Location |
Defendant(s) |
Date of Alleged Crime |
Alberta, Canada |
Richard McArthur |
Jan 24, 1986 |
Richard
McArthur was
convicted of the stabbing murder of a fellow inmate at the Drumheller
Penitentiary. Following McArthur's conviction he met
four witnesses in regard to the stabbing while serving time at the Edmonton
Institution. They informed him of what they knew about the stabbing,
explaining their earlier denial of knowledge to Drumheller investigators was
because they did not want to get involved. These witnesses supported
McArthur's contention that he killed the deceased in self-defence.
Three of these witnesses saw the deceased, armed with a knife, go to
McArthur's cell shortly before the stabbing incident. Based on this
new evidence, the Alberta Court of Appeal overturned his conviction.
Since McArthur had already served the minimum time for his conviction and
the crown did not wish to retry him, the Court also ordered his acquittal. (R.
v. McArthur) [8/09] |
British Columbia, Canada |
Corey Robinson |
July 24, 1992 (Richmond) |
Corey Lawrence Robinson was twice convicted of the murder of his neighbour
and close friend, Lori Aiston. He was sentenced both times to a term
of 10 years. Aiston was repeatedly stabbed, kicked, and beaten in her
apartment on Colonial Drive in Richmond, then dragged and left to bleed to
death on her two-year-old daughter's bed. Her daughter was in the
apartment with her the whole time, unable to do anything but watch. The general details of the case give little reason to suspect
Robinson's
involvement in the murder. The only evidence ever found linking
Robinson to the scene of the crime was a microscopic amount of his DNA
detected under Aiston's fingernails. DNA found on a bloody paper towel
found at the scene did not belong to either Aiston or Robinson. It was
only after a “so-called” confession made following heavy interrogation by Sgt.
Don Adam, in December 1994, that the police were able to lay a charge.
In 2003, the British Columbia Court of Appeal dismissed Robinson's
conviction on the grounds there was never any evidence to arrest him in the
first place. (Now)
(R.
v. Robinson) [4/09] |
Manitoba, Canada |
Thomas Sophonow |
Dec 23, 1981 (Winnipeg) |
Thomas
Sophonow was
convicted of murdering 16-year-old Barbara Stoppel. Stoppel was working at
the Ideal Donut Shop when twine was placed around her neck and she was
strangled. Sophonow's first trial resulted in a mistrial, but he was
convicted at his second and third trials. However, the Manitoba Court of
Appeal acquitted him in 1985. In June 2000, the Winnipeg Police announced
that Sophonow was not responsible for the murder and that another suspect
had been identified. In 2003, Sophonow was awarded $2.6 million in
compensation. (R.
v. Sophonow) (Inquiry
Report) (FJDB) [1/07] |
Manitoba, Canada |
James Driskell |
June 16,
1990 (Winnipeg) |
James Patrick
Driskell was convicted of the murder of Perry Dean Harder. Harder,
age 29, was last seen outside his rooming house in a pickup truck. His
decomposed body was found three months later in a shallow grave just outside
Winnipeg near Brookside Boulevard and Logan Avenue on Sept. 30, 1990.
He had been shot three times in the chest. Driskell and Harder had
been involved in a chop shop operation which was raided in 1989. They
were jointly charged in a series of break-and-enters following the raid.
Driskell said he had nothing to do with the criminal activity. But
according to police Harder named him as an accomplice. Five days
before the preliminary hearing into those charges, Harder disappeared.
The Crown's theory was that Driskell had committed the murder in order to
prevent Harder from testifying against him.
