Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Nova Scotia ruling that cleared RCMP in wrongful rape conviction goes to appeal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jan, 2015 10:34 AM

    HALIFAX — The lawyer for a man who was wrongfully convicted of statutory rape 45 years ago says a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge should have found his client's confession was improperly obtained.

    The Supreme Court last year cleared the RCMP of wrongdoing and said there was nothing wrong with the way police investigated the case against Gerald Barton, which he is appealing in court today.

    Barton had launched a lawsuit against the Mounties alleging negligent investigation.

    In a decision last May, Judge James Chipman said Earl Hamilton, an RCMP corporal at the time, interviewed the right people and properly obtained an incriminating statement from Barton, then 19.

    Dale Dunlop is arguing before five judges of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal that Chipman didn't have enough evidence to find the confession was properly obtained and his client should have been awarded compensation.

    He also says the Charter of Rights and Freedoms may have been violated when the province refused to negotiate compensation with Barton over the past four years.

    Chipman's decision concluded that Barton's rights had not been breached even though there had been a miscarriage of justice and no compensation from the province or police.

    He also said Barton did not provide any evidence in his lawsuit that the defendants caused him serious psychological harm beyond the "ordinary stress" that comes with litigation.

    Barton spent a few hours in jail and was sentenced to a year of probation after he was convicted of statutory rape in 1970 — a conviction that was thrown out in 2011.

    The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal quashed the conviction after the complainant recanted her story and blamed her brother for getting her pregnant.

    DNA testing showed her brother was 1.9 million times more likely to be the father of the boy than anyone else. He was later charged with indecent assault, but the charge was dismissed in 2009.

    His name and that of his siblings and immediate family are protected by a publication ban.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Patch Or Pill? Way Smokers Metabolize Nicotine Could Predict Best Way To Quit

    Patch Or Pill? Way Smokers Metabolize Nicotine Could Predict Best Way To Quit
    TORONTO — It seems not all smokers are created equal when it comes to how their bodies handle nicotine, and that could have big implications for anyone trying to kick the tobacco habit for good, researchers say.

    Patch Or Pill? Way Smokers Metabolize Nicotine Could Predict Best Way To Quit

    Canadian Resident Released After More Than A Year In Egyptian Custody

    Canadian Resident Released After More Than A Year In Egyptian Custody
    CAIRO — An ailing Canadian resident imprisoned in Cairo for more than a year has been released from custody in an Egyptian hospital.

    Canadian Resident Released After More Than A Year In Egyptian Custody

    Falling Gas Prices And Weaker Dollar Brighten Canada's Tourism Prospects

    Falling Gas Prices And Weaker Dollar Brighten Canada's Tourism Prospects
    Falling gas prices and a weakening loonie are raising hopes within Canada's tourism industry that 2015 will be a banner year.

    Falling Gas Prices And Weaker Dollar Brighten Canada's Tourism Prospects

    Rallies Being Held Across Canada To Support French Terrorism Victims

    Rallies Being Held Across Canada To Support French Terrorism Victims
    MONTREAL — Thousands of people marched in downtown Montreal on Sunday to honour those who were killed and wounded in the recent terrorist attacks in Paris.

    Rallies Being Held Across Canada To Support French Terrorism Victims

    Ortio Makes 36 Saves For First NHL Shutout As Calgary Flames Down Vancouver Canucks

    Ortio Makes 36 Saves For First NHL Shutout As Calgary Flames Down Vancouver Canucks
    VANCOUVER — Joni Ortio had to overcome a lot more than the Vancouver Canucks to record the first shutout of his NHL career.

    Ortio Makes 36 Saves For First NHL Shutout As Calgary Flames Down Vancouver Canucks

    Will Low Oil Prices Force Ottawa To Open Contingency Reserve To Balance Books?

    Will Low Oil Prices Force Ottawa To Open Contingency Reserve To Balance Books?
    OTTAWA — Experts weighing the threat of low oil prices to the federal government's bottom line are asking themselves a follow-up question: what's to become of Ottawa's contingency reserve?

    Will Low Oil Prices Force Ottawa To Open Contingency Reserve To Balance Books?