Story Published:
Dec 3, 2002 at 1:56 PM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 12:53 AM PDT
PORT COQUITLAM, BRITISH COLUMBIA - Journalists must be
permitted in the courtroom to explain to the public what happens at
the preliminary hearing for Robert Pickton, a media lawyer said
Tuesday.
Pickton, 53, faces 15 first-degree murder charges, with police
still searching a Port Coquitlam pig farm he owns with his siblings
for possible remains of more than 50 other women missing from the
Vancouver area.
His lawyer is arguing in court that the preliminary hearing,
which determines if sufficient evidence exists for a trial, should
be closed to all but lawyers and court officials to prevent media
reports on untested evidence that could jeopardize selection of an
impartial jury.
Canadian judges routinely ban the reporting of evidence from
preliminary hearings, but the closed courtroom sought by lawyer
Peter Ritchie would be much broader.
Ritchie fears U.S. media would publish details of the evidence,
and the reports would get into Canada via the Internet, cable and
satellite television broadcasts and imported newspapers.
Barry Gibson, representing two Vancouver newspapers and a
television station, agreed with Ritchie that foreign media were the
problem, but he said that barring all journalists would be
improper.
If the charges against Pickton get dropped, then a closed
courtroom would prevent the public from finding out what happened
and why, Gibson said.
"There has to be someone here to explain what happened in this
courtroom," Gibson told Port Coquitlam Provincial Court Judge
David Stone, who will decide what restrictions apply to the hearing
scheduled to formally begin in January.
For the second straight day, Pickton observed the proceedings
from behind bulletproof glass in a special defendant's box.
A search combining elements of police work, scientific analysis
and archaeological digging has uncovered DNA and body parts of some
of the missing women at the property east of Vancouver owned by
Pickton and his siblings.
In seeking a closed courtroom, Ritchie argued Monday that
controlling information on the evidence at the preliminary hearing
will be impossible if journalists and relatives of the dead and
missing are present.
He said the overriding concern should be selection of an
impartial jury, calling a ban on attendance by journalists and
family members "an awesome decision to be made in the rarest of
cases."
Pickton was arrested days after police raided his family
property in February. He previously had been arrested in connection
with a 1997 knife attack on a prostitute, but the charges,
including attempted murder, were dismissed in 1998.
Relatives of the dead and missing women say police ignored them
for years when they warned that drug addicts and prostitutes from
Vancouver's seamy Downtown Eastside were disappearing, perhaps
victimized by a serial killer.
At least two lawsuits have been filed by relatives of missing
women against Vancouver authorities, claiming police incompetence
and a failure to properly investigate contributed to the continuing
disappearances.
In a statement of defense to one of the lawsuits, filed by the
family of one of his alleged victims, Pickton denied killing the
woman or burying or disposing of her remains.