Monday, 30 November 2020

Selfless Warrior Win Wahrer/Guy Paul Morin: "Win is one of a kind. There are others who have given their life for a cause - but when I heard how it all came about for her - taking on the Canadian criminal justice system without a law degree and then becoming a founding member of the only organization in Canada to help free those wrongly convicted, her story is nothing short of a Hollywood thriller. Win lives her life like everyone matters and would do just about anything to help someone who has suffered an injustice. She is their relentless hero, their warrior." Filmmaker Lori Kuffner.


 THE CRIME: Every parent's nightmare. A nine-year-old daughter disappears sometime after being dropped off at home by the school bus. The parents come home and  find her school bag on the counter - but no sign of Christine. Something is terribly wrong.  The parents call the police,  a search is launched, but after several days there is no sign of her at all. No sign for months, until her body  is found over 50 kilometres from her home. Stabbed to death, semen  on her underwear. A family mourns, a community mourns -  the small town of Queensville, Ontario,  and cries out for an arrest, and Paul Morin soon becomes one of the most notorious murder suspects in Ontario's history. (Chronology below):
THE SUSPECT:  (Guy  Paul Morin  (born in 1961) spent 10 years of his life – and 18 months in prison – living with the stigma of a horrifying crime: the sexual assault and murder of a nine-year-old girl. (In 1984))  As Innocence Canada tells us,  Paul hardly fit the profile of the archetypical murderer/rapist. At the time of Christine’s disappearance, he was  working as a finishing sander with a furniture manufacturing firm, he  also played the saxophone and clarinet, was a bee-keeper, and helped his father with renovations on the family home. Paul and his parents would later testify that on the day Christine vanished, Paul had brought the groceries in, taken a nap and then worked on the renovations until after dinner. However,  the police, having been  told by Christine's mother that their neighbor was a “weird-type guy” who played the clarinet,  zeroed in on him as a suspect. Although all signs pointed to innocence, the police stuck to their 'weird-type guy' theory, and arrested him on April 22, 1985. The good news is that on February 7, 1986,  Paul was acquitted, the bad news - terribly bad news for a young man charged with  rape and first-degree murder of a 9-year-old girl - is that in Canada,  prosecutors can appeal jury verdicts of acquittal on the basis of an alleged error in law by the trial judge.  And so they did. The Ontario Court of Appeal overturned the acquittal ordering a new trial;  The Supreme Court of Canada upheld the Court of Appeal decision; The new trial was held, and, unlike the first trial,  on July 30, 1992,  Paul Morin was convicted of First-Degree murder punishable by life imprisonment. (That was a horrible prospect for  Paul, an  innocent man  who was later cleared by DNA evidence, and earlier this year learned on October 15, 2020, like the rest of us, that an ongoing investigation by The Toronto Police Service had established, through ancestral DNA evidence,  that Christine Jessop's  real killer was a man  named Calvin Hoover, who had subsequently killed himself.)
SELFLESS WARRIOR:  (PART ONE): Many people, as is noted below,  played a role  in freeing and exonerating  Paul Morin.  However, one stands out in my books.  She is Win Wahrer, who, at the time that   Paul was  going through his hellish experience was a total stranger to him, who, in fact, lived in the town of Pickering about 70 kilometres away. Like most of the 'Selfless Warriors' in this series, Win was also a stranger to the criminal justice system. She lived a busy life, centered around her children and her church, and it would likely have stayed that way if, she hadn't one day read an article about Paul  Morin  in a copy of the Toronto Star,  which she had received as a promotion. In a recent interview, Win explained that when she looked at the picture accompanying the article,  somewhere inside her a chord had been struck - unlike anything she had ever experienced before  - and a voice inside her said, "Oh my God. They've got the wrong guy." (The article had appeared between Paul's acquittal at his first trial and the start of the second trial sought  by the prosecutors and sanctioned by the courts.) Win is convinced that some very special