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Impairment a factor in single-vehicle crash that sent 2 to hospital: police

Two people were hospitalized after a car hit a tree in west Edmonton on the morning of Aug. 8, 2024. (Matt Marshall/CTV News Edmonton) Two people were hospitalized after a car hit a tree in west Edmonton on the morning of Aug. 8, 2024. (Matt Marshall/CTV News Edmonton)
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Impairment was a factor in a crash that sent two people to hospital on Thursday morning, Edmonton police said.

Emergency crews were called to 87 Avenue just east of 149 Street at 5:30 a.m. for a single-vehicle crash.

"Information we have is that it was a single-vehicle collision where the vehicle was travelling westbound, crossed over eastbound lanes and struck the tree," Acting Sgt. Jeff Knull told CTV News Edmonton.

A man and a woman were taken to hospital with serious, but non-life threatening injuries, police said.

"We do believe impairment is a factor," Knull said.

"There is going to be an ongoing investigation into the impairment level, what may or may not have caused the impairment and what kind of injuries are sustained by each party."

The road was closed after the crash but has since reopened.

Anyone who witnessed the crash or has video of it is asked to call Edmonton police at 780-423-4567.

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A man who has brain damage has a murder conviction reversed after a 34-year fight

A man who has brain damage and was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of a shopkeeper in London had his decades-old conviction quashed Wednesday by an appeals court troubled by the possibility police elicited a false confession from a mentally vulnerable man. Oliver Campbell, who suffered cognitive impairment as a baby and struggles with his concentration and memory, was 21 when he was jailed in 1991 after being convicted based partly on admissions his lawyer said were coerced. “The fight for justice is finally over after nearly 34 years," Campbell said. “I can start my life an innocent man.” Campbell, now in his 50s, was convicted of the robbery and murder of Baldev Hoondle, who was shot in the head in his shop in the Hackney area of east London in July 1990. He had a previous appeal rejected in 1994 and was released from prison in 2002 on conditions that could have returned him to prison if he got into trouble. Defense lawyer Michael Birnbaum said police lied to Campbell and “badgered and bullied” him into giving a false confession by admitting he pulled the trigger in an accident. He was interviewed more than a dozen times, including sessions without either a lawyer or other adult present. His learning disability put him “out of his depth” and he was "simply unable to do justice to himself,” Birnbaum said. He said the admissions were nonsense riddled with inconsistencies that contradicted facts in the case. At trial, he testified that he was not involved in the robbery and had been somewhere else though he couldn't remember where. A co-defendant, Eric Samuels, who has since died, pleaded guilty to the robbery and was sentenced to five years in prison. At the time, he told his lawyer Campbell was not the gunman and later told others Campbell wasn’t with him during the robbery. Lawyers continued to advocate for Campbell that he wasn't the killer and his case was referred to the Court of Appeal by the Criminal Cases Review Commission which investigates potential injustices. The three judges on the Court of Appeal rejected most of Birnbaum's grounds for appeal but said they were troubled by the conviction in light of a new understanding of the reliability of admissions from someone with a mental disability. The panel quashed the conviction as 'unsafe,' and refused to order a retrial.

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