Supreme Court won’t hear appeal in case of novelist acquitted on child porn charge
OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada declined on Thursday to hear an appeal in the case of a Quebec author acquitted of producing child pornography in connection with fictional scenes in a horror novel.
In refusing to hear the case, the Supreme Court indicated it did not have jurisdiction to consider the matter.
Quebec Superior Court last year acquitted author Yvan Godbout, who had been charged with producing child pornography over passages found in his novel, “Hansel et Gretel,” which include scenes of sexual abuse of a minor-aged brother and sister.
In a Sept. 24 judgment, Justice Marc-Andre Blanchard ruled that certain articles of Canada’s child pornography laws cast too wide a net, targeting works of literature that don’t endorse or promote pedophilia.