Judge overturns convictions of B.C. woman, accused of coughing on grocery worker
CAMPBELL RIVER, B.C. — A British Columbia woman who was accused of deliberately coughing in the direction of a grocery store worker early in the COVID-19 pandemic has had her convictions for assault and causing a disturbance overturned.
A B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled on Thursday that Kimberly Woolman should have been allowed to call a character witness in her 2022 trial.
The original trial heard testimony that Woolman was at a Save On Foods store in Campbell River, B.C., in April 2020 when she refused to follow rules requiring customers to keep six feet apart.
A Provincial Court judge ruled last year that Woolman “forcibly coughed” towards an employee’s face after being told to leave, then pushed her shopping cart into another worker.