palisadesk
Active Member
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2007
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Would anyone know whether Justice Toni Skarica's statement that he would have found there to be insufficient evidence that would prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Noudga knew about the murder would have been based solely on the agreed statement of facts?
It wouldn't have been based solely on the agreed statement of facts, no. Justice Skarica was also privy to plenty of behind-closed-doors discussions with Crown (and defense), to pre-trial submissions and to the witness list, assuming there was one. So he knew more about what the Crown had in its quiver than simply the statement of facts.
The key statement comes from the Crown, really, and Skarica merely amplified that: that they had no real evidence that CN knew about Bosma's murder. The fact that the OPP, Bosmas and pretty well everyone was on board with the plea agreement, suggests that the case was quite shaky and known to be so. Now, the Crown did not come out and say straight up that they didn't have enough evidence until after the deal was done, so there was (earlier) the possibility that some witness might have some damning information, or something similar - the process in some ways resembles a game of "chicken," after all.
But I think his statement, which came at the end of the proceedings, reflected the whole picture, and especially the Crown's characterization of its own case.