Edmonton Journal

Man cleared of murder suffered ‘every single day’

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Ottawa • Glen Assoun’s lawyer says the wrongfully convicted halifax man suffered “every single day” as he waited to be exonerated for a murder he didn’t commit — a wait that was prolonged for months as his case sat on former justice minister Jody Wilson-raybould’s desk.

david lametti issued an order for a new trial on Feb. 28, just seven weeks after taking over as justice minister. the following day — after a five-minute new trial in which the prosecutio­n presented no evidence — assoun was a free man.

he had spent almost 17 years in prison and another four and a half years under strict parole conditions after being convicted of the 1998 murder of his ex-girlfriend, Brenda Way.

Sean macdonald — one of the lawyers for innocence canada, a non-profit organizati­on dedicated to exoneratin­g the wrongfully convicted and which spent years trying to prove assoun’s innocence — declined to specifical­ly discuss Wilson-raybould’s handling of the case.

But he said in an interview: “i can tell you this much — that Glen Assoun is 100 per cent factually innocent and he suffered every single day while he waited for his exoneratio­n. i can say that minister lametti worked with dispatch to make sure that justice was done.”

the halifax Examiner first reported this month that Wilson-raybould sat for 18 months on the findings of the Justice department’s criminal conviction review group, which recommende­d that a new trial be ordered for assoun. Sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, have confirmed that report to the canadian Press.

during assoun’s brief new trial on march 1, prosecutor mark Scott referred to the “considerab­le period of time since the minister’s decision has been pending.”

Wilson-raybould herself did not confirm or deny a lengthy delay in dealing with assoun’s case, but suggested it was just one of many potential wrongful conviction cases that landed on her desk.

“it would be entirely inappropri­ate for me to comment on specific cases or applicatio­ns made under the criminal conviction review process . ... these applicatio­ns are necessaril­y confidenti­al in nature,” she said in an email this week to the canadian Press.

“as minister, i took potential wrongful conviction matters incredibly seriously. in order to deal with all such applicatio­ns more thoroughly, effectivel­y, and impartiall­y, i appointed the honourable mr. Justice morris Fish (a former Supreme court justice) as special adviser on wrongful conviction­s in early december 2018. his role was designed to advise me — as minister — on applicatio­ns under the criminal conviction review process, of which there were many.”

however, before anything could come of that appointmen­t for assoun, Wilson-raybould was moved to Veterans affairs in a mid-January cabinet shuffle, replaced by lametti, a former law professor. Wilson-raybould resigned from cabinet a month later amid allegation­s she was improperly pressured last fall by the Prime minister’s office to intervene to stop a criminal prosecutio­n of montreal-based engineerin­g giant Snc-lavalin on bribery charges related to contracts in libya.

among the examples of what she considered inappropri­ate pressure, Wilson-raybould told the house of commons justice committee last month that she was urged to solicit a second opinion — from someone like a retired Supreme court justice — on whether Snc-lavalin should be invited to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement, a kind of plea bargain.

She rejected the idea as interferen­ce with prosecutor­ial discretion.

macdonald questioned Wilson-raybould’s suggestion that she had many potential wrongful conviction cases to deal with.

his group screens out the “vast majority” of applicatio­ns that are deemed to have little merit. it investigat­es only those that appear to be likely or possible miscarriag­es of justice — “an ultra rare and exclusive club that very few canadians, fortunatel­y, have found themselves members in. it’s like a rare, albino rhinoceros.”

 ?? Andrew VAuGhAn / The CAnAdiAn press files ?? Before being exonerated, Glen Assoun, shown leaving court in Halifax on March 1, spent more than 16 years in prison after being convicted of murder.
Andrew VAuGhAn / The CAnAdiAn press files Before being exonerated, Glen Assoun, shown leaving court in Halifax on March 1, spent more than 16 years in prison after being convicted of murder.

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