R v Williamson
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R v Williamson is a leading Supreme Court of Canada case in which the Court ruled that Section 3 the Charter of Rights and Freedoms prohibited undue delays in criminal proceedings. The right to be tried within reasonable time was, in Williamson's case, delayed nearly three years between the laying of charges and the end of trial. The justices weighed whether the accused’s right to be tried within reasonable time under s. 11(b) of Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was infringed, and found a new framework for determining s. 11(b) infringement.[1][2][3]
The Court used the ratio decidendi of R v Jordan (2016).[1]
Background[]
The case involved the sexual abuse of a minor (Ruttan) at the hands of a Queen's University student (Williamson) who was given authority over him by the judiciary in Kingston.[4][5]
In the summer of 2017, Ruttan obtained permission from the Court for The Globe and Mail to disclose his name.[4]
At the age of 12, Ruttan began skipping school and stealing money from his mother. The intervened, and Ruttan ended up in Kingston child-protection court. In 1979, a judge found his mother unable to care for him and ordered Ruttan to accept a mentor, Williamson, who was a 26-year-old student working towards a Bachelor of Education degree at the University. Williamson met Ruttan through a juvenile diversion program designed to place boys with positive male role models. With his Court-sanctioned influence in hand, Williamson proceeded repeatedly and lengthily to bugger Ruttan, sometimes at his dormitory room on University grounds.[5][4]
References[]
- ^ a b "R. v. Williamson, 2016 SCC 28 (CanLII), [2016] 1 SCR 741". Canadian Legal Information Institute.
- ^ https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/kenneth-gavin-williamson-justice/article36664624/. Missing or empty
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(help) - ^ https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-trial-date-set-in-legal-battle-of-child-abuse-victim-byron-ruttan/. Missing or empty
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(help) - ^ a b c Fine, Sean (29 December 2019). "'People understand me now': Byron Ruttan is finally at peace after a 40-year quest for justice". The Globe and Mail Inc.
- ^ a b "Jean Royce Hall sexual abuse case comes to a conclusion". The Queen's Journal. 10 January 2020.
- Canadian criminal case law
- Supreme Court of Canada cases
- 2016 in Canadian case law
- Sexual harassment in Canada
- Political controversies in Canada
- Ontario society
- Harassment case law
- Violence against men in North America