Prosecutors expected to finish submissions today in hockey players’ sex assault trial
Two cellphone videos in which a woman says she’s “OK with this” and that “it was all consensual” are not evidence that she actually consented to the sexual acts that took place inside a London, Ont., hotel room, prosecutors argued Friday at the sexual assault trial of five former members of Canada’s world junior hockey team.
Prosecutor Meaghan Cunningham argued the videos, taken about an hour apart in the early hours of June 19, 2018, also did not constitute reasonable steps to determine whether the woman voluntarily consented to specific sexual acts with any specific person. At most, they were a kind of “token lip service box checking,” she added.
Michael McLeod told police in 2018 he took the first video because he was worried “something like this,” meaning the investigation, might happen, and the second because he wanted to get the woman’s consent for “the whole thing,” Cunningham said.
In the first video, a voice off camera asks the woman twice if she is “OK with this” and she agrees, repeating the words.

