Missing videotapes by inches made miles of difference

Policeman couldn't reach cache of powerful Bernardo evidence


BY GAY ABBATE
The Globe and Mail

TORONTO--It all comes down to a matter of inches.

If the police officer searching behind a potlight in a bathroom of Paul Bernardo's house had been an inch or two taller, or if he had searched a little deeper into the cavity, the incriminating tapes of the rapes and torture of Kristen French and Leslie Mahaffy would have been found.

Thus concluded Mr. Justice Archie Campbell of the Ontario Court's General Division in his report this week on the police investigation of the Bernardo case. The report is critical of the turf war and the lack of communication between several police forces that hindered the search for the girls' killer and the so-called Scarborough rapist.

Judge Campbell said the course of events could have been significantly altered if police had found the tapes that showed Mr. Bernardo and Karla Homolka, then his wife, raping and beating Kristen, 15, of St. Catherines, and Leslie, 14, of Burlington.

With the tapes in hand, the Crown would not have needed to plea bargain with Ms. Homolka, Judge Campbell wrote in his report. Only after the plea bargain did she tell police about the videotapes.

In exchange for her testimony against Mr. Bernardo, Ms. Homolka was given a 12-year sentence for manslaughter for her role in the two teenagers' deaths. She will be eligible for parole next year.

The plea bargain provoked public rage and was the subject of an investigation by Patrick Galligan, a former judge of the Ontario Court of Appeal. In a report made public in March, Mr. Galligan concluded that the deal was necessary because police did not have much evidence against Mr. Bernardo.

Solicitor-General Robert Runciman said this week that Judge Campbell's findings of glaring flaws in the investigation will not lead to a reopening of Ms. Homolka's deal. "It's a closed case--as regrettable as most of us find it," he told a news conference.

The police failure to locate the videotapes enabled Mr. Bernardo's lawyer, Kenneth Murray, to retrieve them from the couple' house in the Port Dalhousie area of St. Catherines on May 6, 1993. Mr. Murray had gone to the house at his client's request and while there, received a call on his cellular phone from Mr. Bernardo.

Mr. Murray removed the tapes and held on to them until Sept. 12, 1994--by which time Ms. Homolka had her agreement--when he turned them over to John Rosen, who replaced him as Mr. Bernardo's lawyer. Ten days later, Mr. Rosen handed the tapes over to police. Mr. Murray is currently under investigation by the Law Society of Upper Canada in connection with his handling of the tapes.

The Campbell report noted that according to published reports, Mr. Murray had to climb on top of a counter and the toilet and stick his arm up to his shoulder into the ceiling cavity to find the tapes.

Constable Michael Kershaw of the Green Ribbon Task Force, which investigated the Mahaffy and French cases, said he climbed a ladder, unscrewed the potlight and pulled it out so that it was hanging from a wire. He stuck his hand in, but there were flaps to get past and he could get his arm in only up to his elbow. He felt around without finding anything and was statisfied(sic) there was nothing there. Judge Campbell noted that the officer is 6 foot 2 to Mr. Murray's 6 foot 3 or 4.

That matter of inches made all the difference, but it did not exonerate the officer. "Constable Kershaw erred in failing to search the area more thoroughly," Judge Campbell concluded.

However, the failure in not finding the tapes is not Constable Kershaw's alone.

Judge Campbell cited the "strict" search warrant the task force obtained.

He said police were so afraid of having the results of their search challenged under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms that they obtained a "courtproof" warrant that specified exactly what they were searching for.

For instance, the warrant did not allow police to remove the 100 videotapes (not including the crucial tapes of Kristen and Leslie) and they had to look at them inside the house. It also precluded police, who had the Bernardo house under surveillance, from stopping Mr. Murray when he left with the tapes.

Police "had no grounds to believe that an officer of the court would remove from a murder scene real physical evidence hidden by the accused," Judge Campbell said.

He said the warrant had to be so exacting because police at that time had very little evidence against Mr. Bernardo. In fact, the evidence was so paper-thin that it was barely enough to get police inside the door of the Bayview Drive house.

The search--at 71 days likely the longest residential search in Canadian history--was an example of Charter chill, "a mindset that deters Crowns and police from doing sensible things because they fear their case will be thrown out of court on Charter grounds," Judge Campbell said.

