this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2026
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What exactly does 'quashed' mean in this context?
Will he be immediately set free? With any conditions?
Will he be eligible for compensation for being detained as a result of the miscarriage of justice, due to the 'fundamental error' in the original case?
He was released in 2010 on parole
Thanks. I didn't notice that.
No compensation I would say. He's not declared innocent, the previous court deemed he likely did it.
I think the crown now needs to decide if they think they can win a case in front of a jury. If yes, they will probably charge him then go through the process similar to if it was a new arrest - decide if he is a risk to the public, and if so ask a judge not to grant bail. Then if approved he stays in custody until the trial has an outcome.
Edit: as per other comment he is apparently already on parole, so that would likely continue. It may influence the crown's decision whether to charge him again, as since he's out of prison it will probably be about his risk to the public now. If he's a risk, they would need to get him retried to maintain the (I'm assuming) life-long parole.