Pubdate: Tue, 21 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 CALGARY JUDGE APOLOGIZES FOR SLEEPING IN COURT A Calgary judge apologized Monday for falling asleep earlier this month during a sentencing hearing for a man he had convicted of trafficking in heroin. Court of Queen's Bench Justice John Moore then stepped aside after dismissing a mistrial application. Moore, 73, appointed to the bench in 1992 and less than two years from mandatory retirement, admitted he has a medical problem that is being addressed. "Since Dec. 1, I have reviewed my sleep problem with a doctor and have further appointments," Moore said. "It may be time before my medical problem is solved." The judge found Nicholas Cypui Chan, 26, guilty in July of selling two ounces of heroin to an undercover city police officer on Nov. 15, 1999, and possession of $7,000 from the proceeds of crime. Moore admitted he was asleep for an undetermined number of minutes while Chan was testifying about alleged human right violations at the Calgary Remand Centre, in particular the facility not fulfilling his order to serve Chan vegetarian meals. "I want to start by apologizing to all lawyers who were here on Dec. 1 - -- defence counsel, Crown counsel, representative of the attorney general. In addition, I apologize to Mr. Chan," Moore said earlier Monday. "I fell asleep during Mr. Chan's testimony. Since Dec. 1, I have listened to the sound recording and have read the transcripts of the evidence. There is no certain, positive way of knowing how long I was asleep. Defence counsel speculates five minutes . . . (but) could be wrong in estimation." Defence lawyer Tom Engel filed the mistrial application on behalf of Chan the following day. Chan took it a step further on Monday when he alleged in an affidavit that the sleeping incident "reminded me of frequent occasions during trial, before verdict, when the trial judge appeared not to be paying attention." Crown prosecutor Bob Sigurdson stressed such allegations were unfounded and, if they occurred, should have been addressed at the time. Sigurdson also argued only a brief portion of the drug trafficker's Dec. 1 testimony was missed and even though there was an admitted mistake by the judge, it did not warrant a mistrial that would overturn the guilty verdicts. The judge said consideration for health reasons and a fair and reasonable perception by the public and the accused is a critical consideration. For that reason, he said sentencing would be done by another judge. The case has been set over until the next arraignments on Jan. 12. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek