Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia Court Upholds Ruling Against Wrongfully Convicted Man

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 08:36 PM
  • Nova Scotia Court Upholds Ruling Against Wrongfully Convicted Man
HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia court has rejected the appeal of man who argued unsuccessfully last year that RCMP negligence caused his wrongful conviction on a statutory rape charge 45 years ago.
 
Gerry Barton's lawyer argued at a hearing in January that a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge erred a year ago when he cleared the RCMP of wrongdoing.
 
Dale Dunlop said Justice James Chipman should have found Barton's confession in 1969 was false and caused by some form of police coercion when he gave a statement in Digby, N.S. Barton was 19 at the time.
 
The five-member Court of Appeal supported Chipman's decision, saying he was correct in finding police met a reasonable standard of care in taking Barton's statement. 
 
The appeal court says Barton gave a sworn statement to the RCMP that acknowledged having had consensual sexual intercourse with the complainant in her home.
 
The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal originally found in 2011 there was a miscarriage of justice after the woman recanted her story in 2008 and blamed her brother for causing her pregnancy, which DNA tests confirmed.
 
But in the latest ruling from the appeal court released Tuesday, it cites new evidence that emerged during a civil lawsuit heard last year by Chipman in the province's Supreme Court.
 
Preliminary inquiry documents from 1969 were presented in the Supreme Court showing that Barton gave a statement to police.
 
"There was also no suggestion at the time of improper conduct in how the statement was taken," says Tuesday's appeal court decision.
 
Dunlop argued the confession must have been both false and improperly obtained, as it was clear Barton wasn't the father of the woman's child.
 
He also argued the Charter of Rights and Freedoms may have been violated when the province refused to negotiate compensation with Barton over the past four years.
 
Recommendations stemming from the inquiry into the wrongful murder conviction of Donald Marshall Jr. suggested the province should have had a third party conduct an inquiry and set proper compensation in similar cases, he said.
 
He also said that by refusing to negotiate and forcing the litigation the province was causing cruel and unusual punishment against Barton. 
 
But the appeal court rejected that argument, saying it and other charter arguments were "legally and factually without merit."
 
The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal originally quashed Barton's conviction after the complainant withdrew her story.
 
DNA testing showed her brother was 1.9 million times more likely to be the father of the boy than anyone else. His name and that of his siblings and immediate family are protected by a publication ban.
 
The appeal court ruled Barton won't be required to pay the defendants' costs.
 
Dunlop said he is disappointed by the decision and will consult experts on whether an appeal is possible to the Supreme Court of Canada.
 
"I blame it on the Department of Justice and the Nova Scotia government. ... They took advantage of the fact so much time had passed that documents were destroyed and files weren't there," he said.
 
"From Day 1 they took the attitude, 'Mr. Barton, you're getting nothing.' "

MORE National ARTICLES

Arvind Kejriwall's Cough, Blood Sugar Under Control

Arvind Kejriwall's Cough, Blood Sugar Under Control
Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal has recovered from chronic cough and high blood sugar after nine-day naturopathy treatment at a private hospital here, a senior doctor said on Saturday.

Arvind Kejriwall's Cough, Blood Sugar Under Control

Loved Ones, Troops Say Goodbye To 'Drew,' A Canadian Soldier Killed In Iraq

Loved Ones, Troops Say Goodbye To 'Drew,' A Canadian Soldier Killed In Iraq
OTTAWA — A huge Canadian flag snapped in the wind Saturday outside an Ottawa cathedral where loved ones and dozens of uniformed soldiers said their final goodbyes to the soldier who was killed a week ago in Iraq.

Loved Ones, Troops Say Goodbye To 'Drew,' A Canadian Soldier Killed In Iraq

B.C. Constable And Colleagues Who Investigated Him Broke Rules: Adjudicator

B.C. Constable And Colleagues Who Investigated Him Broke Rules: Adjudicator
VICTORIA — A police complaint adjudicator has ruled against a Vancouver police officer who was accused of corrupt practice and improper disclosure of information.

B.C. Constable And Colleagues Who Investigated Him Broke Rules: Adjudicator

Police Identify Surrey Truck Driver As Suspect In Homeless Pedestrian's Hit-And-Run Death

Police Identify Surrey Truck Driver As Suspect In Homeless Pedestrian's Hit-And-Run Death
SURREY, B.C. — RCMP have identified a truck driver believed to be responsible for the hit-and-run death of a pedestrian in Surrey, B.C.

Police Identify Surrey Truck Driver As Suspect In Homeless Pedestrian's Hit-And-Run Death

Witness To Deadly B.C. Boat Crash Recalls Tears From Man On Trial

Witness To Deadly B.C. Boat Crash Recalls Tears From Man On Trial
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man whose speedboat crashed on a B.C. lake cradled the head of a dying houseboat operator and cried as he waited for help to arrive, a witness has testified.

Witness To Deadly B.C. Boat Crash Recalls Tears From Man On Trial

Cpl. Cirillo's Death Spurred Benefit Changes For Injured Reservists: Kenney

The killing of a soldier as he stood guard at the National War Memorial spurred Ottawa to fill a gap in the benefit program for reservists who are injured during military service, putting the part-timers on equal financial terms with regular members of the Canadian Forces, the defence minister said Friday.

Cpl. Cirillo's Death Spurred Benefit Changes For Injured Reservists: Kenney