'An absolute blessing': Milgaard's Law receives royal assent, giving hope to the wrongfully convicted
For Susan Milgaard, a new Canadian law brings special meaning.
“Mom would be extremely happy, and David would be as well,” said Milgaard, the sister of David Milgaard.
Bill C-40, the Miscarriage of Justice Review Commission Act, better known as David and Joyce Milgaard’s Law, received royal assent Tuesday.
It creates a new, independent commission to review potential wrongful convictions, like when David Milgaard was arrested and charged with murder in Saskatoon in 1969.
The federal government says it’s a step toward making Canada’s justice system more fair and equitable, and more supportive of potentially wrongfully convicted people, communities, and victims of crime.
“The statistics from my perspective are actually quite startling,” said Arif Virani, Minister of Justice & Attorney General of Canada. “The statistics point to a situation where we know that the justice system is strong. I agree with James on that, but we know that the justice system makes mistakes.”
Milgaard spent 23 years in prison before he was eventually released and exonerated. He and his mother spent the rest of their lives advocating for change to the review process. He died in 2022.
“To see this is an absolute blessing for both of them,” said Susan Milgaard. “And I feel that from them in my heart, and they’re with me here today.”
The case is known among lawyers as one of the most notorious Canadian wrongful conviction cases, and it’s examined in law schools across the country.
“That is a particular situation where, things didn’t just go wrong through the review process,” said Meagan Ward, partner with Ward Mischuk Thomson LLP. “The issues that brought Mr. Milgaard to the point of being wrongfully convicted started at the very start. It started with the investigation, it started with the court process, it started with all of those things. And ultimately, I think we’ve always been taught as lawyers to be mindful of how important our role is.”
While she says no one sets out to wrongfully convict someone, issues can compound through the rest of the process. Ward sees this as a positive step, but she’d like to see more improvements to the review process for wrongful convictions.
“There’s room for improvement throughout the entire process to try to safeguard our system from finding itself where it has wrongfully convicted someone.”
She adds the new law will remove any appearance of bias that came from the previous system, where the justice minister would effectively investigate its own ministry.
“Even if there is no actual bias through the old ministerial process, I think there potentially is sometimes an appearance of bias,” she said. “Where having somebody in the government review decisions by people who are also technically part of the government.”
The federal government says it will work quickly to launch the Miscarriage of Justice Review Commission, so it can start reviewing cases as soon as possible.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Freezing rain, snow, extreme cold: Weather warnings issued from Edmonton to St. John's
Environment Canada has issued a series of winter weather alerts from Edmonton to St. John's as freezing rain, snow squalls and extreme cold blanket parts of the country.
A new book about Chrystia Freeland just came out. Here's what we learned
A new book about Chrystia Freeland has just come out, after the publishing company sped up its release date by a few months. CTV News sifted through the book and pulled out some notable anecdotes, as well as insights about Freeland's relationship with the prime minister.
LIVE @ 10:30 a.m. ET Trudeau shuffling fresh faces into cabinet today to fill vacancies
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is shuffling his cabinet this morning. He is expected to make several changes to his ministerial roster in a bid to inject some stability at a tumultuous time for the embattled Liberal government.
'Lowlifes': B.C. family outraged over theft of outdoor Christmas decorations
Security footage from a home in Vancouver’s Kerrisdale neighbourhood clearly shows a man grabbing Christmas decorations from the front lawn, and then casually walking away with them.
A teenager kills a 7-year-old student and injures 4 others in a school knife attack in Croatia
A knife-wielding teenager walked into a school in Croatia’s capital Zagreb on Friday, killing a 7-year-old student and injuring three more children and a teacher, authorities said.
The Royal Family unveils new Christmas cards with heartwarming family photos
The Royal Family is spreading holiday cheer with newly released Christmas cards.
'You can't blame me!': Macron under fire for Mayotte cyclone response
French President Emmanuel Macron faced widespread frustration and anger from residents of Mayotte during his visit to the Indian Ocean archipelago, which is still reeling from the damage of the strongest cyclone to hit the region in nearly a century.
It's not the government's job to respond to everything Donald Trump posts, Dominic LeBlanc says
Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc says it's not the Liberal government's job to respond to everything U.S. president-elect Donald Trump posts online.
Giant sloths and mastodons coexisted with humans for millennia in Americas, new discoveries suggest
For a long time, scientists believed the first humans to arrive in the Americas soon killed off these giant ground sloths through hunting, along with many other massive animals like mastodons, sabre-toothed cats and dire wolves that once roamed North and South America.