Read More
by Clicking Here
|
Manitoba, Canada |
Cody Klyne |
Sept 4, 2006 |
Cody
Klyne was convicted of dangerous driving and flight from police. His
conviction was based on the eyewitness testimony of two police officers who
only momentarily saw the car's driver. In Aug. 2007, the Manitoba
Court of Appeal ruled that the officers' identification was too unreliable
to support Klyne's conviction, and overturned the conviction. (Winnipeg
Free Press) (R.
v. Klyne) [1/08] |
New Brunswick, Canada |
Erin Walsh |
Aug 12, 1975 (St. John) |
Erin
Walsh was convicted of the second degree murder of Melvin Eugene “Chi Chi” Peters, an
African Canadian. The crown alleged that Walsh's motive in the killing
was racial animosity. They did not consider that he grew up in a
housing project surrounded by African Canadians. Walsh claimed that
Donald McMillan, David Walton, and Peters twice attempted to rob him of his
money and drugs. He testified that after their first attempt, he managed to
escape, and ran to some nearby CNR workers, begging them to call the
police, which they did. When he then tried to make his way to his car to
escape, the would-be robbers found him again. This time they forced
him into the front, middle seat of his car at gunpoint. Walsh struggled for possession of the gun,
but ultimately
it ended up in the hands of McMillan, where it discharged and killed Peters.
There was no evidence to corroborate Walsh's testimony. The crown had McMillan and Walton testify
to a different story.
Following Walsh's conviction, he spent the next twenty years in prison.
In
2003, Walsh wrote to the New Brunswick Provincial Archives and received the
complete crown file of his case. In it were reports that were completely
exculpatory of him and which supported his version of events: (1) Less
than an hour after the fatal shooting, a St. John police officer heard one
of the robbers, Walton, ask the other robber, McMillan, why he
shot Peters. (2) A local store owner stated that the shells used in the gun
were purchased one day before McMillan said they were purchased, when Walsh
was a thousand miles away from St. John. (3) Seven witnesses
signed statements attesting that Walsh ran
away from McMillan, Walton, and Peters after they had attempted to rob him
at gunpoint just prior to forcing him into the car. These witnesses
supported Walsh's claim that he asked people to call the police just
10 minutes before Peters was shot. In Mar. 2008, after a Federal
Justice and the NB Attorney General agreed that a miscarriage of justice had
occurred, the Court of Appeals quashed Walsh's conviction. (CBC) (Walsh
v. NB)
[6/08]
|
New Brunswick, Canada |
George Pitt |
Oct 2, 1993 (St.
John) |
George
Pitt was
convicted in 1994 of the rape and murder of his six-year-old stepdaughter,
Samantha Dawn Toole. Samantha was found dead behind her home at the edge of
the Saint John River. The key evidence against Pitt was that he was washing
a comforter at four in the morning. Biological evidence that was not tested
before trial has since been tested and such tests clear Pitt. Pitt is still
imprisoned as of 2006, serving a life term. (Ottawa
Citizen) (R.
v. Pitt)
[9/06] |
Newfoundland, Canada |
Ronald Dalton |
Aug 16, 1988 (Gander) |
Ronald
Dalton was
convicted of the strangulation murder his wife Brenda. Dalton got a retrial
because forensic evidence indicated that Brenda choked to death on dry
cereal. At his retrial in 2000, Dalton was acquitted. (IB) (FJDB) [1/07] |
Newfoundland, Canada |
Gregory Parsons |
Jan 1, 1991 |
Gregory Parsons was convicted in 1994 of murdering his mother, Catherine Carroll.
Carroll had been stabbed 53 times. Parsons was sentenced to life
imprisonment. His mother's psychiatrist and friends recalled her
saying that her son, 19, had threatened her life. Two years earlier
Parsons been part of a band that sang a song called “Kill, kill, kill,”
about children killing their parents. In addition Carroll had
allegedly once sought a restraining order against her son.
In 1998 the
Newfoundland Supreme Court acquitted Parsons after DNA tests proved he could
not have been the killer. Years later, following an undercover sting
operation, police got Brian Doyle, a childhood friend of Parsons, to confess
to the crime. Doyle pleaded guilty to the crime in 2002 and was
sentenced to life imprisonment. Parsons was awarded $650,000 in 2002
and another $650,000 in 2005 for his wrongful conviction and imprisonment.
