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Canadian Court Jails 62-Year Man for 1987, 1993 Sexual Assault

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By OLUFEMI SHODUNKE (CANADA)

An Ontario Supreme Court of Justice in Canada has sentenced a 62-year-old man, Bradley Britton, who sexually assaulted two women 38 years ago, to a “global sentence” of eight years.

Britton, according to court records, assaulted victim N.G. on May 23, 1987 at Toronto and victim A.N. in Oakville in 1993, both in Ontario Province.

The Presiding Judge, Conlan J, who described the two incidents as “historical offences,” stated last Wednesday that Britton, who was 24 when he sexually assaulted his first victim, committed grievous offences.

“The gravity of these two offences is very significant.  The degree of responsibility of this offender, Britton, is very high,” Justice Conlan said in his recent decision.

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He maintained: “Notwithstanding Mr. Adler’s able submissions, and notwithstanding the passage of time and all of the extensive materials filed by the defence, I am of the opinion that a significant penitentiary sentence is the only reasonable disposition in this case.

“The sentence of the Court is as follows.  On the conviction involving N.G., Britton is sentenced to 5 years’ imprisonment.  On the conviction involving A.N., Britton is sentenced to 3 years’ imprisonment, consecutive.  The global sentence is, therefore, 8 years’ imprisonment.”

“I have deliberately tempered the sentence on each of the two convictions so as to respect the totality principle and so that the mitigating factors are properly accounted for. 

For example, five years in custody for breaking into the home of and sexually assaulting, with full vaginal penetration, a random woman in her bed, at knife point, is relatively low,” the judge stressed.

He added: “Overall, though, I am satisfied that the global sentence imposed is a fit one.”

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According to court records, the sexual offences were committed some six years apart, against the two different victims, in different cities, and in different circumstances, and therefore, consecutive sentences were appropriate, keeping in mind the totality principle.

Britton, who had a lengthy history of drug and alcohol addiction but never committed any crime since the assaults, was discovered as the perpetrator after “a determined police investigation by both Toronto and Halton authorities, and with the assistance of an expert genealogy laboratory in Texas” USA in 2023.

He was alleged to have invaded N.G. home between 3am and 4am, and assaulted the then 28-year-old married mother of three children while sleeping. 

“The family was asleep in their apartment on Jane Street.  The couple’s 1-year-old daughter was sleeping in the bed beside the victim.  The husband and the couple’s two older daughters, 5 and 9 years old, were asleep in the adjacent room,” the record disclosed.

Britton allegedly threatened to kill the woman who later told police that “she was afraid of dying during the attack.”

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Similarly, the accused had laid ambushed on the 20-year-old A.G. while she was walking home in Oakville in 1993 and sexually attacked her.

“When he was finished with her, Britton told the victim to count to 20 before she moved.  He told her not to tell anyone and that he would be watching her.  He then left the area,” the court record disclosed.

The record added: “Police determined that Britton had been hiding behind a gravestone and watching the walking path that had been used by the victim.  He had run out from behind the gravestone to attack A.N.

Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

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CRIME

Michel Platini’s Villa Burgled, Trophies and Medals Stolen

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French football icon Michel Platini has been the victim of a burglary at his villa in Cassis, Bouches-du-Rhône, with several of his prestigious trophies and medals reportedly stolen.

According to reports confirmed by RTL and later by AFP, the break-in occurred early Friday morning.

Platini, who wore the number 10 shirt for France and earned 72 caps between 1976 and 1987, was at home at the time and was alerted by a noise coming from his garden.

The 70-year-old former UEFA president went to investigate and was confronted by a hooded intruder dressed in black.

The suspect fled the scene but not before making off with a number of sporting awards, mainly comprising medals and trophies from Platini’s illustrious career.

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The research brigade from nearby Aubagne has been assigned to lead the investigation into the burglary.

Michel Platini, widely regarded as one of the greatest midfielders of all time, is a three-time Ballon d’Or winner (1983, 1984, 1985) and played a pivotal role in France’s 1984 European Championship victory.

 At club level, he lifted the European Cup with Juventus in 1985 and led France to two World Cup semi-final finishes—in 1982 (4th place) and 1986 (3rd place).

He later went on to coach the national team and served as UEFA president from 2007 to 2015.

The stolen memorabilia represent not just personal mementos but also treasured artifacts of football history. French authorities are continuing their investigation, and no arrests have yet been made.

