David Milgaard part of panel in Winnipeg to discuss wrongful convictions - Action News
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David Milgaard part of panel in Winnipeg to discuss wrongful convictions

David Milgaardspent 23 years in prison after being wrongfullyconvicted ofmurder. He is one of nine panelistsin Winnipeg to speakaboutwrongful conviction and exoneration in the Canadian legal system.

Panel runs 2-5 p.m. Friday at Canadian Museum for Human Rights

David Milgaardis one of nine panelists in Winnipeg this week to discuss wrongful conviction and exoneration in Canada's justice system. (Josh Lynn/CBC)

A man who spent 23 years in prison after being wrongfullyconvicted ofmurder is back in Winnipeg this week, to discuss wrongful convictionand exoneration in the Canadian legal system.

David Milgaardis one of nine panelistswho are in town to speakaboutthe impacts of being wrongly convicted,how the current system designed to exonerate and compensate the wrongly convicted is flawed, andhow and why it needs to be corrected.

Milgaard told CBC Radio'sUp To Speedhost Ismaila Alfa that one of the things taken away from him during his imprisonment was the experience with his family.

"My dad would come out and he would play cribbage with me. But while we were home, we were going on summer holidays and going to the lake," Milgaard said.

"Our lives were really quite fulfilling. And all of that was taken away from everyone as a result of this."

The worst part for Milgaard, however, "was that I didn't get a chance to grow up with my dad.

"That is something I still can't get over to this day," he said.

In terms of people who may have been wrongfully convicted in Canada, Milgaard said the queue is full for the attorneys going to court with them at Innocence Canadaa non-profit dedicated to identifying, advocating forand exonerating individuals who have been wrongfully convicted of a crime.

He said Innocence Canada is working on as many as 10 cases right now, but there could be thousands of people in Canada who were convicted of something they did not do and chose not to fight it.

Partially to blame for the issue, says Milgaard,is the Canadian Justice Review Board,a national advisory organization that reviews the justice system and various court decisions.

Milgaard cited the case of Steven Truscott, who was wrongfully convicted ofmurdering a classmate when he was 14 years old and waitednearly 50 years before being exonerated.

According to Milgaard, the federal justice minister at the time,Irwin Cotler, hadhad the wrongful conviction case in front of him, and the evidence that proved Truscott did not commit the crime. But instead of being able to overturn it himself, the case hadto go back to the courts.

He also noted thatthere is a lack of transparency in the whole process.

The panel conversationis being hostedat theCanadian Museum for Human Rights from 2-5 p.m. Friday.

Along with Milgaard, the panel will include Thomas Sophonow, James Driskell and Frank Ostrowski, three other Winnipeggers who served time in prison on murder convictions that were eventually overturned.

With files from Ismaila Alfa and Kim Kaschor