(CBC)
[4/09] |
Newfoundland, Canada |
Randy Druken |
June 12, 1993 |
Randy
Druken was
convicted of murdering his girlfriend, Brenda Young. This conviction was
overturned after a jailhouse informant recanted his story, claiming that police had bullied him into making
it. DNA testing was then done on a cigarette which was believed to
have come from the killer. That testing established that cigarette had
not be used by Druken. In 2000, the
Crown stayed the charge against Druken rather than proceed with a new trial. Evidence came
to light in 1998 that Druken's brother Paul was the actual murderer, and it
was established he had been with Brenda at the time of her death. (FJDB)
[1/07] |
NW
Territories, Canada |
Herman Kaglik |
Convicted 1992, 93 (Inuvik) |
Herman
Kaglik, age 35, was convicted of raping his 37-year-old niece due to her testimony.
He was sentenced to four years in prison. After he had served a year
of prison the niece then charged him with
additional rapes. Kaglik was convicted
of the additional rapes and sentenced to an additional six years prison. In
1996, DNA tests excluded him as a possible assailant of his niece. In 2000,
he was awarded $1.1 million in compensation for his two wrongful
convictions. (Ottawa
Citizen) [1/07] |
Nova Scotia, Canada |
Donald Marshall, Jr. |
May 28, 1971 (Sydney) |
Donald
Marshall, Jr. was
sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering his friend Sandy Seale. The
two
had been walking in Sydney's Wentworth Park when a stranger stabbed Seale in
the belly for little apparent reason. Seale died the next day.
Marshall was a Mi'kmaq Indian and Seale was a black. Both were 17
years of age. Marshall spent 11 years in jail before being acquitted
in 1983. A witness came forward to say he had seen another man stab
Seale. Marshall was awarded a lifetime pension of $1.5 million. (Info) [7/05] |
Ontario, Canada |
Steven Truscott |
June 9, 1959 |
Steven Murray Truscott was
sentenced to death for the murder of his 12-year-old schoolmate, Lynn
Harper. Harper disappeared near RCAF Clinton, an air force station, a
few miles south of Clinton, Ontario. Truscott and Harper were 7th
grade classmates at the same school. On the early evening of June 9,
1959, Truscott, then 14, gave Harper a ride on the crossbar of his bicycle
from the vicinity of the school and the two traveled north along Country Road.
Truscott maintained that he dropped her off unharmed at the intersection of
Country Road and Highway 8. He said she told him she had squabbled with her
parents and planned to hitch a ride somewhere. He said that after
dropping her off
he looked back and saw that a vehicle
had stopped and that Harper was in the process of entering it.
Harper's father reported her missing at 11:20 p.m. that evening.
Two days later
Harper was found in a wooded lot off of Country Road. She had been
raped and murdered. Within hours Truscott was arrested and charged
with Harper's murder. At trial, all evidence against him was
circumstantial and centered on placing Harper's death within a narrow time
frame which implicated him. A pathologist testified that Harper died
between 7:00 and 7:45 p.m. – an extremely precise determination even by
today's forensic standards. Years later, the pathologist would amend his testimony
and place Harper's death within a 12-hour time frame. Truscott was
convicted and sentenced to hang, but four months later his sentence was
commuted to life imprisonment. In 1966, Isabel LeBourdais rekindled
interest in the case by publishing The Trial of Steven Truscott in
which she argued that Truscott had been convicted of a crime he did not
commit. In 1969, Truscott was released on parole and in 1974 the
National Parole Board released him from the terms and conditions of his
parole.
In 2000 interest
in the case was again revived after a documentary on Truscott appeared on
CBC's The Fifth Estate. Subsequently, journalist Julian Scher
published a book on him entitled Until You Are Dead. Both of these sources suggested that
significant evidence in favour of Truscott had been ignored at his trial.
In 2001, lawyers filed an appeal to have the case reopened. In 2007,
the Ontario Court of Appeal acquitted Truscott, and in 2008, Truscott was
awarded $6.5 million for his wrongful conviction and imprisonment. (CBC)
[7/08] |
Ontario, Canada |
Romeo Phillion |
Aug 9, 1967 (Ottawa) |
Romeo Phillion was convicted of the murder of Leopold Roy.
Roy, 48, was stabbed to death on Aug. 9, 1967 at the Churchill Court
Apartments located at 275 Friel St. in Ottawa. Roy worked for the
Ottawa Fire Department and was also superintendent of the apartments.
The killer had some claim to have acted in self-defence as Roy had assaulted
him merely because his behavior was suspicious.
Read More by Clicking Here
|
Ontario, Canada |
Gary Staples |
Dec 1969 (Hamilton) |
Gary Staples
was convicted of the murder of Gerald Burke. Burke was shot to death
in the cab he drove while parked behind an industrial plant on Dunbar Ave.
in Hamilton, ON. Staples' conviction was based on the testimony of his
jilted ex-girlfriend who in exchange for leniency on robbery charges said
Staples confessed to the shooting. Staples won an acquittal on
appeal in 1972. He was officially cleared in 2002, after a retired
judge and two law students found police had suppressed evidence of two
witnesses whose testimony would have acquitted him. The Hamilton
police force sent him a written apology. Staples also received an
undisclosed amount of cash. (Info)
(IB) (CBC) |
Ontario, Canada |
Guy Paul Morin |
Oct 3, 1984 |
Guy Paul
Morin was
tried twice for the killing of nine-year-old Christine Jessop, his next door
neighbor. Jessup was abducted from her Queensville home on Oct. 3,
1984. Her lifeless body was found on Dec. 31, 1984 some 33 miles away
in the Durham Region. The body's decomposition was consistent with her
death occurring near the time of her abduction. Morin was
arrested in Feb. 1985, and acquitted at trial in Feb. 1986. The
prosecution, however, appealed the acquittal and had it overturned. Morin was again arrested 5
months after his acquittal and convicted at retrial in 1992. At both
trials the crown employed jailhouse informants to fill in gaps in its
case. DNA tests
exonerated Morin in 1995, and he was later awarded $1.4 million in
compensation. A book was written about the case entitled Redrum The
Innocent by Kirk Makin. (Champion) (IB)
[12/05] |
Ontario, Canada |
Rodney Cain |
Apr 7, 1985 (Toronto) |
Rodney
Cain was
convicted of murdering Joel Willis outside an after-hours club located at
566 St. Clair Ave. West in Toronto. Cain's conviction
was overturned in May 2004 because of new evidence that strongly suggested
Cain acted in self-defence. Cain is currently free on bail while a court
decides whether to order a new trial or exonerate him. (Canoe)
(R.
v. Cain, 2006) (The
Star)
[12/05] |
Ontario, Canada |
Michael McTaggart |
Convicted 1987 |
Michael McTaggert was convicted in 1987 of armed bank robbery. In 1990, his
conviction was reversed after it was discovered that while he was jailed,
robberies continued by the same robber that McTaggert was alleged to have
been. In 2000, evidence was revealed that two
bank tellers had identified another man as the robber, and the prosecution
had concealed this information from McTaggert's defence. In 2001,
McTaggert was awarded $380,000 in compensation for his 20 months of
imprisonment. (IB) [1/07] |
Ontario, Canada |
Peter Frumusa |
Aug 22, 1988 (Niagara Falls) |
Peter Frumusa was convicted of murdering Richard and Annie Wilson,
a married couple. The
victims were found dead in their beds and died as a result of blows to their
heads. No murder weapon was found. There was no evidence of forced
entry to their house, or of robbery or vandalism. Since Richard's
wallet and money were found close to his body, robbery appeared not to be a
motive and the killings were thought to be executions.
Read More
by Clicking Here
|
Ontario, Canada |
Cumberland Four |
Jan 16, 1990 (Cumberland) |
Robert Stewart, Richard Mallory, Richard Trudel, and James Sauvé were convicted of the murders of
24-year-old Michel
Giroux and his 27-year-old pregnant common-law wife, Manon
Bourdeau. The victims were shot to death at their home on Queen Street
in the Ottawa suburb of Cumberland.
