Pubdate: Fri, 03 Dec 2004 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2004 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Daryl Slade, Calgary Herald JUDGE SLEPT AT HEARING Drug Trafficker Wants Court To Order Mistrial A Calgary man convicted in July of heroin trafficking has applied for a mistrial because he says the judge fell asleep during his sentencing hearing. Nicholas Cypuis Chan, 26, claims Court of Queen's Bench Justice John Moore was sleeping for more than five minutes while he testified in his own defence at Wednesday's hearing. Defence lawyer Tom Engel filed the four-page application for a mistrial on Thursday. The document said Chan had been answering questions by Engel for about 35 minutes when the lawyer noticed the judge appeared to be asleep. It alleges Moore, appointed to the bench in 1992, had his head bent forward with his chin on his chest while Engel questioned Chan. "After about five minutes and with no sign of movement or wakefulness from the judge, defence counsel stopped asking questions and the accused stopped testifying," says the document. "It could be immediately heard that the judge was snoring and obviously sound asleep." The court clerk suggested the hearing be adjourned, then woke up Moore. "The judge appeared somewhat dazed, like someone who had been awakened from a deep sleep, agreed to the adjournment and exited the courtroom," says the document. Moore granted Engel's request for counsel to hear the recording of Wednesday's hearing. It was played back behind closed doors, without the judge present, in the fourth-floor courtroom. Engel would not comment outside court. Crown prosecutor Ivanna Perozak said she will oppose the application. The document noted there is no similar reported case law in Canada, and only one case from 1961 in Britain, when a court martial appeals court quashed a conviction because one of the judges fell asleep during the trial. It says the only fair thing to do is grant a mistrial, quashing the convictions for heroin trafficking and possessing $7,000 derived from the commission of an offence in connection with the sale of drugs to an undercover Mountie on Nov. 15, 1999. "The potential miscarriage is, of course, much greater in this case than in (the British case) since here the judge is the trier of fact and fell asleep while listening to the sworn testimony of the major witness -- the accused," the written argument says. "If a mistrial is not granted in this case, there is a real danger both the accused's interests will be prejudiced by the sentencing judge having fallen asleep during the accused's viva voce (oral) testimony and that the reputation of the administration of justice will be damaged." The judge ruled the Crown has until Dec. 10 to file its written argument on the mistrial application and the defence must file a rebuttal by Dec. 17, three days before the application will be heard. Moore set sentencing dates for the week of Feb. 7 and March 3 to 11 for sentencing arguments to continue, if the application should fail. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek