Radio host dares gay activists suing Christian ‘zombies’ who crashed Pride: sue me too
VANCOUVER, British Columbia, —
B.C. conservative firebrand and radio host Kari Simpson wants to be a
co-defendant alongside outspoken activist Bill Whatcott in the $104 million
class action lawsuit filed against him by two prominent Toronto male
homosexuals.
Simpson has released her open letter to the
Toronto men’s lawyer, Douglas Elliot, inviting him and his clients, Christopher
Hudspeth and George Smitherman, to add her to the suit filed shortly after the
recent Toronto Gay Pride Parade.
The suit is a class action on behalf three
groups: all 500,000 in attendance; the 9,000 who marched in the parade, and the
500 who attended as supporters of the Ontario or federal Liberal parties,
including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne.
According to the suit, all were allegedly
terrorized, defamed, or traumatized by Whatcott and a small group of supporters
who gained admission to the event as “Gay Zombie Cannabis Users” presumed to be
distributing condoms to parade goers. Instead, clad in green bodysuits, they
handed out pamphlets condemning homosexuality in general and some politicians
in particular while citing the Bible.
The lawsuit names Whatcott, wife Joni, and
semi-anonymous participants bearing names such as “Brian Zombie” and
“Christopher Zombie,” as well as “Jane Does” and “John Does.”
The Does are, according to Elliot, intended to
cover “those who paid for his airfare or donated Aeroplan miles to get him to
Toronto, those who put him up in Toronto, the people who paid to print the
pamphlets, anyone who helped him in any way could be on the hook for $100
million.”
It is from the Does that Simpson wishes to
emerge. Never a shrinking violet, the conservative radio host has sued and been
sued over her outspoken opposition to homosexual propagandizing in the public
schools, and she has called Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin a liar and offered
a $10,000 reward to anyone who can prove she isn’t one.
Simpson is daring the Toronto Gay Pride
plaintiffs to sue her too, though she won’t say in what capacity she helped the
Gay Zombies. If she is named, she can countersue during the lengthy initial
phase of a civil action called Examination for Discovery, and acting as her own
lawyer, she can interrogate the plaintiffs themselves under oath.
She says she especially looks forward to
questioning Trudeau, who has agreed to be a named plaintiff, “about the
billions of dollars Canadian taxpayers spend on health and medical costs
associated with men having sex with men.”
She is also eager to question Elliott about
what she sees as a conflict of interest because his parade attendance places
him among the unnamed plaintiffs and also about his “letter of support for
Brent Hawkes in the wake of his criminal charges involving indecent assault and
gross indecency and a minor male.” Hawkes is a clergyman and homosexual
activist facing charges dating to the 1970s.
Simpson wants to further question Elliott
about his involvement in the recently released “Just Society” Report,
“specifically, your advocacy contained therein of lowering the age of consent
for anal sex, and health issues related to men having sex with men (and minor
boys).”
Simpson informed Elliott in the letter: “I am
no stranger to the tactics of those relying on Gay Privilege within the courts
— as opposed to the rule of law. I also appreciate that the mainstream media
routinely fails to report on important legal matters whenever the result
exposes the antics of militant homosexual activists like Mr. Hudspeth and Mr.
Smitherman.”
“I note that you are a stickler for rules
where others are concerned.” She continues, “I trust that you are clever enough
to know that you are in a conflict of interest, and at best may have already
compromised the serious accusations made by your clients and the classes of
pride attendees — of whom you appear to be one.”
Elliott’s law firm Cambridge LLP did not
respond to LifeSite’s request for an interview.