Battle over independence of military judges expands to include Appeal Court
OTTAWA — A landmark legal battle over the independence of judges responsible for overseeing military courts martial has gone meta with new questions over the autonomy of a judge hearing the case.
The Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada hearing revolves around then-defence chief Jonathan Vance’s decision two years ago to task an officer under his own command with disciplining the country’s four military judges.
Three of those four military judges later stayed several cases, saying Vance’s order impinged upon their independence and thus robbed service members accused of wrongdoing of their right to fair trials.
The question of whether military judges are independent was subsequently sent to the Court Martial Appeal Court, where three civilian judges including Chief Justice Richard Bell heard arguments from both sides in the winter and was set to make a ruling.