Innocence Canada Thomas Sophonow Summary

753 Words2 Pages

Introduction Historically in Canada, there have been over 100 cases of people being wrongfully accused and negatively impacted by the punishments given out by courts. One Canadian who suffered the experience of this was Thomas Sophonow. He was accused of murder and put on trial three times for the death of Barbara Stoppel. Throughout this case, several mistakes on the part of the police, and the way evidence was introduced, were not uncovered until after Sophonow’s conviction. It was a continuous fight as the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict. This case should have the attention of the legal community in order to not have a repeat of the injustice that Sophonow and the victim's family experienced. Inadequate Legal Representation, Eyewitness Misidentification and Faulty Forensic Evidence were combined to make this …show more content…

In the article, Innocence Canada: Thomas Sophonow, Sarah Harland-Logan, argues that the main reason Sophonow was convicted was the testimony given by jailhouse informants, who’s evidence was sketchy at best but accepted at the time as fact by the court. Quoted by Harland-Logan. The author here breaks down the motivations of each of these witnesses and describes how, out of their own personal interest, they provided testimony that claimed Sophonow had told them while in jail he was guilty. This is very weak and it is surprising that the defense team did not have a stronger way to rebuke this evidence and discredit the informants. What made matters worse for Sophonow was the judge in his case made comments to the jury that created a bias and doubt towards the alibi given by the defense (quote Caragata). It seems from the material reviewed here that Sophonow did not receive a fair trial on many levels. The defense team’s inability to make effective arguments to help their client also contributed to this miscarriage of

Open Document