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Hedley's Jacob Hoggard to face trial in April on sex-related charges
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Jury trial of Hedley frontman to begin April 12
The Canadian Press ·
Posted: Jan 07, 2021 11:59 AM ET
The singer of the Canadian rock group Hedley has pleaded not guilty to two counts of sexual assault causing bodily harm and one count of sexual interference. (Peter Power/The Canadian Press)
A new trial date has been set for Jacob Hoggard, the frontman for the Canadian rock band Hedley, who is charged with sex-related offences.
Hoggard's trial was initially set to begin this week but is now slated to start on April 12, with pre-trial motions scheduled later this month.
The singer was arrested and charged in 2018 in connection with alleged incidents involving a woman and a teenager.
Hoggard pleaded not guilty at his preliminary hearing to sexual assault causing bodily harm and sexual interference.
He has opted to be tried by a jury rather than a judge alone.
The complainants cannot be identified due to a publication ban.
Allegations suggesting the musician had inappropriate encounters with young fans surfaced in 2018, prompting a police investigation.
Toronto police have said the charges relate to three separate incidents involving a woman and a girl under the age of 16 that allegedly occurred in the Toronto area in 2016.
Hoggard issued a statement in early 2018, before his arrest, denying he engaged in non-consensual sexual behaviour, but acknowledging he had behaved in a way that "objectified women" and was "reckless and dismissive of their feelings."
Hedley has been on an indefinite hiatus since March 2018.
Lincoln Project co-founder accused of ‘grooming’ young men,
offering jobs for sex
10 Jan, 2021 17:49
Republican strategist John Weaver, a founding member of the anti-Trump Lincoln Project group, has been accused by conservative reporters and alleged victims of “preying” on young men by offering them work in exchange for sex.
A former strategist for George W. Bush, John McCain, and John Kasich, John Weaver was in a celebratory mood on Thursday, declaring“America is great again,” after Congress formally certified Joe Biden’s electoral victory. Though a Republican, Weaver is also a member of the Lincoln Project, a group of disaffected ‘Never Trump’ Republicans and neoconservatives formed with the sole purpose of defeating the president.
Emboldened by Trump’s downfall, and buoyed by the $67 million they raised in the runup to the election, the Lincoln Project began work on a “database” of soon-to-be former Trump staff and officials, with a view to holding them “accountable” for the rest of their professional lives. However, Weaver himself was soon confronted with some alleged skeletons in his own closet.
“Maybe I should start talking about one of the founding members of the Lincoln Project offering jobs to young men in exchange for sex,” Conservative pundit Ryan Girdusky tweeted on Saturday, adding, “his wife is probably interested.”
Girdusky went on to say he had been contacted by several men who claimed to have been groomed by the “founding member.” Girdusky did not reveal more, but said he had screenshots of messages the Lincoln Project member sent to one recipient.
A Twitter user named Josh Price, who has since locked his account, soon came forward and named Weaver as the creep in question. He was followed by another liberal pundit, who claimed Weaver sent him “pushy” and “flirty” messages.
After Donald Trump Jr. retweeted their accusations, journalist Scott Stedman reacted to Girdusky’s thread, declaring he, too, had been contacted by Weaver. Stedman said he had followed the strategist on Twitter in 2017, and the pair would chat about politics. Stedman said he had offered him “some sort of ‘joint venture’ which I wasn't interested in,” before he “proceeded to tell me how ‘hot’ I looked and commented on my profile picture and my hair.”
“He started calling me ‘my boy,’” Stedman continued. “I found it deeply uncomfortable.”
Stedman alleged that, since posting about his experience, he has “gotten multiple DMs of people telling me they experienced this (and worse).” Some, he said, are “afraid to say anything.”
The accusations are not totally new, and first surfaced last summer, around the same time Weaver reportedly suffered a heart attack and scaled back his work with the Lincoln Project.
As of Sunday afternoon, Weaver has not yet weighed in on the accusations or issued a denial. Meanwhile, right-wing commentators have been hammering the group of anti-Trump crusaders.
Despite raising a whopping $67 million in a bid to crater support for Trump among Republicans, the Lincoln Project’s efforts appear to have been in vain, as he won even more Republican votes last year than in 2016. Now, with Trump defeated, the group’s battle going forward will be to remain relevant.
Child incest scandal shakes French intelligentsia
Prominent political analyst Olivier Duhamel resigns from Sciences Po et Le Siècle
after stepdaughter’s book
10 January 2021 - 16:37
BY VICTOR MALLET
Her twin brother told her when they were 14 that he was being sexually abused by their well-known stepfather.
Last week, Camille Kouchner ended three decades of secrecy with the publication of a wrenching memoir that has shaken the close-knit community of Paris intellectuals with an abuse scandal, this time involving the crime of incest. ..
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