forces were at work. She was uneducated in the law, had no  personal experience whatsoever in the criminal justice system, and doubts whether she would have had such a visceral reaction to the photograph unless something else was going on. The experience prompted her to read everything she could get her hands on about the Morin case,  and communicated her belief in his innocence and her concern over Paul's plight to anyone who would listen. Time marched on, Paul's trial finally began, and on July 30th, 1992, while driving on a highway, listening to the news, she was stunned on hearing the news announcer report that Guy Paul Morin had been convicted of first  degree murder,  and she had  to pull over. "I was outraged," Win  told me. "An innocent, young man had just been convicted of a rape and murder which he did not commit of raping and murdering a nine-year-old girl. I  had to do something."  There, on the spot, she  decided to write two letters: One to Guy Paul Morin's lawyer Jack Pinkofsky, to encourage him to appeal, and one to Guy Paul Morin's family offering them whatever help she could provide. Win says she write Pinkofsky because she realised that he must have been devastated by the verdict (especially following the acquittal in the first trial), and she wrote the family,  because she was concerned that because of all of the outrage that would be directed against Paul following the verdict, they would need all the support and empathy that they could get. Win says that she told the family in her letter that if Christine Jessop was pointing a finger from the grave, it would not be at their their son. A short time later, Win received a phone call from Mrs. Morin who thanked her for 'the lovely note' and connected her with Paul's sister Diane who invited Win to attend a meeting at which measures to rally support for Paul, such as a petition, were to be discussed. At the meeting, the family asked Win to assist two other people in  putting together a petition protesting the unfairness of Paul's trial, which she did. It was decided to call the Group (which never had more than six members) the Justice for Guy Paul Morin Committee.  One of the first major challenges of the committee was to engage community support for Guy Paul Morin's release pending the appeal of his conviction to The Supreme Court of Canada. Under Win's leadership, the members of the committee threw  themselves into this  task which was extremely important because it is easier to win at trial   when the jurors are aware that the accused  is not in custody. It was also important to get  Paul, who they firmly believed was innocent, out of prison, a brutal, dangerous environment in which he did not belong. So Win and her colleagues went to work, making up strategies as they moved along. For a start they began knocking on doors - including the door to my office in the Editorial Board of The Toronto Star. (Win had become official spokesperson for the group). Win came to my home one evening and sold me on the weaknesses of the prosecution case and the unfairness of the trial. She was extremely knowledgeable, extremely convincing. As a result of her visit, I did further research, and  convinced the paper to support  Paul's release on bail - not an easy task where the accused has been convicted of first degree murder in the rape and murder of a 9-year-old girl -  and I was asked to write the editorial, which ended up being filed by the defence as an exhibit on the bail hearing. Indeed, I remember reading some of the language I used in the editorial in   Justice Marvin Katzman's decision ordering Paul's release. When I asked Win recently if she had run into hostility during her door to door encounters,  she replied that what moved most people was her  passionate belief  that Paul was innocent - and their astonishment  that someone would have the courage to stand up in their community for a child killer because of their belief.   "It was a time  before the social media era when there was little discussion of wrongful discussions, so people were interested " Win adds. "The thing that really fascinated people was that no one in our group knew Guy Paul Morin, that we would come to the defence of a total stranger."
A BIG MOMENT FOR WIN: SHE IS AT  KINGSTON PENITENTIARY WHEN PAUL IS FREED ON BAIL:
Win Wahrer provided enormous personal support and encouragement to  Paul's family and to Paul himself, whom she first saw 'free'  at Kingston Penitentiary, when she attended with the \ late, legendary  Rubin (Hurricane) Carter,   Paul's family,   sureties and the lawyers,  for the signing of papers and Guy Paul's release on bail. As Win described it to me in our recent interview: "I will always remember what Paul had done - trading stuff with other inmates so that he could buy  each of us a chocolate bar. It was his way to say thank you. And that was the first time I was able to give him a hug.  Then there was a gathering at his sister's house to welcome him home."  Win Wahrer added, in an immortal quote, "I don't know if I told you, but Paul wanted to thank me so he got a car out of the wreckers and rebuilt it and gave it to me as a gift."
SELFLESS WARRIOR (PART TWO):
What motivated Win Wahrer to step out of her ordinary busy family life to fight for a young man she did not previously know who had been accused of raping and killing a 9-year-old girl? In our recent interview, Win Wahrer attributes her empathy towards 'underdogs' to her experiences growing up in foster homes, saying,"I always related to people who society sort of looked down upon...I have an insatiable appetite to do the right thing." She remains puzzled by the manner in which she was drawn to the defence of Guy Paul Morin - especially since, at the time, she was shy, introverted, not an 'in your face kind of person,' and "there was no reason on the face of this planet that would lead me to something like this," except for one. Win Wahrer had a strong 'faith base' as a Christian, and therefore believed that, as someone who believed in God she had to do her best to do God's work on earth. One other reason perhaps. When she was 12-years old she read a book by Canadian author Isabel LeBordais exposing the wrongful conviction of a youth named Steven Truscott, who had been wrongfully convicted of the murder of a schoolmate named Lynn Harper and, for a while, before his exoneration decades later had been placed on death row. This tells me that Win Wahrer was motivated by a sense of justice. What other 12-year-old would read a book like this? For the above reasons alone, Win Wahrer is a stellar 'Selfless Warrior.' However there is yet another reason. After Paul was finally exonerated on January 23, 1995, Win became a founding member of AIDWYC - The Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted (now known as Innocence Canada) - where she has played an important role in the exoneration of more than 20 people, and, irony of ironies, one of those people was Steven Truscott.
COMMENTARY:  Win Wahrer has a very special place in my life as a friend, and as a 'Selfless Warrior.' She would be the first to protest that many other people played important roles in the exoneration of Guy Paul Morin - great lawyers such as Jack Pinkofsky (Counsel on the second trial), James Lockyer (Appeal lawyer) and their teams, family, friends, other members of the public.  But I won't let Win off the hook so easily - as the role she played as an utter stranger to Guy Paul who couldn't stand by in the face of a glaring miscarriage of justice is so very special - and, as the accolades she has won over the years are so well deserved. For example, in her introduction of Win as a guest speaker at the Robson Hall Law School, at The University of Manitoba, her introducer concluded: "It is abundantly clear that Win Wahrer’s work with wrongful convictions has saved the lives of many. She brings hope to people during the darkest times of their lives and continues to provide them and their families support after their exonerations. Wahrer has had a storied career that started with her belief in another person’s innocence, coupled with her drive to stand up for and act on her belief." I will leave the last word, well, almost the last word, to filmmaker Lori Kuffner, also a friend and admirer of Win, "Win is one of a kind, She writes. There are others who have given their life for a cause -but when I heard how it all came about for her - taking on the Canadian criminal justice system without a law degree and then becoming a founding member of the only organization in Canada  to help free those wrongly convicted,  her story is nothing short of a Hollywood thriller.   Win lives her life like everyone matters and would do just about anything to help someone who has suffered an injustice.  She is their relentless hero, their warrior.  Anyone who knows her is glad she has answered this call. Wouldn't life be a better place, if we had more Wins in this world."
I couldn't agree more.

