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Challenge of Crown witness delayed by judge's illness
Paul Barnsley, Sweetgrass Writer, Calgary
Three scheduled weeks of hearings in the Samson Cree First Nation's $1.5 billion claim against the federal government were cancelled on Jan. 9 after Federal Court of Canada Judge Max Teitelbaum was diagnosed with cancer.
Judge Teitelbaum has presided over 149 days of hearings so far with the trial expected to last at least two more years.
At the beginning of what was to have been the third day of cross-examination of Dr. Thomas Flanagan, a University of Calgary political science professor, the announcement was made that the trial had been adjourned until April. The Crown had wished to persuade the court to accept Flanagan as an expert in the history of Aboriginal-federal government relations. Samson Cree lawyer Ed Molstad made the announcement about the adjournment to a courtroom half full of Native observers who were there to see him argue that Flanagan was not qualified to be an expert witness in the case.
The dozen or more people who made the hour-and-a-half trip south from Hobbema to downtown Calgary were looking forward to seeing the cross-examination of Flanagan completed.
More than one observer said the scheduled events of Jan. 9 promised to be the most interesting day of the trial so far. Flanagan, a former policy advisor to former Reform Party leader Preston Manning and author of First Nations, Second Thoughts, the Donner Prize winning book that is critical of what the author calls "Aboriginal orthodoxy," is seen by most First Nations leaders as an arch political foe. He is currently the campaign manager for Stephen Harper, an Albertan who will seek to replace Stockwell Day as the leader of the Canadian Alliance.
Molstad spent six hours of court time narrowing down the areas where Flanagan can claim to have expertise in Native issues, getting him to admit that he has never done research on reserve and has never spent any time working directly with Native people. Flanagan, who holds a PhD in political science from Duke University in North Carolina, also admitted he has never taken a single course in Canadian history or Canadian Aboriginal history. One more full day of court time is expected to be required before the judge will be asked to decide if Flanagan's testimony will be admitted as evidence.
Judge Teitelbaum, 69, is expected to make a full recovery, sources say, although he faces surgery in late January. He was appointed judge of the Federal Court of Canada on Oct. 29, 1985.
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