Cindy Ali, the Toronto mother who was acquitted in the 2011 death of her 16-year-old daughter Cynara after serving more than four years in prison, is suing Toronto police and the city for more than $10 million.

“Officers took little care to secure the scene in the hours following the event, and the forensic team neglected to take fingerprint or DNA samples from several surfaces that Cindy said the home invaders touched,” (Cindy’s) claim reads.

The claim stats that despite the investigation’s failure to produce “any incriminating evidence,” Ali was arrested on March 8, 2012 and charged with manslaughter. The charge was later upgraded to first-degree murder on Oct. 17, 2012.

The suit is seeking damages in the amount of $8 million from the Toronto Police Services Board and Frank Skubic, $2 million from the City of Toronto and Bujokas, and an additional $500,000 from all defendants.

  • @[email protected]
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    137 days ago

    She told police one man led her through the house searching for the item, and when they returned to the living room, Cynara was lifeless on the couch, with the other man standing nearby, holding a pillow. The men left, claiming they had the wrong house, and were never found.

    I can see why she was viewed with suspicion, given her story. But I agree that the cops had a duty to check for fingerprints and dna if they wanted to disprove her story.

    • @[email protected]
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      87 days ago

      Her story sounds very farfetched but yeah they had a duty to investigate this properly. When they didn’t do their job reasonable doubt sets in.

    • @Nuke_the_whales
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      17 days ago

      So how did she die then? Are we just believing this random no reason murder by mysterious strangers? If you’re gonna say she’s innocent, then what happened to the daughter? Cause I honestly am not buying that story at all

        • @Nuke_the_whales
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          16 days ago

          Right. Just seems like a wild story, escalating from b&e to murder like that. Was there ever any proof that suspects exist?

          • @[email protected]
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            36 days ago

            I think that’s part of the suit. She said that specific items were handled by the invaders, but that they were not checked for fingerprints.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              16 days ago

              Maybe the cops just saw the colour of mom’s skin and figured the case was solved with exactly zero evidence.