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WINNIPEG -- A man who complained about being shocked and traumatized by nude Internet photos of a Manitoba judge was no stranger to cyber sex and was willing to perform sex online for money, the judge's lawyer alleges. Alex Chapman, whose sexual harassment complaint sparked an inquiry that could cost Justice Lori Douglas her job, has his own online sex history, claims an affidavit filed by Sarah Whitmore. The document was filed in Federal Court as part of an application to quash a Canadian Judicial Council inquiry into Douglas's actions.
Whitmore says in her affidavit that evidence, which has not been heard at the inquiry, "showed Chapman had signed up to be an online sex performer: He would perform sex acts in front of a video camera on the Internet in front of strangers who paid to watch.
There is also evidence that Chapman had pornographic images on his computer and had engaged in group sex with "three or four women at a time," Whitmore said. Chapman's sexual past calls into question his credibility, Whitmore said, because he claimed to have been traumatized by seeing sexually explicit photos of Douglas and by being asked by her husband to have sex with her.
Chapman referred questions Monday to his lawyer, Rocco Galati. Galati said he had not yet seen Whitmore's affidavit. The contents of the affidavit are the latest in a string of tawdry sex accusations that have erupted since Chapman complained to the Canadian Judicial Council in about his dealings with the judge's husband seven years earlier. In , Douglas was a family law lawyer along with her husband, Jack King. King had uploaded sexually explicit photos of Douglas to a website dedicated to interracial sex and said his wife was looking for a black partner.
He also emailed photos to Chapman, who is black, and who King had represented in a divorce. He asked Chapman to have sex with Douglas. Chapman broke that deal in and complained to the judicial council, saying Douglas was part of the sexual harassment. The inquiry, which has been suspended amid court challenges and allegations of unfairness, is also examining whether Douglas failed to disclose the matter when she was appointed a judge in and whether the very existence of the photos disqualifies her from continuing as a judge.