Sentencing arguments for Alberta pastor Artur Pawlowski and his brother Dawid Pawlowski, who were found guilty of contempt after deliberately violating COVID-19 health orders, have been pushed to September
This translation has been automatically generated and has not been verified for accuracy.Sentencing arguments for an Alberta pastor and his brother found guilty of contempt after deliberately violating COVID-19 health orders have been put over until September.
The arrests came after court orders were granted allowing Alberta Health Services and police to arrest and charge anyone who advertised gatherings that would breach health restrictions.Last month, Justice Adam Germain ruled that Alberta Health Services had proven “nearly to absolute certainty” that the two Calgary men were “guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of contempt.”
“Frankly, on a matter of this nature, where you have what some legal authorities might describe as an almost public contempt, bordering on criminal contempt … I’m going to give her every opportunity to vigorously defend her clients,” said Germain.The judge said the delay might give the court a better understanding of COVID-19 in remand centres and provincial correction institutions.“There are people who doubt the COVID-19.