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Judge-ism - Justice Alfred Stong - A Free Masons look at fathers

Political Commentary and Opinion

Ont. mom convicted of killing daughters appeals

Last Updated: Friday, December 10, 2010 | 9:14 PM ET
The Canadian Press


Elaine Campione, who was convicted on Nov. 15 of drowning her two daughters, is appealing the verdict.(Canadian Press)

An Ontario woman who killed her two young daughters by drowning them in the bathtub is appealing her convictions, suggesting the jury was wrong.

Elaine Campione, 35, was convicted by a Barrie jury on Nov. 15 of two counts of first-degree murder in the deaths Serena, 3, and Sophia, 19 months.

The jury took nearly a week to decide mental illness did not prevent Campione from knowing it was wrong to drown her children, as the defence had suggested.

Campione has filed an inmate notice of appeal, which preserves her right to file a full appeal from a lawyer at a later date, with the Ontario Court of Appeal.

In tiny handwriting Campione wrote under the grounds of appeal section that "the verdict was unreasonable and not supported by the evidence."

Beside a question asking whether the applicant wants to be tried by a jury if a new trial is ordered, Campione wrote "no" in capital letters, scratched it out and wrote "yes."

Campione must serve a minimum sentence of 25 years in prison before she is eligible for parole.

My heart goes out to those children and the father who has now lost his children for good......

On Oct. 2, 2006, Elaine Campione held Serena and Sophia underwater in the bathtub of her Coulter Street apartment in Barrie. After they were dead, she dressed them in pajamas, laid them down on her bed and wove rosary beads through their hands. She then filmed herself uttering an angry tirade against her estranged husband, to whom she feared she would lose custody of the children.



It begins as a scene repeated in a thousand home videos: two little girls, the eldest running to see the pink bike she got for her birthday. The youngest, barely a toddler, singing lullabies in the bathtub, her big round eyes smiling at the camera.
 
“How much do you love momma?” Elaine Campione asks 3-year-old Serena, who throws her hands open wide. “Is that it?” she asks again. “You don’t love me to the moon and back?”
 
What comes next destroyed a Barrie father and sent his estranged wife to prison for life.
 
In a video released by the court, Ms. Campione tosses a toy to the floor — a Winnie the Pooh stuffed animal Serena was filmed dancing with seconds before. Her tired face crumples as she sinks into a couch and unleashes a venomous tirade against her former husband just moments after she held her baby girls under water in the bathtub until they drowned. “Leo, there, are you happy?” she spews at the camera. “Everything’s gone.… The idea that you could actually have my children — God believes me and God’s taking care of them now.”
 
Campione was sentenced Wednesday to life in prison, with no chance of parole for 25 years, for the murders of her two daughters, Serena, and Sophia, 19 months. The sentence came during an emotional day in court that heard victim impact statements from Campione’s estranged husband, Leo Campione, and his family.

Part 2: Campione crying, and talking about events. Ends with her listening to Doors When you’re strange




“Are you happy now?” Elaine Campione spews at the camera. “You can visit them in their caskets.” The Crown characterized the murders as an attempt to prevent Mr. Campione from ever gaining custody of his kids.

http://news.nationalpost.com/2010/11/17/lives-shattered-by-death-of-two-girls-father/
 
http://news.nationalpost.com/2010/11/17/video-evidence-from-the-elaine-campione-trial/

Dad expresses grief over murdered daughters
DiManno: Caring father hardly the ‘monster’ described by ex-wife
ont. mother gets life for drowning her young daughters


Political Comment and Opinion: 

This tragedy could have been stopped if CPS, police and the government had listened to the father in the fist place. It's time the elected political elite in office start to look at women's violence and put the laws back in place, that show all laws are to apply to everyone, not just men and fathers on violence issues.

Where are those rights of that Father and his Children, where a woman can murder her children and the CPS protection Racket can ignore children at risk when fathers speak out, all because they in the government and those feminist beleive women never commit violence, as Pam Cross has pointed out on her blog and how women need protection and violence laws from men, fathers in court issues on family law 

And Where is Pam's outrage that children are killed by the hands of a woman, instead of blaming men for all violence. Violence isn't a gender issue. 

According to Feminist Pam Cross on her blog, she points out in a section on her site - "When violence is present, not only is inequality an issue, but also safety and, sometimes, survival. These can become, literally, life and death cases." 

Maybe Pam Cross can point out, why didn't the children get to have a life, where their survival could have been played out, if someone in Government, CPS, or the courts had make an attenpt to hear the father in the first place. His children would still be alive today, but you can bet your bottom dollar the feminist and the government with the likes of an useful idiot judge, Justice Alfred Stong will still slam men and fathers anyhow.

Maybe if these extermist feminist like Pam Cross just stop pushing their feminist propaganda on violence issues into laws based on their own opinions and forcing clueless government elected officals to enact laws in legislation on violence aganist women, that do no one any good, those children might even get a chance to live a life, instead of living in a nightmare world, where everything is up side down-ism created by socialist government-ism to harm all familys.

Violence has never been a gender issue, violence can be committed by anyone, no matter who and what gender you are..
Maybe Children need protection feminist cults that run wild in Canada that play one sided cards.

We already know from the so many news storys that CPS is a useless agency that doesn't stop children from being harmed.
Put child protection issues back into the hands of police only.





 

Barbara Kay: When a mother is on trial, the father is the accused

  November 17, 2010 – 10:31 am

REUTERS/J.P. Moczuls

A relative comforts Leo Campione (L) as Campione leaves a funeral service for his two daughters Serena, 3, and Sophia, 1, outside St. Peter's Catholic Church in Woodbridge, a Toronto suburb, October 10, 2006. The girls were believed to be murdered by his estranged wife Elaine in Barrie, Ontario, on October 4.

He just couldn’t leave well enough alone. Judge Alfred Stong, I mean, who presided over the Elaine Campione murder trial. Two days ago the jury brought in a decision of first-degree murder and a 25-year sentence against Elaine Campione, who freely confessed to drowning her two little girls in a bathtub, and who freely stated in a videotape that her motivation was hatred for, and revenge against her husband Leo.

The trial was over, But Judge Stong added comments after the verdict announcement suggesting that if had the power to overturn the jury’s verdict, he would. He said, “It is more than disconcerting to think that if Campione had not been so abused, so used and discarded as a person, her two daughters could still be alive…” Judge Stong was determined that even if it is Campione that gets locked up, Canadians would know that the real villain, morally speaking, is Leo Campione, the father of the dead girls (even though his alleged abusiveness was entirely based on his wife’s allegations and never proved), and it is actually the “discarded” Elaine Campione who is the victim.

Judge Stong felt such personal animus against the grieving father that he wanted to deny Mr. Campione and his parents their opportunity to read a victim-impact statement, standard practice even with mandatory- sentencing cases. He only relented under strong pressure from the prosecutor, who reminded the judge that the murdered girls had been “an extremely important part of [Mr. Campione's] life.”

The judge’s attitude is shameful. But what can you expect from someone who has been trained – literally, judges take structured learning programs steeped in feminist myths and misandric conspiracy theories – that women are never abusive or violent unless they have been driven to it by an abusive male. Judge Stong just could not get it into his head – he alluded to the “unimaginable facts of this case” – that a woman could kill her children without a motivation involving a controlling male that somehow drove her to the act.

Why did it not occur to the judge to blame the CAS? The CAS was well aware of Elaine Campione’s quixotic and alarming history. They knew that Campione had exhibited many signs of psychosis, that she had been hospitalized in psychiatric wards, believed people were out to kill her and kidnap her children, and exhibiting such bizarre and/or negligent behaviours toward her girls that mother-substitutes, including her own mother, had to be constantly parachuted into her household if it was to function at all.

Yet the CAS decided the mother was the “safe parent.” Mr. Campione fought like a tiger and indebted himself trying to wrest control of the children from a woman he knew to be unstable and a potential risk to them, but nobody listened to him. Why? Because everyone licenced to deal with family issues on behalf of the state – social service agencies, police, lawyers and judges – are trained in the same mythology about women as Judge Stong was. They are all singing from the same hymn book: trust the woman, suspect the man, even when the evidence screams not to.

Let a man raise his hand once to a woman (or not, but simply be accused of doing so), and he will be whisked out of his children’s lives for a year at least. You can be sure that if the father of these children had exhibited one-hundredth of the myriad clues to Elaine Campione’s potential risk to her children’s safety, the CAS would have eaten him for breakfast.

The “system” didn’t fail Elaine Campione. The system failed those two little girls by enabling a woman’s psychosis at the expense of her children. There is nothing “unimaginable” in this case at all. It has all happened before.

Everyone involved in this fiasco should be locked up in a room and forced to review the case of Zachary Turner, the thirteen-month old baby who was drugged and drowned in Newfoundland in 2003 by his psychotic mother, Shirley, while she was out on bail for the third time on charges of murdering Zachary’s father. And after that forced to review the case of Toronto baby Jordan Heikamp, who in 2001 was starved to death by his mother under the blind eyes of the Catholic Children’s Aid Society (no jail time) and Toronto baby Sara Cao, abused to death in 2001 by her mother Elizabeth. Christie Blatchford, who covered that case, said the mother (again no jail time) “was treated by the system, and in the main by the media, as a pitiful [woman], worthy of sympathy.”

Sound familiar? Plus ça change. When fathers kill, they are not assigned any motivation but their own evil impulses. When mothers kill, everyone in the system kicks into denial mode, and assumes the fault has to lie elsewhere – anywhere, as long as the woman doesn’t have to take responsibility for her actions, and can be offered sympathy. When fathers show disturbing tendencies, the system acts, or tries to. When mothers show disturbing behaviour, the system protects the victimizer.

Little Sophia and Serena Campione did not have to die. They were allowed to die because of a belief system that denies the truth of human nature. Both men and women are capable of aggression.

Statistically in Canada, mothers abuse their children more than fathers. When will our society really consider the “best interests” of the child rather than throwing them under the bus of a superannuated and pernicious ideology?

 


 

Mom guilty of murder for drowning daughters

 


 

Video - Click here to watch

Convicted mom sentenced Elaine Campione formally sentenced to life with no parole for at least 25 years for drowning daughters Sophia and Serena Watch: 2:47


CTV News Video -
Click Here


 
CTV News Channel: Mary Cramer, defence attorney
The defence attorney of Elaine Campione speaks to the media about the life sentence that was handed to Campione for the drowning deaths of her two daughters


CTV Toronto: John Musselman reports from Barrie, Ont.
John Musselman reports as Elaine Campione is sentenced to life in prison after drowning her two young daughters.



Video - Click Here

A correspondent with /A\ News says victim impact statements were read on behalf of Leo Campione and his parents and were very moving and touched everyone inside the courtroom. He says Elaine Campione is expected to be moved to a federal institution over the next few weeks and an appeal is in the works.




Together with the hate video intended for her Ex, here's what turned the Jury against this vile narcissistic beast: feigning she had no recollection of the murders to cops, shrinks, etc., while elsewhere admitting otherwise when it comes to women's violence.  

Tracy Mclauchlin | QMI / Sun Media | Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Anyone vilifying defense lawyer Mary Cremer as rabid feminist is missing the mark. At worst she's a soulless functionary who'll make any argument, no matter how amoral or disingenuous, on behalf of her publicly-funded clients. Most of her highest profile cases have involved plainly guilty from the outset male perps who range from
gang bangers to one of the York U. spree rapists.   

As Rosie DiManno skillfully argues below, beyond the killer, it's misandrist propagandists in the msm & the Liberal hack Judge who personifies all the countless shamelessly biased, arrogant, & effectively unaccountable Bench Gods who presume to sit in judgment of non-elite citizens that amply merit condemnation. 

Addressing bigoted media, here's pro family justice attorney Grant Brown's take on this totally representative example: 
 

Girls drowned days before custody battle

Allison Jones | Canadian Press - nationally | November 15/16, 2010

Mom guilty of killing two little daughters, yet the first three words of the article are - you guessed it - "An abusive husband..."

Later we read, "The trial heard that Campione spent time in psychiatric wards, attempted suicide, had delusions that people were trying to kill her and steal the girls and exhibited bizarre behaviour including not letting one of her daughters touch anything red and claiming she saw aliens." Yet through all of this, the judges who run our world-class legal system never once thought of taking the children away from her. On the contrary, with only the testimony of a clearly psychologically troubled woman to go on, the judges gave sole custody to the mother, and ONLY ALLOWED SUPERVISED VISITS BY THE DAD. How is that for a case-sensitive application of the "best interests of the child" standard? They could not have got it more wrong if they had tried! I hope the dad has made a complaint to the Judicial Council against every judge who granted and affirmed sole custody to the mother in this case. (Naturally, the judges who hear complaints like this would find their colleagues on this file innocent of any misconduct or bias. But what does it say about a system that can consume tens of thousands of dollars in high-priced judging and lawyering, make the completely wrong decisions at every stage - and still be found to be functioning without error?)

Oh, yeah, and journalists never tire of stating that the murders took place in the context of a "bitter custody battle." Well, who wouldn't fight hard for custody when the other parent has the history of psychological problems that this woman had? Duh! Clearly it became "bitter" because the mom was loony tunes and the judges pandered to her endlessly. Maybe dad wasn't the brightest bulb, either; let's assume for the sake of argument that maybe he was somewhat dysfunctional, too. Think of it this way: this poor dad was at his wits end trying to cope with the craziness of a wife without the slightest help from any government agency (child welfare, police, social services....). In fact, I'll bet dollars to donuts that if he had tried to get help dealing with the crazy woman, instead of "being abusive" toward her, then he would have been abused by the child welfare and police instead.... It is just astonishing how everyone is so willing to throw this poor guy under the bus in an attempt to minimize the disastrous foolishness of our courts and other agencies who should have stepped in and helped dad and daughters out of the mess.

 It seems some judges STILL did not read the report of the Zachary Turner inquiry: http://www.canadiancrc.com/PDFs/Zachary_Turner-v1.pdf

 -gb.

 

Taking aim at a grieving dad

 Rosie DiManno

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

BARRIE - Leo Campione was not on trial.

Leo Campione was a victim, the father of two little murdered girls, killed by their mother’s hand.

Leo Campione had pleaded with child welfare officials to remove those children from his estranged wife’s custody, terrified the youngsters might come to harm — fears that were sadly, gruesomely, realized when Elaine Campione took their lives.

But on the day of Elaine’s reckoning, found guilty by a jury on two counts of first-degree murder, the judge in the case implicitly aimed his condemnation at . . . Leo.

“It is more than disconcerting to think that if Ms Campione had not been so abused, so used and discarded as a person, her two daughters could still be alive.’’

This is a breathtaking rearrangement of the facts as court heard them.

If spousal abuse had occurred, if violence was done to Elaine Campione and the children, those allegations were not tested in this court.

Justice Alfred Stong has only the word of a convicted murderess — statements made not in this courtroom but to police, psychiatrists, counsellors and residents at a women’s shelter — that she was horribly mistreated, more than a year before she drowned the children.

It was with a custody battle looming, one that she suspected she’d lose — and there was ample cause for her trepidation — that Elaine Campione made the ghastly decision to execute her children. She preferred them dead than awarded to her ex-husband and his parents.

It wasn’t against Leo, purported wife-beater, that Elaine unleashed her homicidal wrath on Oct. 2, 2006. It was their utterly innocent daughters, their murder a conduit for her rage at their father. She said so, at great length, in the monologue delivered before a videocamera 48 minutes after the children were last seen alive — 19-month-old Sophia splashing in the tub, 3-year-old Serena colouring.

Yet shockingly, inexplicably, against all the rules of jurisprudence, Stong levelled his stinging indictment not at the accused and now convicted defendant, a woman who has never denied her crime, but — there’s no other way for me to interpret this — at the husband. And then, only after discussion of the parameters under which he would permit it, did Stong agree to let Leo Campione and his parents make victim impact statements, which will be heard on Wednesday.

Stong can’t undo the verdict. But by his bizarre words, he has given succor to a killer and considerably shifted the onus of responsibility, diminishing the impact of the jury’s finding.

Elaine Campione, in July 2005, had her husband charged with assault, claiming Leo had hit her and slapped their older daughter.

Those charges were stayed for 12 months and are now done with.

The allegations of abuse were made by a woman who never took the stand in her own defence, who spewed venom at her estranged spouse and damned him to hell for the murders she had just committed — “How does it feel” Elaine had so cruelly snarled, anticipating Leo’s discovery of the corpses — and who, by the testimony of her own mother, was profoundly disengaged from the lives of her daughters, endlessly putting her own needs first.

Disregarding all of that, Stong extended to this vengefully embittered woman moral cover that all but made a mockery of the jury’s verdict, at the same time veering off into a completely inappropriate polemic, a non sequitur, on perceived social ills as contributing factors in Campione’s lethal behaviour — essentially putting the stamp of approval on a defence exculpation that the jury had just rejected.

“The circumstances of this case are undeniably and inordinately tragic,’’ Stong intoned from the bench. “One can only hope that they do not reflect, even at their most extreme, a direction of our society. One of the greatest challenges seen routinely and daily in our Family Courts dealing with the breakdown of the family unit is an increasing inability to make personal commitments, much less permanent commitments.’’

It was Elaine who left Leo, not the other way around, though she may have had good reasons for doing so. But that was not an issue — Leo Campione’s alleged violence toward his family — ever tested at this trial. He wasn’t called as a witness and never came to court, having stated long ago that he couldn’t bear to look at the woman who’d killed his precious girls.

Stong, reading from his peculiar dissertation, comments clearly prepared before the jury had returned with their verdict, continued: “Perhaps that is influenced by societal features such as their ‘throw away concept’ or the ‘disregard when no longer wanted approach,’ both of which impact not only on the environment but on building and maintaining even the most intimate of relationships.’’

What, in the name of heaven, does that even mean?

“Insofar as society is prepared to tolerate the degradation of some of its members, be it by proliferation of pornography on the Internet or by aggrandizement of violence such as permeates the entertainment industry and sometimes sports events, it owes an enhanced responsibility to its weaker and more vulnerable members who as victim/offenders act out of the expected norm.’’

With all due respect, the victims here were Serena and Sophia. There could be no more vulnerable among us than defenceless children — the girls Elaine Campione drowned, apparently Sophia first and then chasing Serena through their apartment because the little girl, as her mother would later tell a psychiatrist, “didn’t want to take her bath.’’

Sweet Jesus, the child must surely have sensed something awful had been done to her sister and the same was intended for her.

But Stong’s pity was for their mother.

“So during her stay in the penal system, Ms Campione is entitled to receive and so it is incumbent upon the federal system to provide her the necessary psychiatric treatment and medical care while in their custody needed to prepare her for any eventual return to society. That is the decision of the court.’’

Pornography, which Stong for some unfathomable reason found pertinent to address in his remarks, had no significance in the trial. From this reporter’s recollection of the evidence, Elaine Campione made one passing reference to porn during her videotaped diatribe — claiming that her husband looked at such material, which is hardly a crime. She mentioned it as casually as she criticized Leo for chewing his nails.

This jury had taken a long time considering the evidence, returning on the seventh day with its verdict, several declining to even look at Elaine when the foreman declared her guilty on two counts of first-degree murder. Stong then made another unusual order.

