What jury didn’t hear at the trial of Halifax medical student William Sandeson
HALIFAX — The jury in medical student William Sandeson’s first-degree murder trial retired to deliberate Thursday without hearing that the defence had sought a mistrial after a bombshell surprise.
About halfway through the trial, Sandeson’s lawyers said they had just learned that a private investigator who was working for them had facilitated meetings between two key witnesses and police.
The defence argued those meetings led the witnesses to give new statements to police that further implicated Sandeson in the Aug. 15, 2015, killing of fellow Dalhousie student Taylor Samson.
The lawyers argued it contravened solicitor-client privilege, and was grounds for a mistrial or exclusion of the witnesses’ evidence.


