N.B. wrongful convictions: A story of undisclosed evidence, recanting witnesses
The story behind two New Brunswick men’s wrongful convictions for murder contains classic elements of how things can go terribly wrong in Canada’s justice system, say the lawyers who fought to prove their innocence.
A written submission presented to the court by Innocence Canada lawyers on Thursday argues that “police tunnel vision, the non-disclosure of important evidence, recantations by the two key Crown witnesses,” as well as a disregard for the men’s strong alibis, were key factors in Robert Mailman and Walter Gillespie’s 1984 murder convictions.
Mailman, 76, spent 18 years in prison, while Gillespie, 80, served 21 years. On Thursday, the province’s chief justice found them innocent, following the federal justice minister’s Dec. 22 decision to overturn the 1984 convictions for second-degree murder.
The court document goes back to Nov. 30, 1983, when George Leeman’s partially burnt body was found by a jogger in a wooded area in the Fisher Lakes area in Saint John, N.B. There were 20 blunt force wounds to his head and face, and a hospital pathologist concluded he had been dead for at least 24 hours.