Why a N.B. judge dismissed the jury in the Dennis Oland murder case
At the heart of the legal mess that led to a mistrial in the Dennis Oland murder case is the unseemly notion of “jury shopping.”
That’s when the Crown uses otherwise private information about potential jurors to screen for qualities that may help its case.
On Tuesday, Justice Terrence Morrison of the New Brunswick Court of Queen’s Bench declared a mistrial when he learned that a Saint John police officer used a police database to track all interactions would-be jurors had with police.
Some of that information was then passed along to the Crown during the jury selection process.