The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Ex-N.S. paramedic denied funding for appeal of sex assault conviction­s

- EDUCATION

A former paramedic convicted of two sexual assaults while on the job in Nova Scotia has lost a bid to have his appeal paid for by the province.

James Duncan Keats, 52, was found guilty in December 2015 of groping two patients.

In his appeal, Keats said his lawyer didn’t follow his instructio­ns. As well, he said the judge “incorrectl­y presented some facts, which gave a negative bias to my case.”

Nova Scotia Legal Aid refused to handle the appeal, saying it lacked merit.

Keats said he was too broke to pay for his own appeal because his 18-year career as a paramedic ended when he was fired in 2013 as a result of the sexual assault allegation­s. He was charged in 2014 with five counts of sexual assault, but only four of these charges were tried in Nova Scotia Supreme Court by a judge and jury.

During his trial, four women testified Keats touched and groped their breasts and genitals. He said he had listened to their chest and abdomen with a stethoscop­e but never touched their genitals. He was later acquitted in two of the cases.

In October 2016, Keats was sentenced to 30 months in prison.

He asked the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal to order funding for an appeal, but it refused in a ruling released Friday.

While the court accepted that Keats has no money, it said justice would not be served by ordering the appointmen­t of state-funded lawyer.

Keats also argued he has “borderline Attention Deficit Disorder,” but the appeal court said he was competent enough to handle his own appeal.

After a separate trial, Keats was found guilty in May 2015 of one count of sexually assaulting a 71-year-old woman during a medical call. He was sentenced five months later to four years in jail.

Keats raped the woman in her home in the Annapolis Valley in 2013 while his partner tended to her ailing husband in another room, court heard.

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