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Nova Scotia

Hearing set to seek release of evidence in Glen Assoun's wrongful conviction

Sixty-three-year-old Glen Assoun served almost 17 years in prison forsecond-degree murder in the 1995 death of 28-year-old Brenda Way.

Assoun, 63, served 17 years in prison before he was released pending a review of his case

A man wearing glasses looks to the right
Glen Assoun at Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Halifax on March 1. (Robert Short/CBC)

A hearing to seek the release of evidence that led to the exonerationof aNova Scotia man who was wrongfully convicted of murder has been set for early this summer.

Sixty-three-year-old Glen Assoun served almost 17 years in prison forsecond-degree murder in the 1995 death of 28-year-old Brenda Way.

The federal justice minister quashed Assoun's conviction and ordered a new trial, andon March 1 Nova Scotia prosecutors decided not to offer evidence.

Documents leading to the decision by Justice Minister David Lametti have been sealed since a preliminary federal assessment led to Assoun's release on bail on Oct. 8, 2014.

A timeline of the case against Glen Assoun

6 years ago
Duration 1:06
The case against Glen Assoun was dismissed in a Halifax court on Friday.

Media hope to make evidence public

Justice James Chipman later ruled against releasing the assessment, saying allowing the public access to the evidence while an investigation was still underway could harm the administration of justice.

However, the CBC, The Canadian Pressand the Halifax Examiner have joined in a motion to have the information released now that the final ministerial review is complete and the murder charge has been dismissed.

A date of July 2 has been set by the Nova Scotia Supreme Court for a hearing, with the Crown, the federal Justice Department and Innocence Canada lawyers also parties to the proceedings.