B.C. writer Galloway can proceed with defamation lawsuit against rape accuser: court
VANCOUVER — Novelist and former University of British Columbia professor Steven Galloway has won a years-long battle to have his defamation lawsuit proceed against a woman who says he sexually assaulted her, an allegation he denies.
The case at the B.C. Court of Appeal was a high-profile test of laws in B.C., Ontario and Quebec that aim to protect people from so-called SLAPP suits, or strategic lawsuits against public participation.
The unanimous decision released Wednesday upholds an earlier ruling by a judge who rejected the argument that all claims of sexual assault are protected.
Such a finding would rule out any legal consequences for publicly calling someone a rapist with “no obligation ever to prove the statement was true,” B.C. Supreme Court judge Elaine Adair said in her December 2021 decision that allowed Galloway’s lawsuit to proceed against certain defendants, including his accuser.


