British Columbia

Minister sends B.C. murder case back to appeal court citing likely miscarriage of justice

Wade Skiffington was convicted of second-degree murder in the killing of his fiancée in 2001.

Wade Skiffington was convicted of murdering his fiancée in 2001

A man in a goatee flecked with white hangs his head while another man looks on in concern with the doors of the court building in the background.
Wade Skiffington is seen speaking to reporters beside his father, Tom, in January 2019. Skiffington was convicted of killing his common-law wife in 1994. A B.C. Supreme Court judge granted him bail pending a federal investigation into a possible wrongful conviction on Jan. 23, 2019. (Camille Bains/Canadian Press)

Federal Justice Minister David Lametti has decided a miscarriage of justice likely occurred in the case of a man convicted of murdering his fiancée in Richmond, B.C., in 1994 and has referred the matter to the province's Court of Appeal.

Wade Skiffington was convicted in 2001 of second-degree murder in the killing of Wanda Martin and spent more than 17 years in prison before he was granted bail in 2019, pending the outcome of the conviction review.

Lametti says in a statement that after an extensive investigation, "there is a reasonable basis to conclude that a miscarriage of justice likely occurred.''

Innocence Canada says its lawyers act on behalf of Skiffington, who was convicted on the basis of what the advocacy group calls a "dubious Mr. Big confession'' in which undercover RCMP officers posed as gangsters to get him to admit to the killing.

A young woman with curls in her hair and her chin resting on her fingers smiles in a closeup of her face.
Wanda Lee Martin was shot six times in 1994 and found dead in Richmond, B.C., with her 18-month-old unharmed son beside her lifeless body. (Supplied by family)

A news release from the group says Skiffington was given "lavish financial incentives'' and subjected to episodes of simulated violence in the 1999 police sting.

Innocence Canada says Skiffington was denied parole for years before his eventual release because he refused to admit guilt for a crime he did not commit.

Skiffington consistently proclaimed his innocence before the so-called Mr. Big confession and has maintained it since, the group says.

"His family and friends have never wavered in their support for him,'' it says.

The group says Skiffington was co-operative with police after Martin was killed.

"Despite reports of a break and enter and a suspicious man hiding in bushes in the immediate vicinity of the crime scene in the afternoon Wanda was killed, police remained focused on Mr. Skiffington,'' the group says.

The Department of Justice says Lametti's decision was the result of new information that was not before the courts at the time of Skiffington's trial or original appeal.