Affaire Glen Assoun: des avocats demandent de relancer l'enquête sur la police

For Sean MacDonald the push to restart a criminal investigation into police destruction of evidence in the Glen Assoun wrongful conviction case matters both for personal reasons and the precedent it could set. Assoun, right, the Nova Scotia man who spent almost 17 years in prison for a murder he didn't commit, and MacDonald talk to reporters outside Supreme Court in Halifax on Friday, July 12, 2019. THE CANADIAN PRESS

HALIFAX - For Sean MacDonald, the push to restart a criminal investigation into police destruction of evidence in the Glen Assoun wrongful conviction case matters both for personal reasons and for the precedent it could set.

The defence lawyer, who teamed with Phil Campbell in the long battle to prove Assoun's innocence, said the ordeal took a huge health toll on the Nova Scotia man, whom he first met in 2006 as he languished in prison for the 1995 murder of Brenda Way.

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