National Post

Two N.B. men declared not guilty of murder

‘Innocent in the eyes of the law,’ judge says

- Hina alam

SAINT JOHN, N.B. • Two New Brunswick men whose 1984 murder conviction­s were recently overturned by the federal justice minister have been formally declared not guilty.

Tracey Deware, chief justice of the Court of King’s Bench, said Thursday Robert Mailman and Walter Gillespie are “innocent in the eyes of the law” of the Nov. 30, 1983 killing of George Gilman Leeman in Saint John, N.B.

After the Crown informed the court it would not present any evidence, Deware said a finding of not guilty was the only verdict available.

“It is most regrettabl­e that it has taken 40 years for this day to come,” she said.

Mailman and Gillespie had been convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonme­nt with no eligibilit­y of parole for 18 years. An appeal of their conviction­s was dismissed in 1988.

Saying new evidence had surfaced and there was a reasonable basis to conclude a miscarriag­e of justice had occurred, Justice Minister Arif Virani quashed the conviction­s last month and ordered a new trial. Virani cited new informatio­n that was not submitted to the courts at the time of the initial trials and appeals and that calls into question “the overall fairness of the process.”

Mailman, 76, and Gillespie, 81, submitted their applicatio­n for criminal conviction review in December 2019, and both were on parole and out of custody awaiting Thursday’s decision.

Innocence Canada, a group that advocates for the wrongfully accused and took up the men’s case, has said Mailman has been diagnosed with terminal cancer.

The organizati­on says Leeman’s body was found by a jogger in the Saint John neighbourh­ood of Rockwood Park. It says Gillespie and Mailman “both had strong alibis with multiple witnesses placing them far from the crime scene on the day of the murder.”

Two eyewitness­es had testified for the Crown in the original trials, and Mailman and Gillespie’s 1988 appeal was based on an affidavit from one of them, 18-year-old Josh Arnold Loeman. In the affidavit, he recanted what he had originally told police about the killing. Loeman said his evidence at the trials was false and police made him testify to what he said after threatenin­g to charge him with Leeman’s murder and send him to prison.

But, in a subsequent letter attached to a police affidavit submitted to the Appeal Court, he said it was his recantatio­n that was false, the result of threats from people associated with Mailman. The Appeal Court found the fresh evidence from the defence was not credible and denied the appeal.

Innocence Canada says Mailman served 18 years and Gillespie served 21 years.

 ?? BARBARA SIMPSON / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Robert Mailman, left, and Walter Gillespie, centre, are pictured outside of the courthouse in Saint John, N.B., with Ron Dalton, co-president of Innocence Canada.
BARBARA SIMPSON / POSTMEDIA NEWS Robert Mailman, left, and Walter Gillespie, centre, are pictured outside of the courthouse in Saint John, N.B., with Ron Dalton, co-president of Innocence Canada.

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