Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Joyce Milgaard remembered: ‘You could knock her down ... but she would get up’

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TORONTO Joyce Milgaard, who spent decades fighting tirelessly for the exoneratio­n of her wrongfully convicted son, David Milgaard, “made the justice system better,” the co-author of her memoir said following her death.

Milgaard, 89, a mother of four, died in a care home in Winnipeg on Saturday after a lengthy illness, son Chris Milgaard told The Canadian Press from Regina.

“My mom didn’t totally like it in the care home because she wasn’t quite as free to do things as she wanted but she’s doing what she wants now,” he said. “She really couldn’t be stopped.”

Joyce Milgaard became a relentless advocate after her 16-year-old son was charged with the rape and first-degree murder of nursing aide Gail Miller, 20, in Saskatoon in 1969. Despite his protestati­ons of innocence, he would spend 23 years in prison before being released in 1992.

His mother spent several more years fighting for his complete exoneratio­n — which occurred when DNA evidence finally excluded him as Miller’s killer in 1997 — and to see him compensate­d. The Saskatchew­an government gave him $10 million.

Journalist Peter Edwards, who co-wrote Milgaard’s memoir, A Mother’s Story, said she displayed enormous strength.

“You could knock her down a million times but she would get up a million-and-one times,” Edwards said.

Besides her two sons, Milgaard leaves behind two daughters, Susan and Maureen, who were at her bedside when she died.

David Milgaard, 67, who lives in Alberta, has always credited his mother’s efforts for his freedom, saying he would otherwise have been left to rot in prison.

“I knew David was no angel and that he had been in plenty of trouble,” Milgaard would write of her son. “But nothing involving violence.”

Milgaard spent most of her waking hours reinvestig­ating the case using skills she learned in her teens as a newspaper switchboar­d operator. She sold her car and home and put up a $10,000 reward for informatio­n that could help free her son. She finally caught the ear of then-prime minister Brian Mulroney.

Ultimately, police charged serial rapist Larry Fisher with Miller’s killing. Fisher was convicted in 1999 of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 2015.

Even after winning the battle to clear his name, Milgaard continued fighting for the cause of justice and the wrongfully convicted. She became a familiar speaker at schools and universiti­es.

“She made the justice system better,” Edwards said.

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