Former fashion mogul Peter Nygard found guilty of 4 counts of sexual assault
Nygard acquitted on 1 count of sexual assault and 1 count of forcible confinement

One-time Canadian fashion mogul Peter Nygard, who was accused of attacking five women in the private bedroom suite of his downtown Toronto office building, was found guilty by a Toronto jury on Sunday of four counts of sexual assault.
He was acquitted of one of five counts of sexual assault and one count of forcible confinement.
Nygard, 82, who wore a black parka in court, didn't appear to show any emotion as the verdict was handed down on the jurors' fifth day of deliberations.
Outside the courthouse, Shannon Moroney, a therapist who worked with four of the five accusers, said she received a message from one of the women, who said the verdict was not just for her, but that it should be shared with all survivors of sexual assault.
'We did this for everyone'
"We did this for everyone, not only for ourselves," Moroney quoted the woman as saying.
Nygard's defence lawyer, Brian Greenspan, said "the jury has spoken" but he was considering an appeal.
Greenspan said similar fact evidence is a "significant aspect" in cases such as this and can "dictate the outcome." Similar fact evidence is evidence that may be introduced when the Crown wants to show that a pattern of behaviour might have occurred.
During the trial, many of the accusers described a similar scenario: that they were taken on a tour of Nygard's office building that ended in his private bedroom suite. All five women said they were sexually assaulted in the suite.
Greenspan said the defence will consider "whether or not the issue of similar fact in this case is such that an appeal is warranted."
Greenspan also suggested that the numerous health challenges faced by Nygard — who, for every day of the six-week trial, had been taken into the courtroom in a wheelchair — might play a role in his submissions related to Nygard's sentencing.
'Not an easy case'
Crown Attorney Neville Golwalla also addressed the media, thanking all the women who had come forward and put their trust in the police and the judicial process.
"This is a crime that typically happens in private and profoundly impacts human dignity," Golwalla said. "To stand up and recount those indignities in a public forum such as a courtroom is never easy and takes great courage. Everyone who came forward here is to be commended.
"It was not an easy case. To hear the jury's verdict is to understand that they worked very hard at coming to the result, and certainly we feel that a just result was what the jury came up with at the end."