Guilty verdict in bashing of lesbian couple in Oshawa
NEWS / Trial for violent schoolyard attack wraps up
Andrea Houston / Toronto / Friday, February 25, 2011
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OSHAWA: After the judge handed down a guilty verdict Feb 24 in the schoolyard bashing of an Oshawa lesbian couple, Jane Currie and Anji Dimitriou, teary-eyed and beaming outside the courtroom, declared the moment “a win for the gay community.”

“We are so relieved to be able to finally go home and tell the kids because they ask us every day,” Currie, 39, said as the couple hugged their friends and supporters outside the Durham Region Courthouse on Bond St.

The decision marks the closing chapter of a nightmarish story that spans more than two years of legal proceedings. But it began when the couple was violently attacked Nov 3, 2008, in front of their children’s school. The couple’s son, who was six at the time, as well as some classmates, witnessed the attack.

Judge Katrina Mulligan said Mark Scott, 45, of Oshawa, “flip-flipped on questions” and his “responses were cagey.” She called his evidence “troubling” and “at times entirely inconsistent.”
Mark Scott, 45, of Oshawa, guilty of two counts of assault causing bodily harm
(Andrea Houston)


She found Scott guilty on two counts of assault causing bodily harm. He was remanded until sentencing March 14.

The Nov 3 attack wasn’t Scott's first run-in with the couple, Mulligan told the courtroom. The bashing was the culmination of a series of disputes over their children and parking spots over about a year, the court heard. “He’s a bully,” Currie told Xtra.

“Before all this happened, our kids were buddies,” she said. “It’s such a shame.”

Mulligan pointedly rejected Scott’s claim that he acted in self-defence. In court, he claimed that he threw blows at the women only after they called him and his son a “nigger.” But Scott never mentioned that part to police when they took his statement, she said.

Throughout the trial, Dimitriou and Currie testified they were on the receiving end of repeated anti-gay slurs, Mulligan said. Dimitriou, 33, told the court that Scott called the couple “fucking dykes” and asked, “Which one of you men spoke to my kid?”
Jane Currie and Anji Dimitriou celebrate the guilty verdict.
(Andrea Houston)



As Mulligan continued to read through her summary, Scott stared forward blank-faced. He barely shifted in his seat or moved the entire time. Mulligan described him as going “into a rage,” screaming and gathering a crowd.

“Scott admitted he left out details in his testimony and that versions of the story were reserved for his lawyer,” she said. “The use of the word 'nigger' was never mentioned to police… a crucial detail.”

Currie told Xtra she was “shocked” to hear Scott’s defence. “I probably called him an asshole, but neither of us used the word ‘nigger.’”

In her statement, Mulligan made a point of noting Scott's large physical size. She said she got the impression he had tried to “minimize” the contrast between his size and that of the two women. Then she rhetorically asked how “a five-foot-two woman with a back issue and limited mobility could reach up and strike a six-foot-tall man?”

Grisly photos were submitted into evidence showing Currie’s face covered in blood. Scott, who represented himself, submitted his own photo of his broken eyeglasses, something the judge said didn’t add up, either, saying, “not one person remarked that Scott’s glasses were broken.”


Mulligan concluded that Scott intentionally spat on Dimitriou. In his testimony, Scott claimed to have been eating a mouthful of peanuts while waiting for his children in the parking lot, and rather than swallow the peanuts, he spit them out and some of them ricocheted onto Dimitriou. The judge dismissed it. “His explanation that he was chewing peanuts at the time is ridiculous,” she said.

“I have difficulty accepting Scott was attacked by Dimitriou… and none of the eye-witnesses came forward saying she hit Scott,” she said, adding that Scott claimed he suffered three punches and a kick.

Dimitriou suffered a black eye, cuts and bruises, a mild concussion and partial loss of vision. Currie had to have stitches in her eye and her face was covered in bruises. Currie said that her children still struggle with the memory and their daughter continues to visit a therapist.


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Reader Comments


 
Justice Served
I greatly admire Currie and Dimitriou for toughing it out and seeing this incident through to the end. It doesn't erase the pain, but maybe Scott will realize that violence resolves nothing and give him time to think about the damage he caused.
Charles Melvin, Toronto Ontario
02/25/11 10:37 AM EST
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Deport the bastard...
Now that he has been found guilty, Scott should be deported back to his country of origin... after he serves jail time! It's all bad enough that we have troublemakers and criminals here in Canada, we don't have to import them.
Kieran, Mount Pearl Newfoundland
02/25/11 4:28 PM EST
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What makes you think. . .
that Mark Scott wasn't born and raised in Oshawa? Sorry but "an eye for an eye" is no solution.
A friend, Toronto ON
02/25/11 8:42 PM EST
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Yeah well if.............
Perhaps if the VICTIMS were able to see out of their "EYES" you might have a point (no pun intended) of course. Congratulations on the verdict ladies :)
A friend, Ottawa ON
02/25/11 9:50 PM EST
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Good to see that the court corruption is ending
I was still living in Oshawa when this whole thing began. I am glad to finally see and end of it and what appears to be the end of the debate over wether or not this was a hate crime. my prayers for a full recovery of health in all ways goes out to these brave women and their child.
Owen Nicholls, Kirksville Missourie
02/26/11 5:27 AM EST
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No brainer...
The guy called them DYKES...OBVIOUSLY it was a hate crime -_-
Ally C., Oshawa Ontario
02/26/11 11:39 AM EST
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Other versions
Other versions, in other newspapers, say the judge believe that although the two women had not called him a n**** that precise day, that in the past they had. So, I don´t think it is so clear cut as to say that it was a hate crime. You call me this I call you that. What surprises me is that xtra´s reporter must have been in a washroom break when the judge chastised both parties and told them ALL that the children shouldn´t have witnessed that. What happened xtra? Do we have to be absolute victims? Is this supposed to be a triumph for the community whether or not it is true? I make no excuses for this man. Assault is assault, but if these two women resorted to racism during previous confrontations, well... they shouldn´t have been beaten up, but they hardly have my sympathy in general. Because if they were being racist I wonder what they would have done if they were 6 foot 2. And, if they were just a hateful as he was, I resent it becoming a queer issue.
Suzy, Toronto Ontario
02/26/11 5:21 PM EST
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Deport the bastard... ?!!?
Hello Kieran, in NFLD do you not get the reason why this happened in the first place? While I don't condone Mr. Scott actions, your xenophobic and racist comments don't wash in my book ether. How do you think Queer Immigrants and especially Queer Black People feel about his actions? His behavior reminded me of some of the homophobic behavior I experienced in the Black Community that at times have created a wedge between Str8 and Queers. When people of color come out to the mainstream Queer Community, they not only have to grapple with their Queer Identity but then deal with racists attitudes such as yours! Remember sticks and stones may break your bones, but sometimes words are just as deadly. It's comments like yours that make me wonder if I truly belong in this community!! After all, as you decry to send “him” back, others would say the samething about taking away our rights to exist!! What this case boils down to is hate. What is needed is all of us to reach out towards each other. Not to build more walls. What’s this case taught me is the need for more Queer People on all sides to speak out bravely on the difficult issue of the race and homophobia and to do it so with an open mind and a steadfast heart.
Don, Toronto Ontario
02/28/11 1:02 AM EST
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Ruling of Bashing Lesbian Couple
Nobody deserves to be treated this way because of their lifestyle or beliefs. Clearly this was a hate crime. Glad to see that the judge did the right thing. A real man would never do what Mark Scott did. Not a good example for his child.
Judith Howard, Toronto Ontario
04/09/11 4:21 PM EST
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