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Supreme Court drops bestiality conviction against Prince George man

WARNING: Contents may disturb some readers OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has upheld the acquittal of a Prince George man in a decision that defines the crime of bestiality as penetration involving a person and animal.
Supreme Court of Canada
The Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa.

WARNING: Contents may disturb some readers

OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has upheld the acquittal of a Prince George man in a decision that defines the crime of bestiality as penetration involving a person and animal.

Following a lengthy trial in Prince George, the man was found guilty three years ago of 13 counts arising from years of sexual molestation of his two step-daughters.

The charges included one count of bestiality under the Criminal Code, stemming from sexual activity involving the older girl and the family dog.

Originally sentenced in Janaury 2014 to 17 years in prison, the outcome trims two years off that sentence.

The man successfully challenged the bestiality conviction in the B.C. Court of Appeal based on the fact the activity did not involve penetration. (The man cannot be named to protect the identities of the step-daughters.)

In a 6-1 decision Thursday, the Supreme Court affirmed that ruling, rejecting the notion bestiality is an offence encompassing sexual activity of any kind between a person and an animal.

At issue was whether updates to the Criminal Code in 1955 and 1988 altered the meaning of the crime.

"The term 'bestiality' has a well-established legal meaning and refers to sexual intercourse between a human and an animal. Penetration has always been understood to be an essential element of bestiality," wrote Justice Thomas Cromwell on behalf of the court.

"Parliament may wish to consider whether the present provisions adequately protect children and animals. But it is for Parliament, not the courts, to expand the scope of criminal liability for this ancient offence."

In a dissenting opinion, Justice Rosalie Abella said she had a great deal of difficulty accepting that in modernizing amendments to the Criminal Code, "Parliament forgot to bring the offence out of the Middle Ages."

A good case can be made that by 1988, Parliament intended, or at the very least assumed, that penetration was irrelevant, she wrote.

Originally sentenced to 17 years in prison, the decision trims two years off that total.

Animal rights advocacy group Animal Justice, which intervened in the case, called for parliament to rewrite the law regarding bestiality.

"The Supreme Court's decision is a wake up call that laws protecting animals are severely out of date," Animal Justice executive director Camille Labchuk said in a statement. "As of today, Canadian law gives animal abusers license to use animals for their own sexual gratification. This is completely unacceptable, contrary to societal expectations, and cannot be allowed to continue."

She urged MPs to quickly pass a private members bill that has been introduced by an Ontario MP, Liberal Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, Bill C-246, the Modernizing Animal Protections Act. It updates the Criminal Code "and closes this dangerous loophole to make it crystal clear that all forms of sexual activity between a person and an animal are unacceptable."

- with files from Mark Nielsen