Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ontario Man Convicted Of Killing His Wife In 1970 Acquitted After 45 Years

The Canadian Press, 22 Jun, 2015 11:20 AM
    TORONTO — An Ontario man convicted of killing his wife in 1970 has won his 45-year battle to clear his name.
     
    The province's top court today acquitted 75-year-old John Salmon of manslaughter in the death of his wife Maxine Ditchfield.
     
    The prosecution also apologized to Salmon for a miscarriage of justice that sent him to prison for four years.
     
    Salmon's trial in the 1970s heard that Ditchfield had died from a severe beating.
     
    He maintained her injuries came from a series of falls at their home in Woodstock, Ont.
     
    The Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted hired three pathologists to re-examine the evidence and concluded that Ditchfield had indeed fallen multiple times after suffering a stroke.
     
    The new evidence allowed Salmon to have his case re-opened after all these years.
     
    "Charged with killing the woman I loved and spending four years in prison for it was an awful experience," Salmon said in a statement before the hearing.
     
    "The years since have been difficult, too. I have always carried the shame of a crime I did not commit."
     
    Salmon, who called Monday a "very important day," said he has spent his life with the feeling that people shun him.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Mountie On Trial For Alleged Assault Faces New Charge After Cruiser Crash

    B.C. Mountie On Trial For Alleged Assault Faces New Charge After Cruiser Crash
    Court has heard Const. Grant Jacobson, 32, was not on an urgent call when he was driving his cruiser to the West Kelowna detachment in October 2013.

    B.C. Mountie On Trial For Alleged Assault Faces New Charge After Cruiser Crash

    Victoria Student Awarded $180,000 To Study Whether Social Media Deletes Empathy In Youth

    Victoria Student Awarded $180,000 To Study Whether Social Media Deletes Empathy In Youth
    VICTORIA — A University of Victoria doctoral student is investigating how Twitter and Instagram are changing how much teenagers care.

    Victoria Student Awarded $180,000 To Study Whether Social Media Deletes Empathy In Youth

    Public Set To Air Views On Medical Marijuana Dispensaries In Vancouver

    Public Set To Air Views On Medical Marijuana Dispensaries In Vancouver
    Vancouver could become the first city in Canada to regulate medical marijuana dispensaries after the smoke clears on a public debate that starts tonight.

    Public Set To Air Views On Medical Marijuana Dispensaries In Vancouver

    Calgary Gas Station Worker Maryam Rashidi Dies After Trying To Stop Driver In Gas And Dash

    Calgary Gas Station Worker Maryam Rashidi Dies After Trying To Stop Driver In Gas And Dash
    CALGARY — A Calgary gas station worker has died of injuries she received when she tried to stop two people in a stolen pickup truck from driving away without paying.

    Calgary Gas Station Worker Maryam Rashidi Dies After Trying To Stop Driver In Gas And Dash

    Two Canadians Detained In Malaysia For Posing Naked At The Country's Highest Peak

    Two Canadians Detained In Malaysia For Posing Naked At The Country's Highest Peak
    Malaysian police said Wednesday that they have detained four Westerners — including two Canadians — suspected of posing naked at the country's highest peak last month,

    Two Canadians Detained In Malaysia For Posing Naked At The Country's Highest Peak

    RCMP Lays Terror Charge In Absentia Against Ontario Man Ahmad Waseem

    RCMP Lays Terror Charge In Absentia Against Ontario Man Ahmad Waseem
    WINDSOR, Ont. — The RCMP has laid terrorism charges in absentia against a 27-year-old man from Windsor, Ont.

    RCMP Lays Terror Charge In Absentia Against Ontario Man Ahmad Waseem