Close X
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Man Tried Twice In Case Of Murdered Winnipeg Teen Sues For Wrongful Conviction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2019 07:47 PM

    WINNIPEG - A man acquitted of killing a Winnipeg teenager following two trials and more than a decade behind bars is suing the Manitoba government and police for wrongful conviction and imprisonment.

     

    Mark Edward Grant alleges in the lawsuit that he was subjected to a "never-ending nightmare" in prison due to negligence by police and prosecutors in a dogged pursuit for a conviction in the killing of 13-year-old Candace Derksen.

     

    Grant also says he is still harassed by people on the street.

     

    "The police improperly developed tunnel vision because of their desire to solve the case," says the statement of claim filed Wednesday in Winnipeg's Court of Queen's Bench.

     

    Grant is seeking more than $8 million in damages and other costs.

     

    The allegations have not been tested in court.

    Candace disappeared while walking home from school in November 1984. Worry about the missing girl gripped the city and a massive search effort followed

     

    Her frozen body was found six weeks later in an industrial shed — the cause of death was hypothermia. Her hands and feet had been bound with twine.

     

    The case sat unsolved for more than 20 years until, the lawsuit says, two unreliable witnesses came forward pointing to Grant.

     

    He was arrested in 2007 after a DNA test that the Crown argued linked him to the twine found on the girl. He was convicted of second-degree murder in 2011 and sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 25 years.

     

    The lawsuit alleges that while behind bars Grant was harassed by other inmates, didn't receive help from guards and was stabbed four times.

     

    In 2013, the Supreme Court of Canada overturned that conviction ruling the trial judge erred when it didn't allow Grant's defence to submit evidence about another possible killer.

     

    The year following Candace's disappearance, a 12-year-old girl was found tied up in another part of Winnipeg. Grant was in custody on a different matter at the time.

     

    A new trial in 2017 heard that DNA samples used to link Grant to the murder had deteriorated significantly before they were tested. The judge agreed the DNA evidence was flawed and Grant was found not guilty.

     

    Manitoba has a high rate of wrongful convictions, which include the cases of Kyle Unger, Thomas Sophonow and James Driskell. Grant's lawsuit says it demonstrates a systemic problem "suggesting that Crown attorneys are generally more interested in winning than furthering the ends of justice."

     

    "The prosecuting defendants clearly pursued the prosecution of Mark Grant despite significant evidence demonstrating innocence."

     

    The lawsuit adds that Grant always maintained his innocence and has now lost trust in the justice system and society in general. He has also experienced an "utter loss of confidence in himself."

     

    It alleges he's been publicly spat on, assaulted by random strangers and was once told by a person on the street that he should have been killed in jail.

     

    "Mark Grant continues to this day to be a pariah," says the suit.

     

    Candace's parents have said they continue to believe Grant killed their daughter but they did not want the Crown to appeal after the acquittal.

     

    Wilma Derksen wrote on her website that when she learned of the lawsuit her mind went back to her daughter's disappearance. She said if she had millions of dollars, she would make the whole situation go away just so the family could have peace.

     

    Derksen wrote she felt sorry that the lawsuit was bringing everything up again.

     

    "So even though I am sorry, even though I am tired of it, and even though I regret it all, we have developed that 'forgiveness muscle,' which we will employ again and again."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Wins Big At Western Canadian Music Awards, Vancouver’s Dan Mangan Wins Four Awards

    Mangan is among the 10 B.C. artists honoured at the annual event that celebrates the best of artistic and music-industry talent in western Canada. Mangan also received two awards at the WCMA Industry Awards for Recording of the Year and Impact in Live Music.

    B.C. Wins Big At Western Canadian Music Awards, Vancouver’s Dan Mangan Wins Four Awards

    Delta’s Tsawwassen House Fires Deemed Suspicious, Witnesses Sought

    Delta’s Tsawwassen House Fires Deemed Suspicious, Witnesses Sought
    Delta Police are confirming that a fire at abandoned residences on October 7, 2019 on 8A Ave in Tsawwassen is considered suspicious.  

    Delta’s Tsawwassen House Fires Deemed Suspicious, Witnesses Sought

    Delta Police Seek Man Photographed Near Tattoo Shop Fire

    Delta Police are searching for a person of interest in relation to the fire at the Brass Eagle Tattoo Shop.

    Delta Police Seek Man Photographed Near Tattoo Shop Fire

    Surrey Man Allan McCrea Hasn't Been Seen In More Than 2 Weeks

    Surrey RCMP is renewing the appeal for information regarding 66-year-old, Allan McCrea, who was last seen on September 23, 2019.

    Surrey Man Allan McCrea Hasn't Been Seen In More Than 2 Weeks

    Missing Person To Locate: Ryan Harris

     Ryan was last seen in the 8000-block of 10th avenue at around 1 p.m. on Saturday October 5th.

    Missing Person To Locate: Ryan Harris

    Surrey: Mountie Cut-Outs Go Flat-Out To Target Dangerous Driving

    Surrey RCMP is deploying their newest recruits city-wide in an effort to target dangerous driving… and they’re reminding motorists to ‘cut-out’ their unsafe driving habits!

    Surrey: Mountie Cut-Outs Go Flat-Out To Target Dangerous Driving