Stewart and Trudel were distribution-level drug dealers while Mallory and
Sauvé were their enforcers. Giroux was a retail-level drug dealer.
According to the Crown, Giroux owed money to Stewart and Stewart ordered his
killing as an example to other drug dealers who owed him money.
Read More by
Clicking Here
|
Ontario, Canada |
Robert Baltovich |
June 19, 1990 (Toronto) |
Robert
Baltovich was
convicted in 1992 of murdering his 22-year-old girlfriend, Elizabeth Bain, even though her body
was never found. Bain was last seen Tuesday June 19, 1990 on the
University of Toronto's Scarborough Campus. Her car was found the
following
Friday, parked at an auto body shop near campus. Blood was pooled on
the floor in the back, suggesting she was murdered.
No physical
evidence connects Baltovich to the alleged murder. According to the
crown, Baltovich killed Bain by 7 p.m. on the day of her disappearance.
However, Baltovich was seen waiting to meet her outside a 9 p.m. class that
she took. The crown also argued that Baltovich drove Bain's car after
1 a.m. Friday morning to Lake Scugog, an hour's drive north of Toronto.
He then allegedly buried her body in the mud of the lake before returning to
Toronto by 6 a.m. However, Baltovich reportedly could not drive Bain's
car because it had a manual transmission.
Since Baltovich's conviction, his
lawyers have argued that
serial killer Paul Bernardo is a stronger suspect than Baltovich in Bain's
murder. At the time of Bain's disappearance, Bernardo was known as the
Scarborough rapist. An award winning book called No Claim to Mercy
by Derek Finkle was written about Baltovich's case in 1998. Following
a hearing in September 2004, the Ontario Court of Appeal ordered a new
trial, citing an unfair and unbalanced charge to jury during the first
trial. At retrial in 2008, the crown presented no evidence and urged
the jury to acquit Baltovich, which the jury promptly did.
The crown's sudden decision not to retry Baltovich was apparently prompted
by one of its witnesses. Four days before the retrial, the victim's
father, Rick Bain, told the crown that his daughter told him of an imminent
rendezvous with Baltovich on the day of her murder. Since the witness
had never mentioned this conversation before, he presumably was planning to perjure himself in an
effort to convict Baltovich. Disclosure rules forced the crown had to inform the defence of
the conversation. Even if the witness stuck to his previous testimony,
the defence could use his reported conversation to undermine his
credibility. (IB)
(AIDWYC) [4/08]
|
Ontario, Canada |
Bill Mullins-Johnson |
June 27, 1993 (Sault
Ste. Marie) |
Bill Mullins-Johnson was convicted of sodomizing and strangling his
four-year-old niece, Valin Johnson, who was found dead in her bed. His
conviction was based on the testimony of Dr.
Charles Smith, whose handling of 40 suspicious child deaths since 1991 is
currently under review. Two experts, including Ontario's chief pathologist,
now say Valin was never sexually abused or strangled. They argue she in
fact died of natural causes, possibly from choking on her own vomit caused
by a chronic stomach ailment. Mullins-Johnson was freed on bail in Sept.
2005 pending the results of a federal review of his case. In Oct.
2007, the Ontario Court of Appeal acquitted Mullins-Johnson of all charges. (National
Post)
[12/05] |
Ontario, Canada |
Tammy Marquardt |
Oct 9, 1993 |
Tammy Marquardt was convicted of
the murder of her 2-year-old son, Kenneth. Marquardt said she woke
from a nap to find Kenneth tangled in his bed sheets and when she freed him
he wasn't moving. However, a pathologist, Charles Smith, testified
that Kenneth had died from asphyxia after being smothered or strangled.
Smith's findings were subsequently rejected by six forensic experts,
including Newfoundland and Labrador's chief medical examiner, Dr. Simon
Avis, who said Kenneth, an epileptic, could have died from a seizure.
Another expert, Dr. Pekka Saukko, said Smith's conclusions in Marquardt's
case were “illogical and completely against scientific evidence based
reasoning.” Marquardt had rejected a plea bargain that would have given
her a five-year sentence for manslaughter.
