Death of Christine Jessop Christine Marion Jessop (29 November 1974 – 3 October 1984) was a 9-year-old
Canadian girl from
Queensville, Ontario, who was abducted, sexually assaulted, and murdered in October 1984. Her body was found about from her home on
New Year's Eve of the same year. On October 3, 1984, Jessop's mother Janet and elder brother, Kenney, had travelled to Toronto's East Detention Centre where her father Bob was in custody. Bob Jessop had been incarcerated two weeks earlier for misappropriation of funds. Janet felt that, at 9 years old, Christine was too young to visit the detention centre. Despite her protests, Christine had been left behind in Queensville to attend school as usual. Christine returned home from school that afternoon on the school bus. She dropped her backpack off at home, but was not there when her mother and brother returned home, shortly after 4p.m. Jessop went from her home to the variety store close to her home. The shopkeeper said that Christine came to the store alone between 3:30 and 4:00p.m., bought bubble gum and left a minute or so later. Christine was supposed to meet a friend from school at a nearby park, but failed to show up. Jessop was declared missing later that evening. Two months later, on 31 December, her remains were found in a farmer's field in
Sunderland Brock Township, east from her home; she had been stabbed to death and investigators discovered
semen stains on her underwear.
Conviction and appeal Police turned their attention to Jessop's next-door neighbour,
Guy Paul Morin, on 14 February 1985, after he was one of a few people mentioned by Jessop's mother. Police set up surveillance of the Morin home on 19 February, with two officers eventually interviewing him three days later, on 22 February. On 22 April 1985, Morin was arrested. He was twice put on trial for
first-degree murder; the first trial began on 7 January 1986, for which he was
acquitted. However, on 4 March, the
Attorney General of Ontario launched an appeal of Morin's acquittal. The Crown claimed that the trial judge had made a mistake in directing the jury about the meaning of "
reasonable doubt" and that the acquittal should thus be thrown out and Morin retried. The
Court of Appeal agreed, and on 5 June 1987, it ordered a new trial. Morin appealed this decision to the
Supreme Court of Canada, who dismissed the appeal on 17 November 1988. This second trial began on 28 May 1990, and Morin was
convicted of first-degree murder on 30 July 1992. Immediately after Morin's conviction, a
grassroots organization called
Justice for Guy Paul Morin Committee was established to aid him in his search for
exoneration. The Committee's first objective was to help Morin to appeal his conviction and in the meantime, to apply for his release on
bail while he waited for the appeal to be decided. Morin was granted bail on 9 February 1993. Following this decision, the Committee reorganized itself as the
Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted (AIDWYC), now Innocence Canada, having decided to broaden its mandate from defending Morin to working on behalf of all wrongly convicted Canadians. It was not until 23 January 1995, almost 10 years after he was first arrested, that Morin was exonerated as a result of
DNA testing that had not previously been available. In February 1995, the Ontario Attorney General's office transferred the case from the
Durham Regional Police to the
Toronto Police. However, after interviewing over 300 suspects, a special, 9-man
task force disbanded in March. The real killer remained unidentified until 2020, when his DNA was linked to the crime scene using
genetic genealogy. == The Commission and Report ==