Charlottetown army reserve captain found not guilty of disgraceful behaviour - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 03:41 AM | Calgary | -1.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Charlottetown army reserve captain found not guilty of disgraceful behaviour

A P.E.I. court martial has found Capt. Todd Bannister not guilty of all charges against him.
Capt. Todd Bannister has been acquitted of all charges against him. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

Latest

  • Todd Bannister pleaded guilty to two charges at a retrial in January 2020.

A P.E.I. court martial has found Capt. Todd Bannister not guilty of charges of disgraceful behaviour and not guilty ofcharges ofconduct to the prejudice of good order and discipline.

Bannister, who had been suspended as commanding officer of the Charlottetown cadet corps, was accused of violations of the national defence act. They included allegedly asking a female under his command for sex and for using inappropriate language of a sexual nature.

The judge ruled the prosecution failed to prove Bannister had received formal notice of the army's rules on acceptable behaviour.

The judge, Lt.-Col. V.L. d'Auteil,also said the prosecutor failed to prove harm tothe complainant.

After the ruling, Bannister's defence lawyer told CBC the matter never should have gone to trial.

Decision to be reviewed

"It is quite appalling Iwould suggest that this matter even made it to the court," said Major Philippe-LucBoutin. "In our view it was clear from the get-go that there were no sufficient legal basis and factual basisactually for going forward with this matter."

Bannisteroriginally faced six charges, but part way through the trial last month, the prosecutortold court there was no reasonable chance of conviction on two of the charges. They related to an allegedincident involving a female cadet.

But the judge also said the court did not approve of Bannister's conduct, and found his behaviour "troubling." The judge said the military code of conductdemands better.

Theprosecution is now reviewing the judge's decision.

"We will review in detail the judge's reasoning andwithin 30 daysmake a determination whether or not this matter will be appealed to the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada," saidColonel Bruce MacGregor, Director of Military Prosecutions, in an emailto CBC.

Bannister declined comment Wednesday.