
Supreme Court of Canada to examine role of rape shield law in sexual services case
OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will look at the application of the rape shield law in the case of two individuals accused of acting as pimps for a woman who worked from a house they rented.
Section 276 of the Criminal Code, known as the rape shield law, limits the use of evidence about a complainant’s sexual history in court proceedings.
The law is intended to avoid “twin-myth” reasoning — the idea that a complainant’s prior behaviour makes them more likely to have consented to the alleged sexual activity, or less worthy of being believed.
Two individuals, identified only as A.M. and M.P. due to a publication ban, faced human trafficking and sexual services offences arising out of their relationship with the complainant, known as A.K.