Carter Hart to face cross-examination at world junior sex assault trial

6 months ago 6
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Carter Hart, one of five members of Canada’s 2018 world junior hockey team accused of sexual assault, is set to face questions from Crown prosecutors.

Hart testified Thursday in the high-profile trial, which has seen two juries dismissed since it began in late April and is proceeding by judge alone, and will be subject to cross-examination inside a London, Ont., courtroom Friday.

Hart, Michael McLeod, Alex Formenton, Dillon Dube and Callan Foote have pleaded not guilty to sexual assault stemming from what the Crown alleges was non-consensual group sex with a 20-year-old woman in McLeod’s London hotel room in June 2018.

McLeod has also pleaded not guilty to an additional charge of being a party to the offence of sexual assault.

Crown prosecutors rested their case Thursday after their last witness, retired London police Det. Steve Newton, finished his testimony Wednesday.

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 'World junior trial hears 2018 police interviews with 2 accused'

2:29 World junior trial hears 2018 police interviews with 2 accused

Lawyers for each of the five men can put forward witnesses or call evidence — but McLeod’s lawyer said he would not be calling evidence because McLeod’s police statement in 2018 was shown to court this week.

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However, Megan Savard, Hart’s lawyer, called her client to the stand Thursday.

Court has heard the team was in town for events marking its gold-medal performance at that year’s championship, and the complainant, known as E.M. in court documents, was out with friends when they met at a downtown bar on June 18, 2018.

After being with McLeod and his teammates at the bar, E.M. would go on to have consensual sex with McLeod in his room in the early morning hours of June 19. Court has heard E.M., who testified she was drunk and not of a clear mind, was in the washroom after she had sex with McLeod and came out to a group of men in the room allegedly invited for a “3 way” by McLeod in a group chat.

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It was then the Crown alleges that several sexual acts took place without E.M.’s consent.

 Court watches Michael McLeod’s 2018 police interview'

2:11 World junior trial: Court watches Michael McLeod’s 2018 police interview

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Hart told court he received a group text from McLeod with the invite, and said he had a phone call with him. When he was in the room, Hart said E.M. was asking the players to have sex with her, and he chose to ask for oral sex because he did not want to have intercourse.

Hart said the oral sex was “consensual” and brief because it was “weird.” Hart said he was single at the time, and E.M. was annoyed at one point when guys weren’t taking her up on her offers. Court has heard many of the players were in relationships at the time.

E.M. testified she was naked, drunk and afraid when men she didn’t know suddenly started coming into the room. She went on “autopilot” as a coping mechanism as she engaged in sexual acts, she said.

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Defence lawyers have suggested E.M. wasn’t as drunk as she has testified she was, wanted a “wild night” with the players, was “egging” them on to have sex with her and accused her of having a “clear agenda” at the trial.

E.M. has pushed back against those claims in a several-days-long cross-examination and at points outright rejected them, saying she was coaxed into staying in the room, was disrespected and was taken advantage of by the group who she said “could see I was out of my mind.”

The trial is expected to continue into June.

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