
MIKE’S BLOG
ON WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
JOIN
THE MIKE ON CRIME
MAILING LIST
CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Syndicated National Radio Show with Mike McIntyre
NEW TIME
SUNDAYS 7 pm - 9 pm CST
BROWSE ARTICLES
Ask the Judge
Cold Cases
Crime and Punishment Radio Show
International Crime News
Manitoba Crime News
Mike in Books
Mike In The Community
Mike’s Bio
Mike’s Favourites
National Crime News
The Lighter Side of the Law
Voice of the Victims
Winnipeg’s Hot Cars of the Day
LINKS
- FACEBOOK - Mike McIntyre's new true crime book "DEVIL AMONG US"
- Winnipeg Free Press
- What If Sports Fantasy Leagues
- 2009 Panama Canal cruise
- THE DOE NETWORK
- Peter Warren
- Charles Adler
- Amazon.ca - "To The Grave"
- The Smoking Gun
- Bouck's Law Blog
- Canadian Missing Adults
- Full Comment - National Post Blogs
- Great Plains Publications
- Manitoba Organization of Victim Assistance (MOVA)
- Missing Children's Society
- PrimeTimeCrime
- Scared Monkeys
- TJ's Gift Foundation
- Tyler Pelke
- Vision For Justice
- Winnipeg CrimeStat Program
JURY POLL
Ontario holds symbolic vote on Truscott compensation before seeing recommendations
DATE: May 14, 04:21 PM
By Tobi Cohen
THE CANADIAN PRESS
TORONTO — A largely symbolic gesture supporting compensation for Steven Truscott will play out Thursday through a private member’s motion in the Ontario legislature as the government sits on formal recommendations on the matter.
The government tasked former Appeal Court Justice Sydney Robins with reviewing the issue of compensation and while Attorney General Chris Bentley now has his recommendations in hand, he said he’s not yet prepared to discuss them publicly, even though many in the house are expected to endorse the idea in a free vote.
“I think we would all like to be in a position where we can bring some closure to this case,” Bentley said. “I have (Robins’) advice and I am looking forward to speaking to it in the not too distant future.”
While Robins was unwilling to discuss his findings this week, he told The Canadian Press last August that the compensation issue “turned” on the fact the Guelph, Ont., man wasn’t declared factually innocent of schoolmate Lynne Harper’s 1959 rape and murder.
Ontario’s top court declared Truscott a victim of a miscarriage of justice and acquitted him of the crime, but stopped short of declaring him innocent due to a lack of physical evidence.
Robins said then that it was too early to speculate on whether Truscott could be denied compensation on that basis. Bentley refused to confirm this week whether the issue has come up in his final recommendations.
Bentley also refused to say whether he’d be supporting Thursday’s motion put forward by Guelph Liberal Liz Sandals.
“I certainly will be very interested in what the house does,” he said. “I think it’s important in my role to take the advice from Justice Robins, of course, and listen carefully to what the house says.”
Sandals said her motion is not meant to supersede Robins’ advice, but is rather meant to publicly recognize the tremendous injustice that’s occurred.
“Obviously, Mr. Robins is giving legal and technical advice to the attorney general on the matter of compensation but it seemed to me, because of the fact this case has such high public interest, it was also appropriate for the members, on behalf of the public, to give advice to the attorney general,” she said.
“The reason I’m doing this is that this is a case where Mr. Truscott has gone for almost 50 years labelled as a murderer by Canadian courts… He’s been absolutely consistent all these years saying, ’I am innocent. I did not do this,’ and wanting to have his name cleared.”
While individual members are allowed to vote with their hearts and aren’t required to follow party lines on this matter, New Democrat Peter Kormos suggested the resolution will likely receive “all party support.”
And although the vote is not binding, he expects it will carry more weight than the average resolution given its nature.
“Mr. Truscott has suffered just a tremendous and cruel injustice,” Kormos said. “Money can’t begin to compensate but it’s all that we have in our society. He’s lost a life. His own.”
Still, Progressive Conservative justice critic Christine Elliott suggested it’s “premature” for members to be taking a side on the compensation issue.
Noting Truscott’s case is different than that of David Milgaard and Guy Paul Morin, who were fortunate enough to be exonerated by DNA evidence, Elliott said current federal and provincial guidelines require proof of innocence before compensation could be granted.
Milgaard spent 23 years in prison for the murder of Saskatoon nursing aide Gail Miller and received $10 million after DNA evidence helped catch the real killer. Morin was tried twice for the 1984 killing of Christine Jessop, 9, just north of Toronto. Exonerated in 1995 on the strength of DNA evidence, he was awarded $1.2 million in compensation.
It’s a matter Elliott suspects Robins dealt with inha ditraordinary circumstancesI family has also made repre h sn, Ont., who’ve been studying the high profile case, ared to preseg to otheath penalty, spent months on death row uns in g a decade behind bars and later married and raised a family in Guelph, Ont n
