Two and a half years after Norman Tate’s son was killed in a car accident, he’s still struggling to come to terms with how the justice system handled the aftermath.

“If you step forward inside that place, you’re flipping a coin — whether you’re going to get justice that day or not,” he said on April 30, standing outside the Ontario Court of Justice in Brantford, Ont.

Norman Tate Junior was killed in a head-on collision a week before Christmas in 2021. The driver in the other car eventually was charged with impaired driving causing death and bodily harm. But the case crawled through the court system and was stayed after it breached the time limits for trials set in a 2016 Supreme Court decision.

That decision in R. v. Jordan established that criminal cases that go beyond those time limits — 18 months for provincial courts and 30 months for superior courts — can be stayed for unreasonable delay.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    The article suggests prosecutors do prioritize:

    Delays often force Crown prosecutors to decide which cases go forward and which don’t.

    And provinces are apparently looking at dropping charges early to prioritize those that will likely succeed:

    Alberta is switching to a pre-screening charge process, similar to one in B.C., to weed out more charges before they get into the court system.