Harold Levy:  Publisher of The Selfless Warrior Blog.

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INNOCENCE CANADA ENTRY: (GUY PAUL MORIN): (Author Sarah  Harland-Hogan);

On October 3, 1984, nine-year-old Christine Jessop disappeared sometime after being dropped off at home by the school bus. When her parents came home, they found her school bag on the counter, but there was no sign of Christine. By early evening, her parents realized that something was terribly wrong and her mother called the police. Although the search for Christine lasted several days, there was no sign of her at all.

Christine’s body was not found until December 31, 1984, over 50 kilometers from her home. Christine had been stabbed to death. Investigators discovered semen stains on her underwear. Christine’s mom described her as “a happy, sensitive, lively, caring” fourth grader who “loved school and … sports, particularly baseball.” On January 7, 1985, Christine was buried in the cemetery behind her family home where she used to play. Her shocking, untimely death is all the more tragic in that her killer has not yet been brought to justice.

At the time of Christine’s disappearance, Guy Paul Morin was working as a finishing sander with a furniture manufacturing firm. He also played the saxophone and clarinet, was a bee-keeper, and helped his father with renovations on the family home. Guy and his parents would later testify that on the day Christine vanished, Guy had brought the groceries in, taken a nap and then worked on the renovations until after dinner.

The police first became interested in Guy on February 14, 1985, when Christine’s mother mentioned that their neighbor was a “weird-type guy” who played the clarinet. On February 19, police set up surveillance of the Morin home. On February 22, Guy was interviewed by two police officers. During this interview, Guy did not say anything that objectively could have been construed as a confession nor did he give any indication that he was responsible for Christine’s death. Nonetheless, the officers suspected he was responsible for her murder. The police thought it strange that Guy knew that Christine’s remains had been found across the Ravenshoe Road despite the fact it was public knowledge at the time. They also did not like the sound of a comment he made to the effect that “All little girls are sweet and beautiful, but grow up to be corrupt.” In addition, Guy made a snarky remark about his innocence, perhaps because he was irritated at being treated as a suspect.

After this interview, the investigators obtained Guy’s time card from work, which suggested that it would have been difficult or impossible for Guy to return from his job and abduct Christine before her parents’ return. However, the police remained convinced that this “weird-type guy” had sexually assaulted and murdered her.

Guy was arrested on April 22, 1985. Later that evening, the police searched the Morin home and took samples of his hair, blood, and saliva, which Guy voluntarily gave. During his six-hour interrogation, Guy repeatedly stated that he was innocent, but a full decade would elapse before his exoneration.

Guy’s First Trial

On January 7, 1986, the first of Guy’s two trials began. During this four-week event, the jury heard expert evidence suggesting that a hair stuck in Christine’s necklace “matched” Guy’s hair sample, and similarly, that three hairs found in Guy’s car “matched” Christine’s. Further, the experts testified that a number of fibres located on Christine’s clothing and recorder case could have come from Guy’s home and car.

The jury also heard from two of Guy’s cellmates – Mr. May and someone identified only as “Mr. X” – that he had confessed to killing Christine while incarcerated prior to his trial. Guy, in fact, never confessed anything in prison.

The defence team maintained that it was impossible for Guy to have left work at the hour indicated on his time card and have arrived at Christine’s house with enough time to commit the crime. Guy’s lawyers also argued that the hair and fibre evidence did not really prove anything, and they called their own experts who disagreed with the Crown experts’ analysis.

On February 7, 1986, the jury reached a verdict of not guilty. Guy was acquitted and set free. However, his struggle to clear his name had only just begun.

The Crown’s Appeal and Guy’s Second Trial

On March 4, 1986, the Attorney General of Ontario launched an appeal of Guy’s acquittal. The Crown claimed that the trial judge had made a mistake in directing the jury about the meaning of “reasonable doubt” and that the acquittal should therefore be thrown out and Guy retried. The Court of Appeal agreed, and on June 5, 1987, it ordered a new trial. Guy appealed this decision to the Supreme Court of Canada, but that Court dismissed his appeal on November 17, 1988. Guy was out of options; he would have to stand trial again.

This second trial began on May 28, 1990. The new jury heard similar evidence about the supposedly incriminating hairs and fibres, and about Guy’s alleged confession to Mr. May, overheard by Mr. X. Moreover, the jury also heard a great deal of new evidence from witnesses who had not testified at the first trial, but who had now recalled a wide range of damaging information – much of it focused on aspects of Guy’s behaviour shortly after Christine’s death that, in the witnesses’ opinion, had reflected his guilty conscience. For example, the Crown called a police constable who claimed to have visited the Morin residence on the night of Christine’s disappearance. The constable testified that he saw Guy, who appeared unconcerned that the young girl from next door had gone missing. Another member of Guy’s band testified that she had been shocked at the “very uncaring” way that he had remarked on Christine’s death. The Crown also called Christine’s best friend, who testified that the two girls had had several conversations with Guy – during which he had kept such a tight grip on his hedge clippers that his knuckles turned white. Another neighbor, Paddy Hester, testified that Guy had chased her away from his car (where the incriminating hair and fiber evidence had been found). Finally, Christine’s mother testified at the second trial that after Christine’s funeral, she and several guests had heard a man’s voice screaming, “Help me, help me, Oh God, help me.” She believed that this frightened, desperate voice was Guy’s.

