News
Featured Image
Freedom Convoy leaders Tamara Lich and Chris BarberYouTube

Demand that the Freedom Convoy’s $5.5 million be returned. Send a message today

OTTAWA, Ontario (LifeSiteNews) — The trial for Freedom Convoy leaders Tamara Lich and Chris Barber is slowly ending, with defense lawyers giving their last submissions to the Ottawa courthouse last Friday.

The trial is being overseen by Justice Heather Perkins-McVey. The government (Crown) has claimed that Lich and Barber acted as “co-conspirators” in the Freedom Convoy. Perkins-McVey is expected to give her ruling within a six-month time frame after the final court day, meaning a verdict will likely not come until 2025.

After a five-month hiatus, the trial resumed in an Ottawa courthouse last week for closing arguments. According to The Democracy Fund (TDF), which is crowdfunding Lich’s legal costs, the court has adjourned until September 13th, “on which it is expected that the Crown will have a half day to reply.”

Lich’s lawyer, Lawrence Greenspon, noted to the court that there were two distinct things that “made this case different from the 100 legal cases cited by the Crown and defence,” as reported by the TDF.

The first was that “in no case is there a situation where authorities directed protesters to park, then arrested them – to now prosecute the leaders is unprecedented,” the TDF said.

As for the second thing, the TDF observed that “In no case was there an order by another court preserving the right of protesters to peacefully protest. Justice (Hugh) McLean made this clear in his two orders arising from the motion for an injunction. Crown counsel made no reference to this in their submissions. Greenspon said that these judicial orders preserved the right of protesters to protest. And, he noted, these rights are constitutionally entrenched in s2(b) and (c) of the Charter.”

Lich and Barber face multiple charges from the 2022 protests, including mischief, counseling mischief, counseling intimidation, and obstructing police for taking part in and organizing the anti-mandate Freedom Convoy. In Canada, anyone charged with mischief could face a potential jail sentence of up to 10 years.

As reported by LifeSiteNews at the time, despite the non-violent nature of the protest and the charges, Lich was jailed for weeks before she was granted bail.

Besides the ongoing trial, Lich and Barber and a host of others recently filed a $2 million lawsuit against the Trudeau government for its use of the Emergencies Act (EA) to quash the Freedom Convoy in 2022.

In early 2022, thousands of Canadians from coast to coast came to Ottawa to demand an end to COVID mandates in all forms. Despite the peaceful nature of the protest, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government enacted the Emergencies Act on February 14. Trudeau revoked the EA on February 23.

The EA controversially allowed the government to freeze the bank accounts of protesters, conscript tow truck drivers, and arrest people for participating in assemblies the government deemed illegal.

During the clear-out of protesters after the EA was put in place, an elderly lady was trampled by a police horse and one conservative female reporter was beaten by police and shot with a tear gas canister.

Demand that the Freedom Convoy’s $5.5 million be returned. Send a message today

10 Comments

    Loading...