Former Surrey mayor was victim of 'toxic fanaticism', defence tells judge in public mischief trial - Action News
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British Columbia

Former Surrey mayor was victim of 'toxic fanaticism', defence tells judge in public mischief trial

The shock of an unexpected attack may have confused Doug McCallum about some of the details, but a lawyer for the former Surrey mayor says McCallum was correct in the essence of his accusations against the political opponent he accused of running over his foot.

Defence closes case after final witnesses testify at Doug McCallum's public mischief trial

Former Surrey mayor Doug McCallum is pictured leaving Surrey provincial court on the first week of his public mischief trial. His lawyers wrapped their case Tuesday. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

The shock of an unexpected attack may have confusedDoug McCallumabout some of the details, but a lawyer for the former Surrey mayor says the 78-year-old was correctintheessence of his accusations against thepolitical opponent he accused of running over his foot.

Wrappingthe case in defence of his client Tuesday, Richard Peck told the judge overseeing McCallum's public mischief trial thesituation has to be viewed in the context of the politicsthat preceded it and the "toxic fanaticism" his detractors literally brought to his doorstep.

"This is base conduct. This is not political activism," Peck said as he gavean outline of the defence's theory of thecase.

"And with respect,when repeated it amounts to criminal harassment. And repeated it was."

'He was in shock'

McCallum is charged with public mischief under a section of the Criminal Code that makes it an offence to lie to police in order to see someone accused of a crime they did not commit.

The Crown claims the former mayor falsely claimed that a member of a group opposed to his plans to replace the RCMP with a municipal police forceran over his left foot with the rear wheel of her car, after confronting himin a Save-On-Foods parking lot on Sept. 4, 2021.

Laurie Guerra is pictured in 2018. The former Surrey city councillor claims that she was targeted by the same woman who former mayor Doug McCallum accused of running over his foot. (CBC News)

Police doubted McCallum'sstoryafter CCTV footage appeared to contradicthis claim that Debi Johnstone "pinned" him against his car. By contrast, the video showedhim standing next to a curb filled with small shrubs.

The footagealso shows McCallum walking away from the incident without a limp.

Peck said there "can be no doubt that McCallum's statement contains confusion and misperception."

But he asked Judge Reginald Harris to consider the circumstances: a grocery trip on a sunny Saturday morning that should have represented a "break from the hurly-burly of [McCallum's] daily elected role."

"He was in shock. He was simply trying to run his Saturday errands," Peck said.

"The advent of a sudden, alarming, disturbing event can distortperception and disable memory."

'I didn't sign up for any of that'

Even as Americanvoters cast their votes in midterm elections grounded in polarization, Pecksought to place the events of McCallum's case within a "culture of meanness" that he said has "taken a holdin North America."

To that end, the veteran defenderpointed to the final witness of the day, aformer Surrey city councillor who claimedshe was also subject to profane attacks fromJohnstone.

A screenshot of CCTV video captures the moment that former Surrey mayor Doug McCallum claimed that Debi Johnstone ran over his foot in September 2021. (CCTV Save-on-Foods)

Laurie Guerra testified that Johnstone was one of the most vocal and profane members of Keep The RCMP in Surrey.

Guerra said Johnstone told her to "go F herself" at council. But she said the 66-year-old"crossed a line" when she showed up outside the home where she lived with her children and family.

"It completely changes the dynamic," she said.

"I didn't sign up for any of that. Where my family is involved and my kids involvedit's disgraceful."

On the first day of the trial, Johnstone testified that she called McCallum a "scaly-faced motherf--ker" an admission Peck called "astonishing."

He said Johnstone saw McCallum in the parking lot, "stalked him" and drove off without warning or regard to the former mayor's proximity to her vehicle.

"This was the epitome of recklessness," Peck said. "In the process,his foot was run over."

'Could that be 'ankle'?'

Beyond the politics of the incident, the defence claims the basic facts also supported aclaim of hit and run.

A series of defence witnesses testified that the injuries depicted in McCallum's hospital records were not inconsistent with those of a person whose foot had been run over by a vehicle.

Orthopedic surgeon Kevin Wing was the final expertmedical witness to testify Tuesday. He said he drew his conclusions based on McCallum's emergency room records and the description of his injuries described in 911 calls.

A person's left foot is pictured from the top, next to a black shoe.
One of the photographs of Doug McCallum's foot entered into evidence at the former Surrey mayor's public mischief trial. An orthopedic surgeon says the injuries are not inconsistent with being run over by a car. (B.C. Provincial Court)

McCallum told a triage nurse that he had some "tingling" and "mild pain" on the top of his left foot. Wing said the records also showed that he had moderate soft tissue swelling and a contusion of the foot.

A doctor told the former mayor to treat it with ice and some Tylenol.

"I don't see any inconsistencies," Wing said towardthe end of his testimony. "What I've been provided with is consistent with a soft tissue injury."

On cross-examination, Wing admitted that like the other expert witnesses he had not actually examined McCallum.

Crown prosecutor Richard Fowler noted that much of what the triage nurse recordedin the hospital records would have come from McCallum himself and that much of the doctor's handwritingwas illegible.

Debi Johnstone is the woman who former Surrey mayor Doug McCallum accused of running over his foot. She was the first witness at his public mischief trial. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

He and Wing tried to decipher it together.

"It says 'tender', then there's a word that looks like 'foot'," Wing said at one point.

"Could that be'ankle?'" Fowler asked a short time later.

"Certainly looks like it," Wing replied.

The judge asked a number of questions during Peck's submissions.

Towardthe end of the day, Harrisqueried what he should make of the fact that a person might expect a person to feign a limp if they were falsely claiming to have their foot run over by a car. And the fact that McCallum had none.

The trial is expected to conclude later this week, after Fowler makes the final case for the Crown.