“The ordinarily, unimaginable facts of this case have had a physically and emotionally draining impact on you and I am therefore ordering the attorney general to provide at the expense of that ministry any counselling whatsoever and of whatever nature you may wish to seek as a result of serving as a juror on this case.’’

What followed thereafter was the request by lead crown counsel Enno Meijers for Leo Campione and his parents to make victim impact statements. Defence counsel Mary Cremer fiercely objected, pointing out that a conviction on first-degree murder carries an automatic life sentence with no parole for 25 years.

“It is not provided by the (Criminal) Code and is not an appropriate use of court’s resources in that juncture.’’

Yet victim impact statements are routinely permitted under these circumstances, most recently in the murder conviction of former Col. Russell Williams.

It was obvious, to me, that Cremer — who said afterwards she would appeal the conviction — was fighting mightily to deny Leo Campione his day in court, even suggesting that he might “issue a press release’’ instead.

Stong needed some convincing to allow the prosecution’s request. “There is no way I’m going to permit him . . . to make issues about what the jury has heard . . . when he wasn’t even called as a witness and cross-examined.’’

Him. He. The man has a name, as besmirched as it’s been in his absence.

And now, by virtue of a judge’s imprudent remarks, he’s also got a dreadful legacy: The father who didn’t kill his kids but has been blamed by proxy all the same.


 Murdered daughters 'were my life'

The victim impact statement from the Campione family.

The victim impact statement from the Campione family.
(CBC)

More than four years after discovering his two young daughters had been murdered, Leo Campione was too distraught to appear in a Barrie, Ont., courtroom and describe the impact their deaths have had on his life.

"I see Serena and Sophia in my mind every day and I [will] carry them in my heart until we reunite again," Campione said in a victim impact statement read by a Crown attorney on his behalf.

"Serena and Sophia were my life."

On Monday, 35-year-old Elaine Campione was convicted of drowning Sophia, who was 19 months old at the time, and her three-year-old sister Serena.

Elaine Campione is seen with her two daughters, left to right, Serena, 3, and Sophia, 19 months, in this undated photo.

Elaine Campione is seen with her two daughters, left to right, Serena, 3, and Sophia, 19 months, in this undated photo. (Canadian Press)

Their mother killed the girls in October 2004, just a few days before a family court hearing, which might have given custody to their father.

In court Wednesday, Elaine Campione sat quietly while the statements were read out.

She had a solemn expression on her face — a marked difference to Monday, when she broke down in tears after being convicted on two counts of first-degree murder.

"We miss their laughter, their smiles and their love for life," said an impact statement from the family also read out in court. "Their mere presence lit up a room.

"The emptiness of losing Sophia and Serena is something we live with everyday, however the joy and memories we shared with them will live on in our memories forever."

The seven-week trial heard that Elaine Campione spent time in psychiatric wards, attempted suicide, had delusions that people were trying to kill her and steal the girls, and exhibited bizarre behaviour, including not letting one of her daughters touch anything red, and claiming she saw aliens.

Minutes after Campione calmly called police on Oct. 4, 2006, saying her children were dead, officers found the girls in their mother's bed, dressed in their pyjamas, holding hands and lying with a photo album and a rosary.

A videotape was found in the room on which Campione addressed the camera, speaking as if she and her daughters were dead. "Leo, there, are you happy?" she asks.

"Everything's gone. … The idea that you could actually have my children — God believes me and God's taking care of them now." She goes on to spew vitriol about her ex-husband, calling him a "hideous monster" and "the devil."

"I want you to know how much I hate you."

She says her former husband couldn't leave her and the children alone.

"You wanted to win and you won. ... Are you happy? … You beat your wife to death and your children and don't you ever, ever, ever forget it."

At the end of Monday's proceedings, Justice Alfred Stong said he hopes the healing process can now begin.

Campione will serve a minimum of 25 years in prison before being eligible for parole.