Sex assault trial starts more than a year after complainant’s death
BARRIE, Ont. — Kassidi Coyle took her own life before she could testify against the man she accused of sexually assaulting her, but statements the Ontario woman made to friends and police shortly after the alleged incident will be admitted as evidence at his trial, a judge has ruled.
In a ruling delivered just before the trial was set to begin, Ontario Court Justice Robert Gattrell said Coyle — who he identified only as K.C. — spoke to her friends in the “immediate aftermath” of the alleged incident and didn’t have time or motive to fabricate the allegations against Shawn Roy, nor is there evidence that she was impaired at the time.
Furthermore, the 20-year-old’s statements to a 911 operator and to police investigators were recorded, which allows the court to assess her demeanour, the judge wrote. And the results of a rape kit corroborate her perception of physical contact and “the nature of that contact,” he wrote.
“I find that there are sufficient circumstantial and evidentiary guarantees that the statements in question are inherently trustworthy and they will be admitted,” he wrote.


