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Carter Hart, Michael McLeod, Cal Foote, and Dillon Dube, Alex Forementon Granted Indefinite Leaves of Absence


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On 1/28/2024 at 11:37 AM, Br4d said:

 

This is way too simplistic.  It's easy for a young female to get into a room with several young males and have something go wrong with no way to stop it.

 

It doesn't have to be drugs that's at the center of the incident.

 

If what happened was non-consensual then it's rape.  Period.  And this could be true if the first guy was consensual and then everybody else was non-consensual.  The first guy who got consent is just as guilty of the rapes if he was involved in what followed.

 

Yeah it sounds like the outcome of the case is going to come down to this issue, the extent of consent.

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/world-junior-hockey-sexual-assault-london-1.7096096?fbclid=IwAR1TvPfZz-AgjAa1Wrf2Hcb9zpsBCBXjKcghnNT-KUATJVctHLhaE7aDKLQ

 

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Court documents written by London Police state E.M. and the players agree in general on what happened during the night of the alleged incident, but disagree on the main issue: consent. 

 

E.M. told police she consented to go to the hotel room with one of the players, but did not consent to the other group of players coming into the room and those alleged sexual acts. London Police said in those court filings that they believe "E.M. did not consent to any of the sexual activity, except for specific sex act(s)" with the first player. E.M. told police in a statement in July 2022 that "I didn't want to do what they were making me do."

 

The court filings written by London Police alleged the player with whom E.M. consented to sexual acts was involved in filming two videos of E.M. in the hotel room in which he asked if she was OK. In the first clip, which is about six seconds long, E.M. is seen smiling at the beginning of the video. The court filings say E.M. is then seen wiping her eyes and speaking without slurring. The video is "short in duration and difficult to construe context," London Police said in the court filing.

 

Police confirmed that the player who brought her to the hotel is heard on the recording asking, "Hey, you're OK with this though, right?" 

EM: "Yeah."

Male: "You're OK with this?"

EM: "I'm OK way with this."

 

The second video clip is about 12 second long, according to the court filing. The same male voice from the first clip is heard again and E.M. is seen partially covering herself with a white towel. Police included a transcript of the video in the court filing:

Male: "Say it."

E.M: "OK, it was all consensual. Are you recording me?"

Male: "Yeah."

E.M. "K, good. This was all consensual."

Male: "What else?"

E.M: "Would you? You are so paranoid, holy. I enjoyed it, it was fine, it was all consensual. I am so sober, that's why I can't do this right now."

 

Police said in the court filing that the first player told investigators he "was worried something like this — in reference to the police investigation — would happen."

"The two video clips made by Player #1 were created, according to E.M., to protect against her going to police," wrote  Sgt. Younan. "Player #1 even asked her if she was planning on going to the police ... and asked she fix things with police."

 

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57 minutes ago, Karan said:

 

Yeah it sounds like the outcome of the case is going to come down to this issue, the extent of consent.

 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/world-junior-hockey-sexual-assault-london-1.7096096?fbclid=IwAR1TvPfZz-AgjAa1Wrf2Hcb9zpsBCBXjKcghnNT-KUATJVctHLhaE7aDKLQ

 

 

Interesting case. You cannot withdraw consent after you consented and the event is over; while in action, of course she could have. The devil will be in the details here. Does Canada have jury trials like the US?

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These teams are really lucky that all four (Formenton was in Europe already) of these players don't have years left on their deals. Believe they're all RFAs, so they're just going to get walked away from and become UFA. Would imagine they all sign in Russia to keep earning money while they await trial.

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I think there's a chance this gets thrown out all together for delays. I think they have 30 months to make it happen, from what I've been reading. They're definitely going to be up against it. Nothing gets done in a timely manner, here.

 

If that happens, holy fuck what a travesty.

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Just watched the press conference. All charged with sexual assault but it sounds like McCleod was the one who brought her into the room with everyone (an extra charge). 

 

Not much clarity into the incident but the Police Service is under severe scrutiny for how it was handled initially and they wouldn't answer questions as to why it took six years.

Edited by jsm7302
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22 minutes ago, Phil said:

Was curious what would happen regarding that. It makes sense given how long these players are likely to be out of the lineup.

Marek had someone on who was saying these trials/appeals can take years.

 

It's quite likely these guys careers are over unless they can find a league who will employ them while they're on trial or appealing. 

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43 minutes ago, Pete said:

Marek had someone on who was saying these trials/appeals can take years.

 

It's quite likely these guys careers are over unless they can find a league who will employ them while they're on trial or appealing. 

 

Totally. Early on I was reading they estimate at least 18 months before trial.

 

But this isn't on the teams, it's potentially on the players, so it makes sense to give the clubs some cap relief by basically allowing them to be non-rostered or something.

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2 hours ago, Phil said:

 

Totally. Early on I was reading they estimate at least 18 months before trial.

 

But this isn't on the teams, it's potentially on the players, so it makes sense to give the clubs some cap relief by basically allowing them to be non-rostered or something.

Oh 100%. 

 

But just saying it's a question of if the clock is ticking on their contracts, are there contracts just going to be terminated regardless of it they're innocent, what happens next is going to be interesting. 

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They're still getting paid which IF found guilty would be a shame.  I wonder what happens in that case? Thankfully they are all on expiring contracts but still....

 

**Edit - crossed the same time Pete posted his. 

Edited by jsrangers
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2 minutes ago, Pete said:

Oh 100%. 

 

But just saying it's a question of if the clock is ticking on their contracts, are there contracts just going to be terminated regardless of it they're innocent, what happens next is going to be interesting. 

 

I don't think anyone's contract is getting terminated. They're all RFAs (the NHLers). They'll just not get tendered QOs and become UFA this summer. My guess is they sign in Europe or Russia if they want to keep playing/collecting paychecks.

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19 hours ago, Phil said:

Was curious what would happen regarding that. It makes sense given how long these players are likely to be out of the lineup.

Heck, they can't even start working out until the shackles are taken off!

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  • 4 weeks later...
  • 6 months later...

Just a warning to grab some tissues before you read about how these scumbags would be inconvenienced by having to appear in court. Can't wait for the mandatory appearances to come around after the preliminary ones which they've been excused from having to attend in person.


Hockey Canada accused cited new contracts abroad, training and construction work as reasons for skipping pretrial hearings

 

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“There is only a small window of time in which players are at their peak of conditioning and performance, and able to compete at a high level,” former NHLer Mike McLeod said in a July affidavit. Mr. McLeod said he cannot appear in a Canadian court for pretrial hearings if he wants to keep his new job playing professionally in Kazakhstan.

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“I have been learning to operate excavators, skid-steer loaders and rollers,” writes Mr. Formenton, formerly a member of the Ottawa Senators. His affidavit says he needs time to learn. “Having focused on hockey my entire life, it is challenging to transition to a new line of work.”

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“Since I was charged, I have been unable to play in the National Hockey League,” writes Mr. McLeod, a former New Jersey Devil. He says he could not keep his KHL job in Kazakhstan if he had to attend pretrial proceedings in Canada. “When court day starts at 10:00 a.m. EST, it will be 7:00 p.m. in Astana, which is the time when some home games will start.”

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Mr. Dubé, a former Calgary Flame, also plays professional hockey in the KHL, in his case in Belarus – a seven-hour time difference away. He says that he would be hard-pressed to attend court in Canada, especially during away games in eastern Asia. “When I travel to play in the KHL, I will often be in time zones with even a greater difference to that of my court proceedings.”

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“I am required to follow a daily and stringent training regimen,” says Mr. Foote, a former New Jersey Devil. “If I am unable to train at this level consistently, my ability to continue playing professional hockey will be jeopardized.”

Mr. Hart, a former Philadelphia Flyer, says he intends to move from his home province of Alberta to Tennessee to work out full-time with a fellow former professional hockey player.

“If I am required to attend the pretrial motions, whether in person or remotely, it would be impossible for me to maintain my daily training regimen,” he writes. His affidavit says he has hired an immigration lawyer. “I have been previously denied entry to the United States due to my criminal charge.”

 

 

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9 hours ago, Scott said:

“If I am required to attend the pretrial motions, whether in person or remotely, it would be impossible for me to maintain my daily training regimen,

There's no way anyone believed this, right? He can't log on zoom for a few hours during the day because that would ruin his training?

9 hours ago, Scott said:

“I have been learning to operate excavators, skid-steer loaders and rollers,” writes Mr. Formenton, formerly a member of the Ottawa Senators. His affidavit says he needs time to learn. “Having focused on hockey my entire life, it is challenging to transition to a new line of work.”

Oh poor guy has to do some real work so he can't show up to court? Lol fuck off.

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