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Jacob Hoggard now behind bars after appeal dismissed, lawyer says

Canadian musician Jacob Hoggard arrives at the Toronto courthouse on Thursday, October 20, 2022.
Image Credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/ Tijana Martin

TORONTO - Jacob Hoggard began serving his sentence Friday after Ontario's top court dismissed the Hedley frontman's appeal of his sexual assault conviction.

The musician's legal team said he surrendered into custody immediately before the ruling was delivered Friday, as is typical in criminal appeals.

The Appeal Court unanimously upheld Hoggard's conviction despite finding his trial should not have heard the evidence of a psychologist who testified on the neurobiology of trauma.

Hoggard was found guilty in June 2022 of sexual assault causing bodily harm against an Ottawa woman and later sentenced to five years behind bars. He was released on bail hours later, pending his appeal.

Court documents show his lawyers appealed the conviction on four grounds, including that the trial judge erred by admitting the evidence of clinical psychologist Lori Haskell on the neurobiology of trauma.

They also argued the trial judge wrongly permitted prosecutors to argue that the expert's evidence supported the credibility of the woman Hoggard was found to have sexually assaulted.

The Crown argued in court documents that the psychologist's evidence was properly admitted at trial, and that the trial judge limited Haskell's evidence on the neurobiology of trauma to the "established evidence."

Prosecutors also argued that evidence was not challenged by the defence during cross-examination, and that the trial judge gave jurors mid-trial and final instructions on it.

The Appeal Court found that while the trial judge erred in admitting the expert's evidence, she corrected any potential misuse of the evidence in answering the jury's questions.

Therefore, the court found "there was no substantial wrong or miscarriage of justice," it said in dismissing the appeal.

The three-judge panel found the trial judge did not make any errors regarding the other grounds raised by Hoggard's legal team in challenging the conviction.

Hoggard's lawyers said they were disappointed with the Appeal Court ruling.

"While we maintain that Mr. Hoggard's trial was unfair, we respect the court's decision," Megan Savard, Gerald Chan, Arash Ghiassi and Spencer Bass said in a joint statement.

"We are carefully reviewing the judgment to consider our next steps."

At trial, Hoggard was found guilty of sexual assault causing bodily harm against the woman and acquitted of the same charge against a teenage fan. He was also found not guilty of sexual interference, a charge that refers to the sexual touching of someone under 16, in relation to the teen.

Prosecutors alleged Hoggard groped the teen after a Hedley show in Toronto in April 2016, then violently raped her in a Toronto-area hotel room later that year after she turned 16. They alleged Hoggard then violently raped the Ottawa woman in a downtown Toronto hotel in November 2016.

The identity of the complainants is protected under a standard publication ban.

The musician, who was charged in 2018, pleaded not guilty to all charges. In his testimony, he acknowledged having sex with both complainants but denied sexually assaulting them, portraying the encounters as consensual one-night stands.

As a result, the case turned on the issue of consent.

Jurors deliberated for six days and twice declared themselves deadlocked on some aspects before pushing forward. In that time, they asked for the court's guidance on several legal issues, many of them related to consent.

Hedley, which rose to fame after Hoggard came in third on the reality show Canadian Idol in 2004, went on an indefinite hiatus when allegations of sexual misconduct surfaced. Its last show was in Kelowna, B.C., on March 24, 2018.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 16, 2024.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2024
The Canadian Press

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