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"There are some charges for which you don’t get a choice of trial format. These are limited and the only one that really applies with any regularity is murder. In a murder trial, there is no option; you have to have a jury trial unless the Crown consents otherwise, which they almost never do.'
- See more at: http://info.lawyershop.ca/archives/...oosing-trial-by-jury-or-trial-by-judge-alone/
I think there's more to it than that. This is a case where a man elected judge and jury, and then wanted to change his mind. The affidavit explains his position, the decision reflects the position of the court. That is, only because he missed his deadline of 15 days, the Crown as a say:
Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta
"Decision:
[37] I have concluded that an election prescribed for the Applicant by operation of law is still an election. When the Applicant was charged with murder, he immediately had an election - that of judge and jury. When he was indicted on the included charge of manslaughter he subsequently obtained a right to determine without Crown consent the mode of his trial and had, for 15 days following the completion of the preliminary inquiry, that right and opportunity to serve notice of his unilateral intention to re-elect. The Applicant failed to do this, and now he cannot re-elect without the consent of the Crown."
http://www2.albertacourts.ab.ca/jdb/2003-/qb/criminal/2011/2011abqb0145.pdf