Hockey players’ acquittal reverberates in southwestern Ontario city after ruling
LONDON — The acquittal of five former members of Canada’s world junior hockey team who were accused of sexual assault continued to reverberate Friday in the southwestern Ontario city where the trial — and the encounter that gave rise to it — took place, as some residents and advocates said the case provides opportunities for important conversations around consent.
A day after an Ontario judge acquitted Michael McLeod, Carter Hart, Alex Formenton, Dillon Dube and Callan Foote on all charges against them, Lara Harkous said the case and its outcome have changed her view of the city she calls home.
Harkous, a 25-year-old employment counsellor, said she now feels more “hesitant to be part of the London community” and particularly its night scene, noting it’s not the first time the city has found itself in the spotlight due to allegations of sexual assault.
She pointed to the allegations of mass druggings and sexual assaults at Western University’s fall orientation week in 2021, which she said happened in her third year of school.


