5 former World Junior Hockey players expected to face sex assault charges: report
WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced sexual violence or know someone affected by it
Five former 2018 world junior hockey players have been told to surrender themselves to police in London, Ont., to face sexual assault charges in a high-profile case that has embroiled the sport’s governing body in controversy, the Globe and Mail reports.
London Police declined to comment publicly on the status of the case Wednesday. CBC News has not independently verified the Globe and Mail report.
“We do not have any additional information to share at this time,” said London Police Acting Sgt. Sandasha Bough in an email to CBC News.
Court documents in 2022 revealed London Police believed they had reasonable grounds to accuse the players of sexually assaulting a young woman in a London, Ont., hotel room in June 2018.
London police closed the case in 2018, then re-opened it in 2022 in response to public outrage following a lawsuit.
CBC’s The Fifth Estate has reported that the first investigation was described as “cursory at best” by experts.
The alleged victim, known only as “E.M.” in court documents, sued eight unnamed players, Hockey Canada and the Canadian Hockey League for more than $3.5 million. Hockey Canada settled that lawsuit.
E.M.’s statement of claim alleged the woman, who was 20 at the time, met the players when the World Juniors champions were in London for the Hockey Canada Foundation Gala and Golf event.
The statement of claim alleged she went to a player’s hotel room afterward and engaged in sexual acts with him.
The statement of claim alleged that at some point, the player allowed seven others to enter the room without her “knowledge or consent.”
The statement of claim also said the men brought “golf clubs with them, knowing it would further frighten and intimidate her.”
Over several hours, according to the statement of claim, the group of hockey players engaged in a series of degrading sexual acts, including placing genitals on the victim’s face, slapping her buttocks, spitting and ejaculating on her and engaging in vaginal intercourse while she was too intoxicated to consent.
The young woman reported that at some points she was crying and tried to leave the room, but was “directed, manipulated and intimidated into remaining,” the statement of claim said.
The claim said that after the alleged sexual assault ended, the players filmed the young woman, instructed her to say she was sober and told her to shower.
The statement of claim also alleged the players pressured the young woman not to report the allegations or cooperate with a police investigation.
Court filings written by London Police and unsealed by the Globe and Mail in 2022 revealed more details of the investigation.
CBC News has obtained the documents, which include warrants and production orders.
The court filings say E.M. told police in 2018 she met one of the players at Jack’s Bar during a night of drinking, and that she also recalled an “older gentleman” buying rounds for the group and pouring a “Jagerbomb in her mouth.”
That man praised the player she was with and told E.M. to “take care of him,” the court filings said.
The court filings said a player referred to as “player #1” was the one who took E.M. back to a hotel room at the Delta Armouries.
Police interviewed a number of the players who allegedly were involved in the incident.
The court filing said that, based on the players’ interviews, one player reported that player #1 asked if any of them wanted specific sex acts in his room, and two players said yes.
The court filings also alleged player #1 was responsible for filming two videos of E.M. in the hotel room in which he asked if she was OK.
In one of the videos, the woman is seen wiping her eyes and slurring her words, the documents said.
E.M. told police she believed the video was taken at the end of the night and she had no recollection of it.
“The two video clips made by Player #1 were created, according to E.M., to protect against her going to police,” wrote London Police Sgt. David Younan, who prepared the court application.
“Player #1 even asked her if she was planning on going to the police … and asked she fix things with police.”
The court filing includes a text message exchange between E.M. and Player #1 in which he repeatedly asks E.M. to make the matter “go away.”
“Ok so can you please figure out how to make this go away and contact the police,” Player #1 texted E.M., according to the court filing.
“What can you do to make this go away … Ok so you are putting an end to this right?”
There are two other investigations tied to the alleged group sexual assault that are separate from the criminal case.
Hockey Canada hired a private law firm to conduct an investigation of the incident. It then set up an “independent adjudication panel” which completed a confidential hearing behind closed doors and issued a final report to determine whether the players allegedly involved should be sanctioned.
But the hockey organization hasn’t released the results because it says the panel’s conclusions are under appeal.
On Wednesday, Hockey Canada said it does not have an update to share on the “ongoing appeal process.”
The NHL is also conducting its own investigation and has not yet released its findings.
For anyone who has been sexually assaulted, there is support available through crisis lines and local support services via this Government of Canada website or the Ending Violence Association of Canada database. If you’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911.