Ganley wants changes after victim jailed
EDMONTON – Justice minister Kathleen Ganley says she wants policy changes within three months, in light of the case of a sexual assault victim who was held in custody and led into the courtroom in shackles while testifying in 2015.
A provision under the Criminal Code was used to hold the Indigenous woman in custody, after she had trouble with some of her answers during her attacker’s preliminary hearing. It was requested by the Crown and granted by the judge. Ganley said it is her understanding that the woman “wasn’t housed” at the time, and was tired and upset.
“The way this young woman was treated was absolutely unacceptable,” Ganley told reporters in Edmonton Monday, June 5, after a story about the case was published by CBC.
The woman’s name cannot be used due to a publication ban. She was killed seven months after the preliminary hearing, in what is described as an unrelated shooting. Her testimony was used as evidence at trial, which saw Lance Blanchard convicted of charges that included aggravated assault and aggravated sexual assault.


