Maisonneuve first francophone Ontario Court chief justice

Ontario’s Provincial Court will soon have a new judge at its helm. The court’s current Associate Chief Justice Lise Maisonneuve will replace Chief Justice Annmarie Bonkalo on May 3, the Ministry of Attorney General announced.

Associate Chief Justice Lise Maisonneuve takes over the top job on May 3Maisonneuve will be the first francophone chief justice of the Ontario Court of Justice and the second woman to take the office. The Provincial Court is the largest court in Canada.

Currently the regional senior judge of the east region, Maisonneuve presided over criminal matters in the Ottawa area for 12 years.

As a chief justice, she “distinguished herself as a leader and innovator,” the Ministry of the Attorney General said, adding the judge was responsible for initiatives including judicial education and modernization of the courts.

“Over an exemplary judicial career, Associate Chief Justice Maisonneuve has earned a reputation as a strong leader, an effective collaborator and determined advocate for modernization and continuous improvement in our courts,” said Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur.

“I have tremendous confidence in her ability to lead and I look forward to the work we can do together for the justice system and the people it serves.”

Before joining the bench, Maisonneuve was a criminal lawyer at Ottawa law firm Carroll Wallace and Maisonneuve. She was also an advisor to the Canadian Forces and the late Chief Justice of Canada Brian Dickson on military investigations.

Maisonneuve graduated from the University of Ottawa Law School and was called to the bar in 1991.

The Ontario Court of Justice hears more than 200,000 criminal cases in addition to millions of provincial offence matters and in excess of 20,000 family law cases every year.

Recent articles & video

Ontario Superior Court certifies class action against crypto asset trading platform Binance

NS Court of Appeal denies request for the production of CCTV footage in a personal injury action

NS Supreme Court clarifies disclosure standards in a divorce and property division case

Federal Court overturns study permit denial due to immigration officer’s unreasonable assessment

Ontario Court of Appeal dismisses stroke-related medical malpractice suit against physician

Military judges being subject to chain of command does not sacrifice independence, impartiality: SCC

Most Read Articles

BC Supreme Court orders father to pay fines for continuous breaches of conduct and parenting orders

Ontario Superior Court certifies class action against The Bank of Nova Scotia

Manitoba First Nations' class action seeks treaty annuity payments

BC Supreme Court revokes probate grant for failure to properly notify testator’s son in Mexico