Ottawa to review possible miscarriage of justice in 1994 murder conviction in Quebec
MONTREAL — The federal government says there are reasonable grounds to believe a miscarriage of justice occurred in the case of a Quebec man who was convicted of four murders in 1994.
On Thursday, the Justice Department’s criminal conviction review group confirmed it will investigate the case of Daniel Jolivet, who has been imprisoned for 33 years.
A lawyer for Jolivet, 68, submitted a formal application earlier this week to federal Justice Minister Sean Fraser, asking him to review Jolivet’s conviction and order a new trial in the case. The request was made after the Quebec Crown prosecutor’s office concluded in June that Jolivet may not have received a fair trial.
“After completing a preliminary assessment of Mr. Daniel Jolivet’s application for review, we find that there may be reasonable grounds to conclude that a miscarriage of justice likely occurred,” the federal review group wrote Thursday in a letter to Jolivet’s lawyer, Nicholas St-Jacques of Projet Innocence Québec.


