Canadian comedian Mike Ward has launched a crowdfunding appeal to help pay his legal costs after being fined for cracking a bad-taste joke against a disabled teenager. Montreal's misleadingly named 'Human Rights' Tribunal ordered the comic to pay
Jérémy Gabriel $35,000 (£20,000) for the hurt caused, and another $7,000 (£4,000) to Gabriel's mother, Sylvie. However, Ward has refused to pay, and plans to launch an appeal. He says his stance has pushed his legal costs up to $93,000
(£54,000) which he is now hoping to cover from his fans and supporters. Writing on GoFundMe, Ward said: I told a joke. Was it in bad taste? Yes. Comedians should be allowed to tell jokes, even crass, hurtful ones. Hurt
feelings shouldn't dictate what a comedian can or can not do on stage. I've already spent 93 thousand dollars to make sure I don't have to pay 42K... I'm either really bad at math or I take free speech pretty goddamn seriously.
The jokes that landed him in trouble were aimed at Gabriel, who was born with a skull deformity called Treacher Collins syndrome. He became well-known in Quebec after he was flown to Rome to sing for Pope Benedict in 2006. One gag in
Ward s'eXpose tour and 2012 special was about Gabriel getting so much attention over his condition but now, five years later, and he's still not dead! ... Me, I defended him, like an idiot, and he won't die!". 'Justice' Scott Hughes
found that the French-language routine went beyond the limits that a reasonable person must tolerate in the name of freedom of expression . Ward will perform a show at the Edinburgh Fringe next week about his freedom of speech battles.
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