Nearly half of women in Canada report workplace harassment: StatCan
Is Sexual Assault the New Legal Blood Sport in Canada?
By: A Furious Citizen Who's Had Enough
Source-inspired by testimony of the woman who testified against Jacob Hoggard and now advocates with Beyond The Verdict
Let’s not sugarcoat this.
Canada’s courtrooms have become arenas—where survivors of sexual assault are ritually shredded, their pain twisted into performance for the legal elite, while the predators sit smug, lawyered up, and insulated by centuries of institutional cowardice.
This isn't justice.
It's a blood sport, and the victims are the hunted.
How did we get here? How is it that in 2025, testifying about sexual violence feels like being assaulted all over again—legally, publicly, and with the state’s full permission?
Because it starts at the police station.
When a survivor first comes forward, they’re often met not with compassion, but with awkward silence, suspicion, or worse—untrained officers fumbling through questions like they’re taking a fast-food order, not handling the most traumatic experience of someone’s life.
"What were you wearing?"
"Why didn’t you scream?"
"Did you really say no?"
It’s no wonder most survivors never report.
And for those who do? Welcome to hell.
What Happens in Court Will Break You
Ask the woman who testified against Jacob Hoggard in 2022. She sat in the box, trembling, her trauma weaponized against her by lawyers who made it their job to humiliate her.
The same defence lawyer, Megan Savard, who gutted her on the stand is now back again—defending one of the Hockey Canada accused.
This isn’t about one bad lawyer. This is the system working as designed.
The survivor was ambushed with a secret recording. Forced to listen to her own voice, crying. Accused of lying.
Then confronted with footage that wasn’t even her, and pressured until she broke down and admitted to something that wasn't true—because she was emotionally bulldozed.
The judge corrected the mistake.
But the damage? Permanent.
Imagine watching five well-dressed lawyers tear into a woman who dared to report rape—laughing, scoffing, treating her as a liar, a criminal, a piece of evidence.
This is the Canadian justice system in 2025. This is what we call “due process.”
We Don’t Need More Survivors. We Need Fewer Rapists.
Rape-shield laws were supposed to protect survivors from this cruelty.
But in reality? They're treated like speed bumps.
Defence teams find the cracks, exploit the loopholes, and use trauma like a weapon.
And guess what? There’s no real consequence for crossing the line. The court shrugs. The survivor goes home and tries to rebuild a life from the rubble.
Meanwhile, the predator—guilty or not—has a playbook and a system that favors them.
And for every survivor who regrets coming forward, a new predator learns they have nothing to fear.
This is not just injustice. It’s shameless.
The Legal Culture of Misogyny
Let’s be blunt: the justice system in this country is still run on outdated, misogynistic myths:
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That women lie about rape for attention.
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That being calm means you weren’t traumatized.
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That being emotional means you’re unstable.
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That waiting to report means you made it up.
These lies have been debunked. We have the data. False reports of sexual assault are extremely rare—no more common than for any other crime.
But the courtroom acts like every survivor is a suspect in her own trial.
And the legal profession? It cheers this on.
Behind the scenes, lawyers brag about breaking witnesses.
They measure victory by how many tears they extract. Strategy, they call it.
What it really is: a culture of sanctioned cruelty, hidden behind legal robes and Latin phrases.
A Good Defence Doesn’t Need to Be Dehumanizing
Let’s be clear: every accused person deserves a defence.
But a good defence doesn’t need to be a public execution of a survivor’s dignity.
You can challenge testimony without:
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Playing psychological games.
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Invoking rape myths.
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Using trauma against the person already violated.
As legal scholar Elaine Craig put it, “We are not adversaries to be crushed.”
Survivors are citizens. Human beings.
The courtroom should not be where the second assault happens.
The Real Question: Who Is the System Protecting?
If our legal system requires the total emotional destruction of survivors just to function, then it is not a justice system.
It is a pipeline of silence and fear that keeps predators safe and survivors broken.
So here's the real question:
Who is this system really protecting?
Because it sure as hell isn’t us.
Until that answer changes, more survivors will stay silent.
And every time they do, a new predator gets the message: You’re free to hunt. The courts are on your side.
No More Ritual Sacrifices
We don’t want pity. We want protection. We want courts that uphold justice—not crush people to uphold tradition.
And we want a culture where being raped isn’t the beginning of your legal nightmare.
Because when silence feels safer than speaking up, the predator has already won.
Enough.
This isn’t justice.
This is a blood sport. And it’s time to shut it down.
🔥 If you’re a survivor who wants to speak out, organize, or fight back, check out Beyond The Verdict —a survivor-led advocacy group demanding change.
🖤 To every survivor reading this: You are not alone. You are not crazy. You are not weak. The system is sick. And you deserve better.
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