PASSAGE OF THE DAY: "Segal's
mandate fell short of the judge-led public inquiry — with full subpoena
power and cross-examination of witnesses — that Diab and his supporters
had been demanding. So Diab boycotted this review, arguing the
scope was too narrow and appeared to be nothing more than a "concerted
damage-control effort." Diab's objections are spelled out in a letter written by Bayne and sent to Segal in July of last year. "These
terms of reference are a disservice to Dr. Diab and to all the
suffering he and his family have been put through," Bayne wrote in the
letter, which was also sent to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and
then-justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould. Segal's conclusion
that the Department of Justice did nothing improper in Diab's case seems
to contradict the views of the prime minister, who criticized the
outcome. "I think for Hassan Diab we have to recognize first of
all that what happened to him never should have happened," Trudeau said
in June 2018. "This is something that, obviously, it's an extremely
difficult situation to go through for himself, for his family, and
that's why we've asked for an independent external review to look into
exactly how this happened and make sure that it never happens again." The
B.C. Civil Liberties association said this afternoon that Segal's
report only proves that "Canada's extradition law is severely broken and
must be changed." "This report makes clear that our extradition
laws are deeply unfair. Dr. Diab was shipped off for lengthy
imprisonment in a foreign country on a flimsy case, without even having
the right to see and to respond to the evidence against (him)," the
BCCLA said in a media release."
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
STORY: "'Whitewash': Hassan Diab attacks report concluding government acted properly in his extradition case," by reporter David Cochrane, published by CBC News on July 26, 2019. "
SUB-HEADING: "Diab spent over three years in a French prison before the case against him fell apart."
PHOTO CAPTION: "Hassan
Diab, an Ottawa academic who was extradited to France after allegations
of involvement in the 1980 bombing of a Paris synagogue, listens as his
lawyer Donald Bayne responds to the release of an external review on
his extradition by the Justice Department, during a press conference on
Parliament Hill in Ottawa Friday. PHOTO CAPTION:" Murray
Segal, Ontario’s former deputy attorney general and a former chief
Crown prosecutor, says in his report the federal Department of Justice
acted properly in Hassan Diab's extradition case - but the system has
ample room for improvement."
GIST: "Hassan Diab and his lawyer are accusing the federal government
of perpetrating a "whitewash" after an external review, released today,
concluded government lawyers acted ethically and followed proper
procedures in extraditing him to France for a terrorism case that later
fell apart.
Former
deputy attorney general of Ontario Murray Segal, tasked by the federal
government with the external review, wrote in the conclusion of his
report that "(counsel) acted in a manner that was ethical and consistent
– both with the law and … practices and policies."
Diab was
arrested by the RCMP in November 2008 and placed under strict bail
conditions until he was extradited to France in 2014. Diab,
a 65-year-old Ottawa university lecturer, was accused by French
authorities of involvement in a 1980 bombing outside a Paris synagogue
which killed four people and injured more than 40.
"My suffering and that of my family was prolonged by
senior officials at the Department of Justice," Diab told a press
conference this afternoon. "I trusted the government's promise that what
happened to me would never happen to anyone else.
The
Ontario judge who ordered the extradition wrote that France had
presented "a weak case; the prospects of conviction in the context of a
fair trial seem unlikely." That proved to be the case. Diab was
never charged — but he spent more than three years in near-solitary
confinement while France investigated his alleged involvement in the
terror attack. He was returned to Canada in January 2018 after French judges dropped his case due to a lack of evidence.
If France wins its appeal, it could seek to extradite Diab a second time, or to try him in.
That court was supposed to hold a hearing in October of last year. No hearing took place.
Hassan
Diab and his lawyer are accusing the federal government of perpetrating
a "whitewash" after an external review, released today, concluded
government lawyers acted ethically and followed proper procedures in
extraditing him to France for a terrorism case that later fell apart.Anything goes in an extradition, and you can't defend yourself. This will happen again.
- Lawyer Donald Bayne
Speaking at a press conference this afternoon, Diab and his lawyer Donald Bayne ripped into Segal's report.
"It's
a one-sided report. Its purpose is not to provide accountability. Its
purpose is to absolve the Department of Justice of any accountability,
and to shield senior officials at the department of any accountability,"
Diab said.
"This is basically a report that says nothing wrong was done by anybody ... Nothing to see here, folks, move on," Bayne added.
"If
Canadian prosecutors and the justice system … all got it so right, why
then did (Diab) languish in solitary confinement over three years … an
innocent Canadian in a French jail? The standards we are using are
clearly wrong.
"Anything goes in an extradition, and you can't defend yourself. This will happen again."
Rights
groups such as Amnesty International and the B.C. Civil Liberties
Association (BCCLA) called for a public inquiry last year after CBC News
revealed the steps Canadian government officials took to help secure
Diab's extradition.
But Segal concluded those concerns were unfounded.
"Counsel
acted properly in vigorously advancing France's case," Segal wrote. "We
would expect French authorities to do the same when Canada makes an
extradition request."
