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Saskatchewan prosecutor wins Supreme Court appeal

Ottawa : Canada | 17 days ago  
Views: 6
A Saskatchewan Crown prosecutor did not maliciously prosecute people who were accused of sexually assaulting children two decades ago, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled. A proposed domed stadium in Regina could cost a lot more than the initially estimated $350 million, the New Democrats say....
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  • News Source: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | 17 days ago
    The proposed domed stadium in Regina is still a $350 million project, not a $600 million one, the Saskatchewan government insists. The Yorkton, Sask., doctor at the centre of a review of thousands of medical tests does not have the skills or...
  • News Source: Macleans | 17 days ago
    The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled a Saskatchewan Crown prosecutor did not act maliciously when he pressed a controversial satanic sex-abuse case against two foster parent families. In a 7-0 decision Friday, the court erased a malicious...
  • News Source: The Globe and Mail | 17 days ago
    T he Supreme Court of Canada has exonerated a Saskatchewan Crown attorney who vigorously prosecuted a bizarre sex abuse case involving allegations of ritual abuse and murder against a group of children. In a 7-0 ruling, the Court overturned a finding...
  • News Source: Star Phoenix | 17 days ago
    The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Friday that a Crown prosecutor was not acting maliciously when he prosecuted 12 members of a Saskatchewan family in the early 1990s after three foster children accused them of sexual abuse and bizarre satanic ritual...
  • News Source: Canadian Broadcasting Corporation | 17 days ago
    A Saskatchewan Crown prosecutor did not maliciously prosecute people who were accused of sexually assaulting children two decades ago, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled. A proposed domed stadium in Regina could cost a lot more than the initially...
  • News Source: Macleans | 17 days ago
    The Supreme Court of Canada says a Crown attorney who pressed a controversial sex-abuse case against two families of Saskatchewan foster parents in the 1990s did not act in malice. In a 7-0 decision, the court erased a malicious prosecution finding...
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