An RCMP sting caught Nicole Doucet (Ryan) trying to hire a hitman to
kill her ex-husband. It was supposed to be an open-and-shut case. It
wasn’t. She was acquitted on the basis of duress in a context of
abuse. But her ordeal did not end there. No Legal Way Out details the
judicial process, media coverage, and legal implications of R v Ryan,
a landmark case in Canadian law for all the wrong reasons. Appealed up
to the Supreme Court of Canada, Doucet’s acquittal was overturned,
even though the court accepted that she had been abused. However, the
court did issue a stay of proceedings so she could not be tried again.
The court also castigated the RCMP for their actions, leading to an
investigation that ultimately exonerated the force and garnered
substantial media attention, much of it promoting stereotypes about
abused women. The decision has had an enormously negative impact on
public perceptions of domestic violence. A quarter-century after R v
Lavallee – which expanded the parameters of self-defence to include
the experiences of abused women – R v Ryan limited the legal options
for women seeking to escape intimate partner terrorism. No Legal Way
Out is an unabashedly feminist analysis that explains why the court,
the police, and the media let down all women trapped by abuse.
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R v Ryan, Domestic Abuse, and the Defence of Duress
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780774838108
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
University of British Columbia Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter