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October 18, 2002
Jury finds man guilty of
sexual assault
Offered victim $130
for sex, court hears
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
A seven-woman, five-man
Iqaluit jury found Leo Keyookta guilty of raping a 20-year-old woman in the
bathroom of her apartment.
When the victim heard the
verdict, a fleeting smile crossed her face.
Her boyfriend stared at
Keyookta, 31, while one hand steadied his quivering jaw and the other hand reassured
the woman, whose name cannot be published or broadcast.
"Im pleased,"
Crown lawyer Christine Gagnon said after the trial.
The complainant declined
to comment until after sentencing.
During the trial, the woman
said Keyookta followed her down a hallway into her apartment. She said he offered
to pay her $130 for sex, but she refused. Keyookta persisted and forced her
into the bathroom. He told her to put a condom on his penis but she wouldnt
do it, she told the court.
When they heard a knock
at the door, Keyookta raised a fist and warned her to remain silent.
Gagnon said the unanswered
door was evidence of the intimidation used in the attack.
But defence lawyer Michael
Chandler said the unanswered door was evidence the woman was a willing sexual
participant who made a false complaint to police to prevent her boyfriend from
finding out she had cheated on him.
From the trials outset,
both lawyers conceded that a sexual encounter occurred between the slender,
waif-like woman and the short but sturdy man.
While under oath, Keyookta
denied offering money or initiating sex. He said intercourse was quick because
he didnt want to get caught. He admitted hitting the woman but said he
did so because she was demanding payment.
"She asked for sex
... and she got angry when I refused to give her money so I slapped her,"
he said.
After leaving the apartment,
Keyookta bought two grams of marijuana and swallowed a handful of prescription
pills. An overdose caused by the pills landed him at Baffin Regional Hospital,
where police advised him he was under arrest for sexual assault.
Keyookta resisted arrest
and threatened to shoot a police officer in the head. The death threat was caused
by the stress of what he called the womans false accusation.
But he was also found guilty
of one count of uttering a threat.
Keyootkas criminal
record, which includes convictions for theft, fraud and
break-and-enter, was admitted
as evidence.
Justice Robert Kilpatrick
said Keyooktas criminal record was not an indication of Keyooktas
guilt, but was admitted as evidence to help jurors decide on the accuseds
credibility as a witness.
In his list of instructions
to the jury, Kilpatrick said when sexual assault victims dont cry out
or resist an attack, it doesnt necessarily mean they are consenting to
sex.
Chandler objected to those
instructions, saying that the judge offered no counter-theory.
"Its also common
sense that a person might [not react] because theyre lying," Chandler
said.
But Kilpatrick dismissed
that objection on the grounds that his instructions came from a decison by the
Supreme Court of Canada.
The bespectacled Keyookta
sat patiently and listened closely to the proceedings. He appeared expressionless
when the jury delivered its guilty verdict.
Sentencing was set for
Oct. 17.
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