The judge also noted that under the Charter, police are bound by the principle of minimization in their searches: Do as little damage as possible to a site. This principle prevented police from tearing out the ceiling where the tapes were hidden.

(text of article from July 13, 1996 Globe and Mail)


-For international visitors to this website, i just want to explain briefly here that there was a complete press blackout of coverage in Canada of the Bernardo trial. There was quite a bit of press, however, about the fact that Canadians living near the Canada-U.S. border (as i recall, approximately 90% of the population of Canada lives within 200 miles/approximately 333 kilometers of the border), were making trips to the neighbouring American cities to find out what was going on in the Canadian courtroom. Or they were telephoning relatives in the United States to get regular updates--if they had such, as i do, having an aunt and first cousins in Ohio. (My uncle and one of these first cousins died recently, so this is another sacrifice i have made in how this "International Diplomatic Work...on a direct basis" for the world's children was responded to after 1978: Now i'll never see them alive again.)
I believe only the United States and Great Britain of the world's approximately 200 countries presently continue the use of the Imperial Measurement System. So why the Globe and Mail, billing itself as "Canada's National Newspaper" in its front-page banner, elected to report this using the Imperial System is not clear to me.
I wanted to put a footnote here to highlight that in the Canadian legal system of evidence and jurisprudence the defence side is not strictly bound to provide the prosecution with a docket of its evidence and, of course, time to investigate it. Visitors to this website may recall that on the first day of the O.J. Simpson trial, Judge Ito disciplined the defense "Dream Team" for not giving the prosecution a full docket of its evidence.
I actually wasn't aware of this until i saw a Canadian Newsworld news announcer mention it when this story first came to light. This page contains what i found about this matter in "Canada's National Newspaper."
Depending upon your choice of sites to visit at this website, you may already realize what was the reaction of the editor of "Canada's National Newspaper" when i brought his attention to my "International Diplomatic Work...on a direct basis" for the world's children soon after the 1984 Nobel Peace Laureate, my friend Desmond Tutu, took the time to speak with me twice on the day of his first press conference calling for economic sanctions against South Africa. If you haven't seen it already, TAKE A BRIEF SIDESTEP HERE to refresh your memory.
(And if you want to consider what that is a reaction to, TAKE A BRIEF SERIES OF SIDESTEPS HERE.)
I will have more to say on this subject early in 1999, but for now i assume, even if we're not all Rhodes scholars, that most of us can figure out that in a system like this "all of us" are not always told as much as we need to know to make, say...well-educated decisions.
Imagine if, say, this condition of insufficiency was allowed to apply in this ongoing international dispute with Iraq and its program to build weapons of mass destruction.
Why, we would be living in a world with NO security at all, wouldn't we, with the prospects for the future of "all of us" likely to contain frequent CNN "Breaking News" stories of one enormous group of people after another--possibly as much as a city at a time--not waking up and going to work each morning because they didn't go to sleep wearing gas masks.
By the way, with these remarks i am NOT endorsing this recent shortsighted idiocy of threats by Washington and London re the dispute with Iraq. By the additions to this award-winning website by the end of January, 1999, you will see why i believe with absolutely no doubt "all of us" are witnessing "shortsighted idiocy" in the policymaking by Washington and London...and Ottawa.
Or, given the abundance of lawyers arguing over issues that the rest of us (non-lawyers) would not waste time arguing over...perhaps it virtually enters the realm of that lawyers' word: insanity. As i say, about this, beyond what you find via the link here, you'll have to wait until early in the New Year.
Until then, i would refer you to the October 12, 1998 New Yorker article by Seymour Hersh titled, 'The Missiles Of August'. If you can walk away after reading this believing that the White House did NOT "wag the dog" with its attacks in the Sudan in August you have accomplished something i couldn't.
I have to provide the Vatican, "Islamic Conference Organization", and Israeli Government imminently with "summary statements" which they can compare the contents of to the documentation we provided them with at the time of the 1978 Camp David Summit.
I know the Vatican "view" on any application of economic sanctions: they dislike them immensely because of the human suffering they engender.
Imagine then, how the Holy Father is going to react to what you find if you TAKE A BRIEF SIDESTEP HERE.
I also want to see the requirements and timetable (ensuingly) that will see the economic sanctions lifted if Iraq complies.




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