Canadian judge insults alleged rape victim; could face removal

Statue of Justice. Photo by sebra/Shutterstock

CALGARY, Alberta, Sept. 12 (UPI) — A Canadian judge is facing removal from the bench over multiple insults he reportedly made to an alleged rape victim during a case he presided over in 2014.

Federal Court Judge Robin Camp’s behavior is being examined during a weeklong judicial council hearing in Calgary, Alberta. Camp could be fired or demoted.

In a 2014 case, when Camp was then a provincial court judge in Alberta, he asked a 19-year-old woman who alleged she’d been raped over a bathroom sink at a party, “Why couldn’t you just keep your knees together?”

Court records also show he asked the woman why she didn’t push her bottom down into the sink or why didn’t she “skew her pelvis” to avoid penetration?

He also reportedly said, “Young wom[e]n want to have sex, particularly if they’re drunk” and “Some sex and pain sometimes go together…that’s not necessarily a bad thing.”

Though Camp acquitted the defendant, the woman appealed and the ruling was overturned by the Alberta Court of Appeal. The alleged rapist is scheduled to face a new trial in November.

The investigation of Camp began last November, after four law professors filed a complaint, leading to the Alberta attorney general filed a formal complaint a few weeks later.

Camp’s daughter — also a rape victim — told the council her father’s comments were “disgraceful,” but since then he has learned a lot about “those who have experienced trauma.”

Camp, 64, grew up and received his law degree in South Africa. After coming to Canada in 1998, he practiced contractual, trust, oil and gas, and bankruptcy litigation law before being named a judge in 2012.

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