The Office of
the Chief Coroner for Ontario found that Smith made serious errors in 20 of
45 criminally suspicious deaths he investigated between 1991 and 2001.
Smith's findings led to homicide charges against parents and caregivers,
many of which were unwarranted. In early 2009, Marquardt was the last person included in a
review of of Smith's work still behind bars. She has maintained her
innocence and said she discovered her son struggling and tangled in a bed
sheet after he called out to her from a bedroom. Marquardt was
released on bail in Mar. 2009 and her conviction was quashed in Feb. 2011.
The pathologist, Dr. Charles Smith, was stripped of his license to practice
medicine in Ontario. (Toronto
Star) (Ottawa
Citizen) (The
Record) [3/09]
|
Ontario, Canada |
Dimitre Dimitrov |
Feb 21, 1996 (Vanier) |
Dimitre Dimitrov was convicted in 1999 of murdering his friend and landlord,
Hristo Veltchev, 37. Veltchev's body was found in a public parking
lot, stuffed in the trunk of his car. Evidence indicated that he had
been bludgeoned to death in the garage of his house. Dimitrov's
conviction was based on expert testimony that his feet matched
impressions found inside a pair of bloody boots at the victim's house.
The boots were found in a front hall closet in the house. The closet was used by
all the boarders of the house including Dimitrov. Apart from the
expert's testimony, there was no evidence Dimitrov owned or had worn the boots. A retrial was ordered in 2003 after a court
ruled that the
impression evidence was inadmissible to establish positive
identification unless it was accompanied by corroborating evidence. At retrial in 2004, DNA test results
were presented, which showed
that the blood on the boots belonged neither to the victim, nor to Dimitrov,
nor to anyone else known to have entered the house. Dimitrov was
acquitted. He had spent 4 1/2 years imprisoned. (JD30:08)
[5/08] |
Quebec, Canada |
Benoit Proulx |
Oct 25, 1982 (Ste. Foy) |
Benoit
Proulx was
convicted in 1991 of murdering his ex-girlfriend, 19-year-old France Alain.
Alain, a University of Laval student, was shot in the hip near the CHRC
radio station in Sainte-Foy. She died a short time later. Proulx
was a reporter at the station and had been working the night of the murder.
In 1986 the case file was closed as the coroner was unable to establish any
contact between Proulx and Alain on the night of the murder.
Subsequently, Proulx launched a
defamation suit against a radio station and a retired police investigator for comments they made
concerning his guilt. In 1991, in the midst of this suit, the suit
defendants advised the prosecution of a potential new witness. The
witness claimed that after seeing Proulx's photo in the newspaper, he
recognized Proulx's eyes as being the eyes of a bearded man he saw near the
crime scene on the night of the murder. The witness could not at first
formally identify Proulx. Nevertheless he identified Proulx at trial
and Proulx was convicted. In 1992, the Quebec Court of Appeal quashed
the conviction due to serious trial irregularities. It also noted that
the presented evidence was insufficient to support the conviction. The
court entered a verdict of acquittal.
Following his acquittal, Proulx
sued the Attorney General of Quebec for malicious prosecution and won a
judgment of $1.15 million. However, the judgment was reversed on
appeal. Proulx was awarded $1.6 million for his wrongful
imprisonment. (IB)
(Proulx
v. Quebec) [4/08] |
Saskatchewan, Canada |
David Milgaard |
Jan 31,
1969 (Saskatoon) |
David
Milgaard was convicted of the rape
and stabbing murder of Gail Miller, a Saskatoon nursing aide. In 1992,
the Canadian Supreme Court freed Milgaard after he spent 23 years in prison.
Five years later, DNA tests of physical evidence confirmed Milgaard's
innocence. In 1999, the true killer, Larry Fisher, was convicted of
Miller's murder. In the same year, Milgaard was awarded $10
million in compensation for his wrongful imprisonment. (CM)
(IB) (Mention)
[5/05] |
|