29
/pt/
pt
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
April 1, 2024
Criar
Public Timelines
Biblioteca
FAQ
For education
Cabinet
For educational institutions
For teachers
For students/pupils
Baixar
Export
Criar uma cópia
Incorporar ao site
Editar
Visualizações 382
0
0
law
wrong convictions
Criada
jojo
⟶ Atualizado 27 nov 2017 ⟶
List of edits
Linhas do tempo do
jojo
:
1 dez 2017
0
0
984
William Mullins-Johnson's wrongful conviction.
Please zoom in to see pictures and proper timelines. (down t...
Comentários
Eventos
Perry Harder of Winnipeg was shot several times in the chest
The RCMP said three hair samples found in Driskell's van were Harder's, and that evidence convicted him.
The federal justice minister at the time quashed the conviction and ordered a new trial.
The inquiry's final report, released in February 2007, said the jury in Driskell's trial was "seriously misled"
James Driskell speaks to reporters in April 2006 during a meeting in Winnipeg before the inquiry into his wrongful murder conviction.
Henry was convicted on ten counts of sexual assault the basis of weak identification evidence.
Attacks similar to Henry's alleged crimes continued after he was incarcerated
the Vancouver police re-opened 25 unsolved sexual assaults that took place between 1983 and 1988 in the same areas of Vancouver and the assaults for which Henry was convicted.
the British Columbia Court of Appeal quashed Henry's conviction and entered acquittals on all charges.
16-year-old Barbara Stoppel, a counter server at a Donut Shop was found strangled in the women’s washroom of the store
Witnesses ultimately identified Sophonow based on photo lineups that, many years later, would be revealed as having been badly flawed and conducted in a biased fashion.
police announced they had found and arrested the man who had become known as the “Cowboy Killer.”
Sophonow eventually became persuaded that he had killed Stoppel and had blacked out afterward, remembering little of the crime. He confessed this to police.
Having spent a total of four years behind bars, and having lived most of his adult life under the shadow of an ongoing murder prosecution, Sophonow was exonerated and received a full apology from the Manitoba government.
12-year-old Lynne Harper's remains were found
witnesses saw Steven Truscott cycling with Lynne Harper through the countryside (2 days before she was found)
Truscott was found guilty and sentenced to a death sentence
the federal government commuted his sentence to life imprisonment with a 10-year parole eligibility period
the Supreme Court of Canada re-examined the case but found it to be properly judged
Truscott was paroled
Because of new laws and rights, the federal government appointed retired Québec Court of Appeal Justice Fred Kaufman to review Truscott’s Section 690 application.
A special five-judge panel of the Court of Appeal began hearing the fresh evidence.
A year later, Truscott was outright acquitted, in part because a fair retrial would be impossible so many years after the fact.
He was awarded $6.5 million in compensation by the Ontario government.