Blackmail risk kept Manitoba judge from prior appointment - Action News
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Manitoba

Blackmail risk kept Manitoba judge from prior appointment

A Manitoba judge facing a judicial inquiry over a sex scandal was once rejected for an appointment to the bench because of a perceived risk of embarassment and blackmail.

Lori Douglas inquiry to reconvene in December

Lori Douglas has denied knowing her husband posted photos, some of which showed her in bondage gear or performing sex acts, on the internet. (CBC)

A Manitoba judge facing ajudicial inquiry over a sex scandalwas oncerejected for an appointmentto the benchbecause of a perceivedrisk of embarrassment and blackmail.

Manitoba Appeal Court Judge Martin Freedman was head of the Judicial Advisory Committee (JAC) in 2005 when Justice Lori Douglas was first selected to the Court of Queen's Bench.

He told the inquiry on Friday that hehad heard that photos of a naked Douglas had been posted online. He alsoheard that her husband, Jack King, had tried to solicit a manto havesexwith Douglas.

Freedman said he was made aware of thata few years earlier, when Manitoba Chief Justice Marc Monnin opposed Douglas'sappointment because of thepotential risk of embarrassment and blackmail.

But that opposition was withdrawn in 2005 because Monnin believed the photos had beendestroyed and the matter wouldn't resurface.

Freedman said he passed that information on to the rest of the JAC.

Once it was clear the JAC wanted to recommend Douglas, it was decidedshe shouldn't be "highly" recommended, just "recommended," Freedman said.

He added that he didn't know at the time thatthe photos King took had been posted on an interracial sex website. He also didn't know King posted ads on that same website looking for sex partners for hiswife.

Motion to halt rejected

Earlier in the day, the inquiry committeerejected a motion for the hearing to be terminated.

"We have not prejudged. Our minds remain open to persuasion," said committee chair Catherine Fraser.

Sheila Block, the lawyer representing Douglas, made the motion on Thursday to halt the hearing, accusing it ofgiving the impressionit is biased.

She complainedthe committee's questioning of Kingwas one-sided and aggressive.

The inquiry adjourned early Thursday to consider the motion. The committee returned Friday morning, saying it would not recuse itself.

Responding to the decision on Friday, Block repeated the complaints. She arguedthe cross-examination of King by George Macintosh, the lawyer who asks questions on behalf of the committee, was "savage, demeaning, humiliating."

Fraser then cut her off, saying thecommittee ruling had been made.

Removal from the bench

The inquiry is examining whether Douglas should lose her job because she failed to disclose the matter of the photos and solicitation of sex partners when she was appointed a judge in 2005.

Jack King uploaded photos of his wife to a website dedicated to interracial sex and said she was looking for a black partner. (CBC)

Douglas has denied all the allegations.Both she and King have said he was responsiblefor everything without her knowledge.

King hastold the inquiry that he uploaded the photos when Douglas and King were family law lawyers at the same firm. He placed the ad for an interracial sex partner in 2002.

He also emailed photos to a client named Alexander Chapman, who is black, and asked him to have sex with Douglas.

Chapman complained to the law firm and King settled the matter within weeks by paying Chapman $25,000 to return all the photos and to never discuss the matter.

Chapman broke that deal in 2010 and complained to the judicial council, insisting Douglas was part of the sexual harassment.

That is what led to the present inquiry.

Complaint of bias

Block's complaint of biaswas based on questions madeWednesday by Macintosh, who pushedKing on histestimonythat Douglas never knew what he did with the photos, some of which showed her in bondage gear or performing sex acts.

Alex Chapman, seen leaving the hearing on Thursday, prompted the inquiry with a complaint that he was sexually harassed by Lori Douglas and her husband Jack King. (CBC)

Macintosh seemed incredulous at King's suggestion that Douglas never looked at or asked about the photos, some of which were taken with a Polaroid instant camera.

"So [the picture] is there, the camera's there, you're there, your wife is there. You didn't hide it, did you?" Macintosh asked.

Macintosh and King also butted heads when Macintosh pointed to evidence from one of King's former law partners, who said that King had told him Douglas knew about some of the internet photos.

"That is completely inconsistent with the proposal that your wife knew absolutely nothing," Macintosh said.

Guy Pratte, the independent lawyer leading the inquiry and who represents the public interest, agreed with Block that Macintosh's questioning had gone too far.

"The appearance is incontestable that it was a strong and co-ordinated attack on the witness," Pratte said.

"If inquisition is to be done, it has to be done by independent counsel. You cannot descend into the arena."

Pratte stopped short of calling for a halt to proceedings, but said at the very least, the tone of questions from Macintosh must change.

The committee members include Derek Green, the chief justice of Newfoundland and Labrador, Jacqueline Matheson, chief justice of Prince Edward Island, and Fraser, chief justice of Alberta.

The hearing is a rarity. The Canadian Judicial Council has only held them nine times across the country in 40 years and it has only once recommended that a judge be removed.

In 2009, the council recommended to the federal government that Paul Cosgrove be removed as a justice of the Ontario Superior Court due to incompetence and abuse of his powers.

Cosgrove resigned before the federal government could make its decision.

Appointment process described

The inquiry also learned more about the process that took place when Douglas was appointed to be a judge.

Margaret Rose Jamieson, who is now retired, was an official with the Federal Judicial Affairs Commission and was the executive director of appointments from 2003 to 2009.

She said her role in the appointment process included examining candidates' qualifications and assisting with the preparation of a report to the federal minister of justice.

Jamieson said that in her time on the job, a candidate to becomejudge was never formally interviewed by the commission. She said that if she spoke to a candidate it was for verification and she did not investigate people.

When asked about Douglas, Jamieson said she remembers little about speaking to her, butdoesremember Douglas telling her about pictures thatmay have been provided to someone or posted on the internet.

According to Jamieson, Douglas said the matter had been resolved through a confidential settlement.

Jamieson said the conversation focused on verifying that there had been a settlement.

The inquiry was set to reconvene in December, although no precise dates were given.

With files from The Canadian Press