Convicted murderer suing police says he can't get a job

tay

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May 20, 2012
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You were prepared to have Steven Clarke murdered?"

"Yes, sir."

"You asked someone if they were willing to have Steven Clarke murdered?"

"Yes, sir."

That was the strange exchange carried out in a Hamilton courtroom Friday as one-time convicted murderer Christopher McCullough agreed with Hamilton police defence counsel Kieran Dickson that after his May 24, 1990 arrest for the killing of Beverly Perrin, he counselled a would-be hit man to kill Clarke for testifying against him.

That hit man would prove to be an undercover police constable, leading McCullough to plead guilty to counselling to commit murder. McCullough would be sentenced to 10 years in prison.

McCullough would be convicted in December 1991 of second-degree murder in connection with the rape and strangulation of Tapleytown school teacher Perrin. He would serve nine years for both the murder and the counselling murder conviction before he was released in 1999.

Clarke said the trio forced Perrin into her car and drove to Pearce's home. With Pearce at the wheel, the foursome drove to a field off Cascade Avenue, where Perrin was raped and strangled with a rope before her body was dumped at a Tapleytown Road field.

McCullough, 47, and Perrin murder co-accused Nicholas Nossey are suing Hamilton police for more than $10 million for malicious prosecution before Ontario Superior Court Justice James Ramsay.

Nossey, who lives in Orillia, was acquitted of the Perrin murder. But he spent 19 months in pre-trial custody. The lawsuit is unusual in that it has been at least 15 years in the making but subject to numerous delays and postponements.

"I should never have been put in position where I could be charged with counselling to commit murder," McCullough shot back.

"The carrot was put in front of me and I bit," he continued.

McCullough told his lawyer, Neil Jones, about his struggles to lead a productive life after his release.

His last job was as a cashier at a Wendy's fast-food restaurant.

That was in 2009.

McCullough hasn't been able to find a job since.

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Convicted murderer suing police, says he can't get a job
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
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Edmonton
There are no words to describe how utterly stupid and hairbrained this is. How did it get to court? Now, apparently, the word "consequence" is gradually being eliminated from our vocabulary too.


While the situation was considerably different, I had a conversation with a client yesterday that was very similar ... whine, blah, whine blah, whine. I sooooo wanted to say - SUCK IT UP BUD - it's a situation of your own making and this is the result! Some people you can feel badly for being in a situation not of their choosing but these others frustrate me to no end - they simply can't see that it was bad decision making or a bad thought process - i.e. maybe it'll go away all by itself! NOT!


JMHO