Mark Norman’s lawyer warns of interference in courts despite dropped charge
OTTAWA — Canadians must be on guard against government efforts to tip the scales of justice, said Vice-Admiral Mark Norman’s lawyer on Wednesday, as she hailed the surprise stay of a breach-of-trust charge against her client.
That decision came despite — “not because of” — the Trudeau government’s interference in the case, Marie Henein said. She alleged that included withholding key documents and information that could have helped the Canadian military’s former second-in-command demonstrate his innocence on allegations he tried to undermine a federal cabinet deliberation on a large shipbuilding contract.
“No person in this country should ever walk into a courtroom and feel like they are fighting their elected government or any sort of political factors at all,” Henein told a packed news conference right after Norman’s final court appearance.