On July 30, 1992, Guy was found guilty of first degree murder.

Guy’s Appeal and Acquittal

Fortunately, not everyone believed that Guy had committed this heinous crime. Immediately after Guy’s wrongful conviction, a grass-roots organization sprang up to aid him in his quest for exoneration. This group was called the Justice for Guy Paul Morin Committee, and it was the seed from which Innocence Canada (formerly AIDWYC) was born. The group’s first objective was to help Guy to appeal his conviction and in the meantime, to apply for his release on bail while he waited for the appeal to be decided. Guy and the Committee were successful: despite his murder conviction, Guy was granted bail on February 9, 1993. In the wake of this decision, the Committee reconstituted itself as the Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted (AIDWYC), now Innocence Canada, having decided to broaden its mandate from defending Guy, to working on behalf of all wrongly convicted Canadians.

Guy and what became the AIDWYC team had intended to win his appeal by demonstrating that neither the Crown’s hair and fibre evidence, nor the “jailhouse informant” evidence about his supposed confession, was reliable. But just days before they were to present these arguments to the Ontario Court of Appeal, DNA test results came in that made these issues moot. Several previous attempts to perform DNA testing on the semen stains found on Christine’s underpants had been unsuccessful, but the technology had now advanced enough that a more sophisticated test could be conducted. This test proved that the DNA in question could not belong to Guy. The Crown prosecutor explained the new findings to the Court as follows: “The evidence proves as an indisputable scientific fact that Mr. Morin is not guilty of the first degree murder of Christine Jessop, and should be acquitted.”

On January 23, 1995, the Ontario Court of Appeal set aside Guy’s conviction and entered an acquittal instead. The Crown prosecutor expressed his “deepest regret for all that” Guy and his family “had to endure.” Ten years after his arrest – and having spent 18 months in prison – Guy had finally proven his innocence and cleared his name.

On June 26, 1996, the Lieutenant Governor ordered that a public inquiry be conducted into the causes of Guy’s wrongful conviction. The resulting report, which was released in April 1998, identified numerous factors that had contributed to this egregious miscarriage of justice.

Causes of Guy’s Wrongful Conviction: Tunnel Vision

The root cause of Guy’s wrongful conviction is a dangerous and all too common phenomenon known as “tunnel vision.” Commissioner Kaufman, who wrote the Inquiry’s report described tunnel vision as “the single minded and overly narrow focus on an investigation or prosecutorial theory” – in this case, the theory that Guy had killed Christine – “so as to unreasonably colour the evaluation of information received and one’s conduct in response to the information.”  It is easy for police and prosecutors to fall into tunnel vision, particularly if they are under intense pressure to solve or prosecute a case. Tunnel vision is therefore a common feature found in many miscarriages of justice. Moreover, “it is a trap that can capture even the best police officer or prosecutor,” because “it is mutually reinforcing amongst police officers [and] … prosecutors.” Tunnel vision must therefore “be guarded against vigilantly.”

One way that prosecutors must guard against this trap is by keeping in mind that their role is not to secure a conviction, but rather to ensure that justice is done. This means that their role “excludes any notion of winning or losing,” as the Supreme Court put it in the now-famous case R v Boucher. In fact, the current Ontario Crown Policy Manual specifically comments that prosecutors must be “open to the possibility of the innocence of the accused person and avoid ‘tunnel vision.’”

Sadly, the prosecutors who worked on Guy’s case lost sight of these obligations. Commissioner Kaufman observed in his report that there were “various instances where the prosecutors called evidence which, objectively viewed, was highly suspect. At times, their perspective was coloured by their strong views as to [Guy Paul] Morin’s guilt,” and “they were unable … to objectively view the evidence” or to “be at all introspective about the very serious reliability problems with a number of their own witnesses.” Commissioner Kaufman also found that some of the people involved in Guy’s investigation and prosecution still suffered from “‘tunnel vision’ in the most staggering proportions” at the inquiry proceedings, despite the fact that Guy had been acquitted due to incontrovertible DNA evidence.

