Thursday, April 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lawyer wants new evidence mulled in Tallio appeal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Nov, 2020 09:23 PM
  • Lawyer wants new evidence mulled in Tallio appeal

A lawyer for a man who spent 37 years in prison for the murder of a toddler says the British Columbia Appeal Court should first consider new evidence in the case he believes involved a miscarriage of justice.

Thomas Arbogast says Phillip Tallio pleaded guilty in 1983 based on "ineffective assistance" from his lawyer at the time.

Tallio was 17 when he pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of his 22-month-old cousin Delavina Mack, who court has heard had been sexually assaulted in a home in the northern community of Bella Coola.

Tallio, now 54, told the court last month that he wasn't aware of the implications of the plea agreement his trial lawyer had him sign when he was a teenager.

Rachel Barsky, another of Tallio's lawyers, says testimony last month from experts suggests DNA tests by a lab in Texas on the girl's tissue samples taken during an autopsy do not positively point to Tallio as the perpetrator.

Barsky says later testing done at the B.C. Institute of Technology was botched by a lab through contamination.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Police approves charges

Vancouver Police approves charges
Damien Franklin Leung, 34, was taken to hospital where he died from his injuries. John Huang, 30, has been charged with second degree murder.

Vancouver Police approves charges

Arctic heavy fuel ban weak: environmentalists

Arctic heavy fuel ban weak: environmentalists
They say Canada should refuse to take advantage of loopholes the International Maritime Organization has agreed to make part of the ban on heavy fuel oils.

Arctic heavy fuel ban weak: environmentalists

Trudeau joins APEC leaders in stressing free trade

Trudeau joins APEC leaders in stressing free trade
The 21 APEC leaders stressed "co-ordinated action" on the pandemic at the meeting, hosted by Malaysia but held online because of the virus.

Trudeau joins APEC leaders in stressing free trade

New data shows pandemic's impact on immigration

New data shows pandemic's impact on immigration
The figures show that approvals for immigration applications fell by about three-quarters from the months before the country shut down to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus and after.

New data shows pandemic's impact on immigration

Trudeau warns of future toll of COVID

Trudeau warns of future toll of COVID
Trudeau addressed reporters outside his home at Rideau Cottage — the site of his daily briefings during the first wave of the pandemic last spring — on Friday following the release of grim new forecasts suggesting that Canada is on track to see COVID-19 cases climb by 60,000 per day if socialization increases.

Trudeau warns of future toll of COVID

Dog shot while attacking police in Richmond, B.C.

Dog shot while attacking police in Richmond, B.C.
Police say in a news release that officers called for help when a suspect in a break and enter began fighting with them on Thursday night.

Dog shot while attacking police in Richmond, B.C.