Justice Delayed is Justice Denied

Canada’s Supreme Court Building in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Good afternoon beloved sentients. I have two posts to publish today…this first one is an update on the fate of the Mosley Decision condemning the Trudeau’s invocation of the Emergencies Act On February 14, 2022. This decision has been ignored by all the PTB in Canada because it does not condone or legalize their patently illegal and outrageously oppressive behaviour during the COVID HOAX Plandemic [forced mass vaccination with experimental mRNA] between January 2020 to 2023.

So what happened is the Mosley Decision was handed down on January 23, 2024 and it has taken this long for the appeal to finally reach the Supreme Court...not saying that it will be accepted by that judicial body. This is a deliberate and unconscionable delay that has negatively affected many of the courageous Canadians who stuck their necks out for the good of us all–and paid for it with interminable lawfare, imprisonment on false, trumped up charges, fines, freezing of personal bank accounts…..and all the media opprobrium the elite controllers could bring to bear on them. All would be swept aside if the courts stood up for the people and the Mosley decision.

But, No. Here is the text in full from the CBC report. Please review and i will have final comments to follow:

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Federal government appeals Emergencies Act use during convoy protest to Supreme Court

Lower courts ruled use during convoy protests was unlawful

Federal government appeals Emergencies Act use during convoy protest to Supreme Court | CBC News

The federal government is bringing its case to justify use of the Emergencies Act to clear the convoy protests that gridlocked the capital city and border points to the country’s highest court.

The Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the government’s previous appeal after a lower court ruled that former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s decision to use the legislation was unlawful and infringed on protesters’ Charter rights.

“Our government remains committed to ensuring it has the tools needed to protect the safety and security of Canadians in the face of threats to public order and national security,” a spokesperson for Justice Minister Sean Fraser said in an email.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA), the Canadian Constitution Foundation and other groups filed the legal challenge of the government’s 2022 decision that the protests, known as the Freedom Convoy, rose to the level of a public order emergency requiring special powers to address.

In the 2024 decision, Federal Court Justice Richard Mosley, since retired, said the government’s decision lacked justification, transparency and intelligibility.

The government appealed. During a hearing last February, its lawyers argued the court downplayed violence with “hindsight bias on full display.”

The government has long argued the protests posed a security threat and the measures it took under the Emergencies Act were targeted, proportional and temporary.

But the appeal court’s decision agreed with Mosley’s finding that cabinet did not have reasonable grounds to believe that a threat to national security existed and fell short of the legal threshold needed to invoke the act.

“As disturbing and disruptive the blockades and the convoy protests in Ottawa could be, they fell well short of a threat to national security,” wrote the three judges on the appeal court.

A number of the Freedom Convoy organizers were found guilty of mischief and handed conditional sentences.

A mandatory inquiry, led by Commissioner Paul Rouleau, reviewed the government’s use of the Emergencies Act and came to a different conclusion in early 2023 than the subsequent legal challenges.

Rouleau concluded the federal government met the “very high” threshold needed to invoke the Emergencies Act, citing a failure in policing and federalism.

“There are far better uses for taxpayer dollars than to pay lawyers to defend their choice to illegally suspend the rights of Canadians,” Gladu said in a statement.

“At no time was there a threat to national security that was beyond existing resources and laws to deal with. Conservatives have always maintained that the imposition of the Emergency Measures Act was unjustified and illegal. This appeal is a waste of time and money,” her statement said.

What began as a protest largely against vaccine requirements attracted thousands of people to the capital for weeks, many in trucks, who had a slew of grievances aimed at Trudeau and his government.

In the face of blaring horns, big-rig blockades and makeshift encampments, some Ottawa businesses temporarily closed, while many residents complained of noise pollution and diesel fumes.

Protesters, some of whom had brought bouncy castles and an inflatable hot tub, pushed back, arguing it was a largely peaceful demonstration.

Trucks and protesters also clogged some border crossings, including the key trade route to the United States via Windsor, Ont.

Trudeau’s government invoked the Emergencies Act on Feb. 14, 2022, giving law enforcement extraordinary powers to remove and arrest protesters and giving the government the power to freeze the finances of those connected to the protests.

It was the first time the law had been invoked since it replaced the War Measures Act in 1988.”

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Greencrow concludes: Canadians, Justice delayed is Justice denied. How many more years have to pass before we learn whether it was legal or not for the infantile/febrile Trudeau and his fellow Federal Government trough-feeders to invoke the Emergencies Act in February 2022–because of truck diesel fumes and honking horns in the streets of Ottawa?

Stay tuned,

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