Causes of Guy’s Wrongful Conviction: Bad Science

In the Conclusion to his Report, Commissioner Kaufman commented that, “An innocent person was convicted of a heinous crime he did not commit. Science helped convict him. Science exonerated him.” It is very fortunate that we now live in an era where miscarriages of justice like Guy’s can be rectified through DNA testing. However, Guy was wrongly convicted in the first place due in part to the hair and fibre evidence that supposedly linked him to Christine’s murder. Commissioner Kaufman found that the forensic scientist who analyzed the hairs failed to adequately explain the limitations of these findings, meaning that the police thought that they provided stronger evidence linking Guy to Christine than was actually true. Moreover, it is generally agreed today that hair comparison evidence is not reliable enough to be used in a criminal trial, due to the “inherent frailties” of this type of evidence. James Driskell’s and Kyle Unger’s cases are two known cases where hair microscopy evidence contributed to a wrongful conviction.

The fibre evidence put forward by the Crown proved to be similarly unreliable. In fact, it was contaminated during the forensic investigation and although the scientists working with the fibres realized what had happened, they kept this information from the police and prosecutors. Leaving aside the contamination problem, the fibre evidence simply did not support the Crown’s position that it provided a link between Guy and Christine. Rather, the similarities observed between the fibres found on Christine’s clothing and those from Guy’s home and car were “equally explainable by random occurrence or environmental contamination” at the scene.

Disquietingly, as forensic science continues to evolve, it has become clear that many other forensic scientific techniques are much less reliable than we once believed. Shoe print comparison, bite mark analysis, firearm tool mark analysis, and other such techniques that have never been properly tested remain potential causes of wrongful convictions. Furthermore, even generally reliable, properly validated forensic techniques such as DNA typing and serology can produce inaccurate results if the samples are contaminated (as the fibre samples were in this case). Finally, the experts tasked with interpreting forensic scientific evidence for the court may make mistakes that can contribute to miscarriages of justice, as in the many wrongful convictions resulting from the infamously inaccurate testimony of Dr. Charles Smith.

Causes of Guy’s Wrongful Conviction: Unreliable Witness Testimony

As discussed above, a number of witnesses testified at Guy’s second trial to a range of damaging things, all of which turned out to be untrue. In fact, by the time of the Inquiry, some of the witnesses had realized and admitted that the evidence they had given was wrong. Commissioner Kaufman found that there were several problems with these witnesses’ “late-breaking revelations.” First, this type of “consciousness of guilt” evidence – i.e., evidence that is meant to show that the accused felt guilty or was otherwise displaying inappropriate emotions – is in general of very little value. Second, some witnesses actively decided to change their testimony in order to help convict Guy, since they strongly believed that he was guilty. These witnesses were influenced by the police and prosecutorial tunnel vision discussed above, and by the understandable but pernicious need to believe that the man who had committed this terrible crime would indeed be brought to justice. It is a sad irony – and a common one in wrongful conviction cases – that the miscarriage of justice that Guy suffered may have ensured that the real killer will never be caught.[23]

The third reason for the unreliability of these witnesses’ testimony is simply that human memory is far more malleable than most people realize. In the words of Dr. Elizabeth Loftus, one of the leading experts on human memory, people are “particularly prone to having their memories be affected by misinformation when it is introduced after the passage of time has allowed the original event memory to fade.”[24] Commissioner Kaufman caustically noted that “it is truly remarkable the extent to which the memories of a number of Crown witnesses improved as the proceedings progressed” and that some of this “improvement” was “a product of an interviewing process … that was not designed to create unreliable evidence, but which nonetheless had that very effect.” For example, prior to Ms. Hester’s informing the police that Guy had chased her away from his car, the police had actually told her about the forensic evidence that had been found there, and that they believed that Guy was indeed guilty.

Causes of Guy’s Wrongful Conviction: Reliance on Jailhouse Informants

Another cause of this miscarriage of justice was the false testimony of the jailhouse informants, Mr. May and Mr. X, who claimed that while he was incarcerated, Guy had confessed to killing Christine. Unlike the witnesses described above – who believed that they were telling the truth, and/or that they were helping to put a heinous criminal away – these informants deliberately lied, simply to further their own interests. Both Mr. May and Mr. X. had lengthy criminal records, and had made offers to implicate other inmates in addition to Guy. Moreover, Mr. May was diagnosed as a pathological liar by experts at Guy’s second trial and he went on to tell several people that he had committed perjury at both trials. Mr. X had been diagnosed as having a personality disorder with sociopathic tendencies, including suggestibility and a propensity to lie.

