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Dismissal request puts Joe Smyth obstruction of justice trial on hold

Day 3 of the trial for the RNC officer began with a request from defence lawyer Jerome Kennedy for a directed verdict.

Defence lawyer Jerome Kennedy asking for a directed verdict judge will render decision Jan. 21

Joe Smyth, in court on Monday, Jan. 7, is currently suspended without pay from the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

The judge presiding over Royal Newfoundland Constabulary officer Joe Smyth's obstruction of justice trial will take a week and a half to review a request by the defence to dismiss the charge.

Judge Mike Madden says he will render his decision on Jan 21 at 9 a.m.

Day 3 of Smyth's trial began with a motion from Jerome Kennedy, Smyth's lawyer, for a directed verdict essentially, asking the judge to dismiss the charge.

Smyth pulled Sayed Husaini over in May 2017 and issued him four tickets, including one for running a red light while driving his motorcycle. All were eventually dropped.

Joe Smyth, right, looks straight ahead as Sayed Husaini enters the courtroom to testify at Smyth's obstruction of justice trial. (Mark Quinn/CBC)

It was the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT) that investigated Smyth, and the charge was laid in July 2018.Smyth has been suspended without pay since then.

Smyth is the same officer who was the subject of a judicial inquiry after he shot and killed injured worker Don Dunphy in 2015 in Mitchells Brook. It was ruled Smyth used "appropriate force in self-defence" but also "demonstrated certain errors of judgment and noncompliance with aspects of his training."

Defence: no intent

Kennedy said while it's clear the ticket that Smyth issued to Husaini was wrong since video evidence showed the traffic light was green there is no evidence of malice.

The Crown must show Smyth intended to pervert or obstruct justice, Kennedy argued.

"Where is the evidence that there was intent to obstruct justice?" he asked in court Wednesday morning.

On Tuesday, Kennedy told the court that his client was involved in a pursuit one month before the traffic stop at the centre of the trial.

Kennedy said it involved an orange motorcycle similar to the one Husaini was driving in May and Smyth pursued the bike for 15 seconds before calling it off.

Kennedy said Smyth sent an all-staff note within the RNC asking officers to be on the lookout for an orange motorcycle driving dangerously.

Crown: knowingly giving false tickets is obstruction of justice

But Crown attorney Lloyd Strickland said there is reason to believe Smyth intended to issue a ticket that was false, and the act of knowingly issuing false tickets is an obstruction of justice.

"[Smyth] was clearly looking for this driver and the first time he encounters him, he writes him a ticket that involves an egregious error," said Strickland.

A still from the video played in court on Tuesday. It shows Joe Smyth, centre, being interviewed by ASIRT investigator Andrew Johnson, right. Jerome Kennedy, Smyth's lawyer, is on the left. (ASIRT video)

Smyth sat in the courtroom for the third straight day, showing no emotion.

The judge said on Wednesday that if he rejects the request for a directed verdict, the trial will continue.

Read morefrom CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Stephanie Kinsella, Mark Quinn and Bailey White