to identify any error of law in the decision of the Court of Appeal, much less one that raises an issue of national importance,” says Esseghaier’s submission.

He takes issue with the suggestion the serious nature of the alleged offences should prompt the Supreme Court to grant leave to appeal.

“The Crown has not advanced any argument as to why only serious cases involving overturned conviction­s, as opposed to conviction­s that are upheld on appeal, are sufficient to satisfy its new proposed test for leave,” Esseghaier’s brief says. “Profoundly serious cases are, sadly, not an uncommon occurrence in the Canadian criminal justice system.”

In his submission to the court, Jaser also rejects the notion that the gravity of the alleged offences would warrant a high court hearing. “The seriousnes­s of the allegation­s cannot transform an unimportan­t legal issue into an important one.”

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