With any luck, these men will be charged on this appeal by the Crown.......one would hope.
November 5, 2013
The Crown is appealing the decision of a provincial court judge who tossed out charges of illegal hunting against three Lower Mainland men.
The three men were accused by the Crown of using deer in the High Bar area of the South Cariboo as target practice.
A lawyer acting for Paramjit Singh Chahal, his 23-year-old son Sukhraj Singh Chahal, and Sukhvinder Singh Kalkat challenged the case under a section of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The Crown alleged three mule deer were shot on Nov. 12, 2010, at OK Ranch, in the South Cariboo about 50 kilometres west of Clinton.
Defence lawyer Mark Rowan argued charges should be stayed, saying an unreasonable delay in a trial is a breach of the three men's Charter rights.
Judge Stephen Harrison agreed, ruling the delay did breach the three men's charter rights, including the right to a fair trial. The defence was not responsible for any of the delays.
"This is clearly the result of (a lack of) institutional resources," Harrison said in his ruling last month. "There is great demand for court time in all three divisions and lists are frequently overbooked."
Prosecutor Joel Gold said the Crown is challenging that ruling. The appeal is set to be heard the week of March 17, in a one-day hearing.
http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/article/20131105/KAMLOOPS0101/131109946/0/kamloops/crown-appeals-hunting-decision-that-saw-charges-tossed
November 5, 2013
The Crown is appealing the decision of a provincial court judge who tossed out charges of illegal hunting against three Lower Mainland men.
The three men were accused by the Crown of using deer in the High Bar area of the South Cariboo as target practice.
A lawyer acting for Paramjit Singh Chahal, his 23-year-old son Sukhraj Singh Chahal, and Sukhvinder Singh Kalkat challenged the case under a section of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The Crown alleged three mule deer were shot on Nov. 12, 2010, at OK Ranch, in the South Cariboo about 50 kilometres west of Clinton.
Defence lawyer Mark Rowan argued charges should be stayed, saying an unreasonable delay in a trial is a breach of the three men's Charter rights.
Judge Stephen Harrison agreed, ruling the delay did breach the three men's charter rights, including the right to a fair trial. The defence was not responsible for any of the delays.
"This is clearly the result of (a lack of) institutional resources," Harrison said in his ruling last month. "There is great demand for court time in all three divisions and lists are frequently overbooked."
Prosecutor Joel Gold said the Crown is challenging that ruling. The appeal is set to be heard the week of March 17, in a one-day hearing.
http://www.kamloopsnews.ca/article/20131105/KAMLOOPS0101/131109946/0/kamloops/crown-appeals-hunting-decision-that-saw-charges-tossed



















