Jailhouse informants have contributed to many wrongful convictions. According to statistics compiled by the Innocence Project at the Cardozo Law School in New York:

In more than 15% of wrongful conviction cases overturned through DNA testing, an informant testified against the defendant at the original trial. Often, statements from people with incentives to testify – particularly incentives that are not disclosed to the jury – are the central evidence in convicting an innocent person.

Given the alarming unreliability of jailhouse informers’ testimony, Commissioner Kaufman concluded that the prosecutorial policy at the time did not adequately take into account the dangers of using this type of evidence. He noted that most jailhouse informants “wish to benefit for their contemplated participation as witnesses for the prosecution,” and that the use of these informants in criminal proceedings should therefore be “significantly limit[ed]” in order to avoid further miscarriages of justice.

Today, Crown Prosecutors are required to view jailhouse informers’ purported evidence in a much more skeptical and vigilant light. For example, the Ontario Crown Policy Manual states that jailhouse informants’ evidence “requires a rigorous, objective assessment of the informer’s account of the accused person’s alleged statement, the circumstances in which that account was provided to the authorities and the in-custody informer’s general reliability.” The Manual notes that “a principal purpose of this policy is to help prevent miscarriages of justice, which can occur when in-custody informers falsely implicate accused persons” – as did the two jailhouse informants in Guy’s case. 

Wounds that Innocence Canada Cannot Heal

Guy spent 10 years of his life – and 18 months in prison – living with the stigma of a horrifying crime: the sexual assault and murder of a nine-year-old girl. As Commissioner Kaufman phrased it:

The criminal proceedings against Guy Paul Morin represent a tragedy not only for Mr. Morin and his family, but also for the community at large: the system failed him – a system for which we, the community, must bear responsibility. An innocent man was arrested, stigmatized, imprisoned and convicted. The real killer has never been found. The trail grows colder with each passing year. For Christine Jessop’s family there is no closure. (PUBLISHER'S NOTE: No longer true, thank goodness.  (See last entry on chronology): HL); Although nothing can restore to Guy the years of his life and the peace of mind that were taken from him, he received $1.25 million and a public apology in compensation for his wrongful conviction. Despite this miscarriage of justice, Guy has been able to get married, raise children, produce a CD of his clarinet music, and develop his skills as a repairperson. As the years go by, however, it becomes less and less likely that Christine’s real killer will ever be caught and that this little girl and her family will ever get the justice they deserve."

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READING MATERIALS:

Innocence Canada entry on Guy Paul Morin:

Robson Hall Blog:

Toronto Star story on Toronto Police Service announcement  on on-going investigation linking Calvin Hoover to Christine Jessop's death.


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CHRONOLOGY: October 3, 1984 
Christine Jessop disappears

December 31, 1984
Christine Jessop's body was found 56 kilometers from her house in a farmers field 

January 7, 1985
Christine Jessop's funeral , which Guy Paul did not attend 
April 22, 1985
Guy Paul Morin was charged with first degree murder     

February 7, 1986
Morin was acquitted           

June 5, 1987
Ontario court of appeal orders a new trial  

November 17, 1988    
Supreme court agrees with the Ontario court of appeal

July 30, 1992
Morin is convicted of first degree murder

January 23, 1995
Conviction got over turned by Ontario court of appeal
DNA testing excluded Morin as the killer

September 3, 1996
Morin's public inquiry into wrongful conviction starts

January 24, 1997
Ontario government awards Morin $1.25million 

February 10, 1998 
Final summations conclude in inquiry

October 15, 2020

Toronto Police Service announces that an an-ongoing investigation by The Toronto Police Service had established, through ancestral  DNA evidence,  that Christine Jessop's  real killer was a man  named Calvin Hoover, who had subsequently killed himself.)
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