Dr. Brian Nadler, who formerly practised at a hospital in Hawkesbury, Ont., and faced eight charges in connection to the deaths of four patients, was officially acquitted Tuesday at the Ottawa Courthouse.
Lawyer Brian Greenspan said Saturday that his client would likely be acquitted of all eight charges against him — four counts of first-degree murder and four counts of criminal negligence causing death — on the first day of what was supposed to be a five-week trial in Ottawa.
The trial had originally been scheduled to start in June, but was pushed back to Tuesday as pre-trial matters before Ontario Superior Court Justice Kevin Phillips continued right through to the end of this week.
The pre-trial judge decided to make certain evidence inadmissible, the Crown said last week, indicating they had to take this step to be able to mount a challenge around that evidence.
“The Crown has concluded that the effect of this court’s evidentiary rulings is to exclude evidence sufficiently important to the prosecution that the Crown is unable to continue,” prosecutor Robin Flumerfelt wrote in an email.
In order to be able to appeal the pre-trial rulings, the Crown would ask for Nadler to be arraigned, Flumerfelt wrote, “after which we will call no evidence and ask for directed verdicts of acquittal on all counts.”
Nadler was initially charged with first-degree murder in March 2021 in connection with the death of 89-year-old Albert Poidinger at the Hawkesbury and District General Hospital.
Police later laid three additional charges of first-degree murder in the deaths of 80-year-old Claire Briere, 79-year-old Lorraine Lalande and 93-year-old Judith Lungulescu.
Court documents allege Poidinger was killed on March 25, 2021, and the three others died “on or about” that date. The documents say Briere, Lalande and Lungulescu also died in Hawkesbury, Ont.
In February, a new indictment against Nadler filed in Ottawa included four new charges of criminal negligence causing death involving the same four patients.
Nadler’s Toronto-based defence team had maintained their client’s innocence and had said his patients died of COVID-19.
Nadler has been out of custody on bail since July 2021. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario suspended his licence to practise days after he was first charged.