Quebec man convicted of four murders in 1994 may not have had fair trial, Crown says
MONTREAL — The lawyer for a Quebec man who was convicted of four murders in 1994 is pushing for a new trial for his client after the provincial Crown prosecutor’s office concluded a miscarriage of justice may have occurred.
Prosecutor Benoit Lauzon wrote to Daniel Jolivet’s lawyer in June to say there is reason to believe Jolivet’s lawyers didn’t receive all the evidence needed to defend him at trial.
“In short, we are of the opinion that there are reasonable grounds to conclude that Mr. Jolivet likely did not receive a fair and reasonable trial,” wrote Lauzon, who heads an office that reviews cases where a miscarriage of justice is alleged. “Certain undisclosed evidence is clearly relevant, and there is a reasonable possibility that the non-disclosure affected the outcome or overall fairness of the trial.”
Lauzon said he couldn’t conclude that Jolivet was “factually innocent,” but wrote that his “claim of a miscarriage of justice is not without merit.”


