Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

David Milgaard Says Presumption Of Innocence For Accused Has Vanished

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2015 11:20 AM
    SASKATOON — A man who spent 23 years in prison for a murder he didn't commit says he is still troubled to see how the public reacts to news stories about crime.
     
    David Milgaard says the first inclination of most people is to assume a person who has been accused of a crime is guilty.
     
    He says the presumption of innocence that is supposed to be assured by the legal system "just completely disappears."
     
    David Milgaard was in Saskatoon on Wednesday to demand action on the way Canadian courts review convictions.
     
    The Association for the Wrongfully Convicted has been calling for an independent federal commission to review possible miscarriages of justice, which is a recommendation that has been made in five different provincial inquiries.
     
    Milgaard was wrongfully convicted in Saskatoon in 1970 for the rape and murder of nurse's aide Gail Miller, a crime that had actually been committed by serial rapist Larry Fisher.
     
    He was joined Wednesday by Tammy Marquardt, who was wrongfully convicted in 1993 of murdering her infant son, Kenneth.
     
    Her conviction came as a result of evidence from Charles Smith, a forensic pathologist who was later found to have botched work on several autopsies, including Kenneth's. Marquardt spent 14 years in prison before finally being released.
     
    Both were in Saskatoon to deliver a talk to University of Saskatchewan law students, in the hopes that sharing their experiences would help future lawyers to avoid repeats of their stories.
     
    Milgaard said he comes back to Saskatoon to speak out of a sense of responsibility for other wrongfully convicted people still languishing in prison.
     
    "We should always remember that those people are there and they exist on hope," he said. "And if somebody doesn't have something to say about it, who's going to say something about it?"
     
    Marquardt said she has a simple message for people about her experience.
     
    "Never give up hope. Always fight for the truth. Never back down from the truth no matter what other people say. No matter how hard people are trying to push you down or judge you."
     
    Milgaard and Marquardt are backing the call for an independent board to take conviction reviews out of the hands of the courts.
     
    "I think it's important for everybody, not just lawyers, but for the public itself to be aware that wrongful convictions are taking place and that these people are sitting right now, behind bars and they're trying to get out," said Milgaard.
     
    "The policies that are keeping them there need to be changed. The wrongful conviction review process is failing all of us miserably."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Acclaimed Sikh Scholar Dr Raghbir Singh Bains Honoured With 'The Sikh Award In Education'

    Acclaimed Sikh Scholar Dr Raghbir Singh Bains Honoured With 'The Sikh Award In Education'
    Virtually a living legend, Dr Raghbir Singh Bains is the first of its kind writer and creator of the ‘Encylopaedia of Sikhism’ on Multimedia technology which was released by the Prime Minister of Canada in the Canadian Parliament on Dec 11, 1996. 

    Acclaimed Sikh Scholar Dr Raghbir Singh Bains Honoured With 'The Sikh Award In Education'

    Damien Taylor Recalls Heavy Drug Use Before Pregnant Girlfriend CJ Fowler Found Dead

    Damien Taylor, now 24, told B.C. Supreme Court that an associate brought him and 16-year-old CJ Fowler to Kamloops from Terrace to sell drugs.

    Damien Taylor Recalls Heavy Drug Use Before Pregnant Girlfriend CJ Fowler Found Dead

    12 Countries, Including Canada, Reach Tentative Trans-Pacific Trade Deal

    12 Countries, Including Canada, Reach Tentative Trans-Pacific Trade Deal
    Today is a historic day; it is a great day for Canada, it is a great day for Canadians," Prime Minister Stephen Harper beamed during a news conference in Ottawa.

    12 Countries, Including Canada, Reach Tentative Trans-Pacific Trade Deal

    Canadian Taxi Drivers Raise $15,000 Dollars For Spiritual Centre Kelowna General Hospital

    Canadian Taxi Drivers Raise $15,000 Dollars For Spiritual Centre Kelowna General Hospital
    The funds were handed over to the hospital at an event organised at the Okanagan Sikh Temple in Rutland on Sunday

    Canadian Taxi Drivers Raise $15,000 Dollars For Spiritual Centre Kelowna General Hospital

    Accused Killer Son Of Former Top B.C. Mountie Suing RCMP Over Sexual Harassment

    Accused Killer Son Of Former Top B.C. Mountie Suing RCMP Over Sexual Harassment
     One of the three men charged in the 2014 slaying of a Vancouver teen has been identified as the son of a high-profile, former top Mountie who is suing the RCMP over allegations of sexual harassment.

    Accused Killer Son Of Former Top B.C. Mountie Suing RCMP Over Sexual Harassment

    Citizenship And Immigration Canada Probes Terror Revocation Disclosure

    Citizenship And Immigration Canada Probes Terror Revocation Disclosure
    Federal officials are investigating an apparent privacy breach involving an imprisoned terrorist who was stripped of his citizenship.

    Citizenship And Immigration Canada Probes Terror Revocation Disclosure