Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Wrongfully Convicted Man's Decision To Represent Himself Was 'Unwise': Crown

The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2015 01:52 PM
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer for the British Columbia government says the case of a man who was wrongfully imprisoned for nearly 30 years may have ended differently had the accused not represented himself in court.
     
    John Hunter says that Ivan Henry's decision to refuse legal counsel when he was on trial for 10 charges of sexual assault was "fateful" and "unwise," and should be a cautionary tale for those accused of crimes.
     
    Henry spent 27 years behind bars before he was acquitted in 2010, and is now seeking damages for malicious prosecution and abuse of process over allegations that Crown lawyers didn't disclose all the evidence in his case.
     
    Hunter told the B.C. Supreme Court in his opening statement that Henry's lawyers must prove that having the undisclosed evidence would have made a difference between being convicted or acquitted.
     
    Hunter argues that having the documents may not have helped Henry because he did not understand the court process or how to use the information to bolster his case.
     
    While the provincial and federal governments continue to dispute the compensation claim, the City of Vancouver settled with Henry last week for an undisclosed amount and withdrew allegations that the man was guilty despite the acquittal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Election Campaign Set To Break Records For Cost, Length, Nastiness

    Election Campaign Set To Break Records For Cost, Length, Nastiness
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper is set to launch the country Sunday into a federal election campaign that promises to rewrite Canadian history books. 

    Election Campaign Set To Break Records For Cost, Length, Nastiness

    No winning ticket for $41-million jackpot in Friday's Lotto Max draw

    TORONTO — No winning ticket was sold for the $41-million jackpot in Friday night's Lotto Max draw.

    No winning ticket for $41-million jackpot in Friday's Lotto Max draw

    Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says

    Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says
    TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP), the company planning to build the controversial cross-Canada oil pipeline, had been estimating it would cost $12 billion.

    Energy East Pipeline Will Cost More Than $12 Billion, TransCanada Says

    One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.

    One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.
    One man was killed in a collision between a tour bus carrying dozens of people and a car on a notorious stretch of Highway 1 south of Chase, in B.C.'s Interior, say police and firefighters.

    One Person Is Dead, Dozens Injured After Bus Crash On Highway 1 In B.C.

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental
    Forty-five-year-old Robert Luggi and 42-year-old Carl Charlie were working at Babine Forest Products in the community 225 kilometres west of Prince George, when the explosion occurred

    Coroner's Jury Rules Deaths Of Two Mill Workers In Burns Lake, B.C., Accidental

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer
    City officials have dumped chicken manure on campsites, said David Wotherspoon, a lawyer with Pivot Legal Society.

    Stop Abbotsford From Denying Homeless Rights: Lawyer