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Spanish court overturns Dani Alves’ rape conviction

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Dani Alves Release From Prison - Brians 2 Prison, Barcelona, Spain - March 25, 2024 Brazilian soccer player Dani Alves leaves the Brians 2 prison on bail while he appeals his rape conviction REUTERS/Bruna Casas/File Photo 

The top court in Spain’s Catalonia region on Friday overturned Brazilian soccer player Dani Alves’ rape conviction, saying the case against him had inconsistencies and contradictions.

The 41-year-old defender was convicted last year of raping a woman in the restroom of a Barcelona nightclub in 2022 and sentenced to 4-1/2 years in prison.

“Dani Alves is very happy. He is innocent, that is demonstrated. Justice has spoken,” Ines Guardiola, lawyer for the former Barcelona, PSG and Juventus player, told RAC1 radio.

The case has gripped Spain where women’s rights have become a highly sensitive national topic, especially in the sports world after the scandal over former soccer chief Luis Rubiales’ unwanted kissing of national team player Jenni Hermoso in 2023.

In its unanimous appeal ruling, the four-judge Catalan high court said the accuser’s testimony lacked reliability over facts that could be objectively verified through video, “explicitly indicating that what she recounted does not correspond to reality”.

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“The inadequacies of the evidence lead to the conclusion that the standard required by the presumption of innocence has not been met,” it said, noting “a series of gaps, inaccuracies, inconsistencies and contradictions concerning the facts, the legal assessment and its consequences”.

The accuser’s lawyer, Ester Garcia, told reporters she would appeal the decision before Spain’s Supreme Court, which could take a year to be resolved. She said the process was emotionally taxing for her client due to the intense media attention on the case.

The regional prosecutor’s office declined to comment on the ruling.

Alves had already been released from prison on a 1 million euro ($1.1 million) bail while awaiting the appeal. Now he is free to leave Spain after the court overturned a travel ban, restraining order and compensation payment.

The court said that the alleged victim’s argument that she went with Alves into the restroom for fear that his friends might follow them did not appear reasonable, concluding that she instead “voluntarily went to the bathroom area for the purpose of being with the defendant in a more intimate space”.

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It added that CCTV footage did not allow to infer whether she consented to the subsequent interaction or not.

REACTIONS

While some Spaniards said the judges should be trusted, others expressed unease with the ruling and its potential implications for women accusing men of power.

Justice Minister Felix Bolanos said the ruling must be respected and he could not separately assess facts already reviewed by judges. But he added: “Spanish society no longer tolerates sexist vexatious behaviour and women are losing their fear and denouncing it.”

Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Diaz, however, came out in solidarity with Alves’ accuser, whose identity has not been made public. “All my support to the victim. I’m concerned about the re-victimisation of the victim, who is suffering a lot. Justice needs to walk hand in hand with women and provide certainty and security.”

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Irene Montero, who was Spain’s equality minister when Alves was first indicted, criticised the ruling as “patriarchal justice.” “Only yes means yes,” she added, referring to a legal reform she spearheaded establishing an absence of consent as a main criterion for determining sex offences.

-Reuters

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No ‘medical items’ around Maradona deathbed: Policeman to court

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A policeman who was among the first on the scene of Diego Maradona’s death four years ago, told a court Tuesday he saw no “medical items” in the room where the football legend was receiving post-operative care at home.

Officer Lucas Farias testified in the trial of seven health professionals accused of homicide for their alleged role in what prosecutors have described as the “horror theatre” of Maradona’s final days.

Farias said he “didn’t see medical items in the room. I didn’t see serums that I think should be part of home hospitalization,” referring to an intravenous drip.

Farias was one of four police officers to give evidence Tuesday, a week after the trial opened in San Isidro in the northern suburbs of Buenos Aires.

“What first caught my attention about Diego Maradona was his face-up position with an abdomen so swollen it seemed about to explode,” said Farias.

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“I was shocked to see Maradona in that state, I never thought I’d find myself faced with that image.”

Maradona died on November 25, 2020, aged 60, while recovering at home from brain surgery for a blood clot, after decades battling cocaine and alcohol addictions.

It was determined he died of heart failure and acute pulmonary edema, a condition where fluid accumulates in the lungs.

On trial are a neurosurgeon, a psychiatrist, a psychologist, a medical coordinator, a nursing coordinator, a doctor and a night nurse accused of being criminally negligent in the care they provided to the footballer in his final days.

Prosecutors allege the footballer was abandoned to his fate for a “prolonged, agonizing period” before his death.

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The defendants face prison terms of between eight and 25 years if convicted of “homicide with possible intent” — pursuing a course of action despite knowing it can cause death.

Nearly 120 witnesses are expected to testify in the long-delayed trial expected to run until July.

-AFP

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