No rules broken
Documents
obtained by CBC News show that France was aware of — and failed to
disclose — fingerprint evidence that helped to clear Diab of involvement
in the terrorist attack when it made its formal extradition request to
Canada.
Fingerprint
analysis conducted by Canadian officials showed that Diab's prints did
not match prints thought to belong to the suspected bomber. Diab's
lawyers say this information was never shared with the extradition judge
— denying the defence key evidence of his innocence.
But Segal found no rules were broken.
"Counsel
also complied with their obligations to the extradition judge and their
disclosure obligations," Segal wrote. "I note that, in the course of
the extradition proceedings, counsel for Dr. Diab twice brought abuse of
process applications relating to the conduct of DOJ counsel (among
other grounds). Neither application was successful, and the rulings were
not appealed."
But while Segal
concluded that Diab's case was handled properly by the Department of
Justice, many of his recommendations appear to be aimed directly at
criticisms of the department's actions.
His first
recommendation, for example, calls for a "buffer, where
appropriate, between officials in the requesting state and the litigator
in Canada advancing the case for committal" — an apparent reference to
instances of coordination between the Department of Justice and French
authorities working on Diab's case.
Segal also recommended
that states requesting extradition "be encouraged to complete their
investigations in relation to the person sought before making a request
for extradition, subject, of course, to public safety concerns."
In
what appears to be a direct reference to the fingerprint evidence,
Segal suggested that "counsel for the Attorney General advancing a case
for extradition should consider sharing evidence — particularly relevant
and exculpatory or potentially exculpatory evidence — even when they
are not required or obligated to do so."
Segal also called on
Justice to "find out from the requesting state how long the person
sought can be detained" before a decision is made whether to go to
trial — a direct reference to Diab's three years in prison without
charges — and should consider updating the extradition treaty with
France "to specifically address issues of delay and timely proceedings."
Speaking
to CBC News by phone today, Segal said that while he believes the
Extradition Act "is working," he acknowledged that none of his
recommendations would have been likely to prevent Diab's extradition in
the first place.
"I don't think anyone had a solid idea that he
could spend three and a quarter years in custody before the decision was
made not to proceed with charges," he said.
"The law was followed here ... It was not the strongest case."
'It's appalling'
Robert
Currie, a professor of law at Dalhousie University who studies
extradition, said the mere fact that the law was followed in Diab's case
proves the law must change.
"The case that satisfied the
Canadian courts that extradition should be granted (with the resultant
three years of Dr. Diab rotting in a cell and subject to the strange
whims of the French system) didn't even satisfy the French courts — they
threw it out," he said in a text message to CBC News.
"It's
appalling to me, and should be appalling to Canadians, that in a case
where everything proceeded in accordance with law/policy, that this
should have happened."
Speaking in Halifax today, Justice Minister David Lametti said he would be reviewing Segal's recommendations closely.
"The
extradition process and the process that determines guilt or innocence
are two different procedures," he said. "Obviously I have a great deal
of sympathy for Dr. Diab and his family. Nobody wants to see anybody sit
in prison in a foreign country for that period of time waiting to be
tried. You can always make a process better.
"There's a balance
in an extradition process between the rights of the person being
extradited and the rights of us in maintaining our treaty
obligations. It's an extradition proceeding ... we're not looking at
guilt or innocence at that stage. We rely on those (foreign) legal
systems to make the final determination of guilt or innocence."
'Damage control'
Segal's
mandate fell short of the judge-led public inquiry — with full subpoena
power and cross-examination of witnesses — that Diab and his supporters
had been demanding.
So Diab boycotted this review, arguing the
scope was too narrow and appeared to be nothing more than a "concerted
damage-control effort."
Diab's objections are spelled out in a letter written by Bayne and sent to Segal in July of last year.
"These
terms of reference are a disservice to Dr. Diab and to all the
suffering he and his family have been put through," Bayne wrote in the
letter, which was also sent to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and
then-justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould.
Segal's conclusion
that the Department of Justice did nothing improper in Diab's case seems
to contradict the views of the prime minister, who criticized the
outcome.
"I think for Hassan Diab we have to recognize first of
all that what happened to him never should have happened," Trudeau said
in June 2018. "This is something that, obviously, it's an extremely
difficult situation to go through for himself, for his family, and
that's why we've asked for an independent external review to look into
exactly how this happened and make sure that it never happens again." The
B.C. Civil Liberties association said this afternoon that Segal's
report only proves that "Canada's extradition law is severely broken and
must be changed."
"This report makes clear that our extradition
laws are deeply unfair. Dr. Diab was shipped off for lengthy
imprisonment in a foreign country on a flimsy case, without even having
the right to see and to respond to the evidence against (him)," the
BCCLA said in a media release.
"Canada's laws must be changed to
prevent anything like this from happening again in the future. The
report makes suggestions as to how federal lawyers might conduct their
cases better in order to protect Canadians' rights — with respect,
that's not good enough. The law must be changed to guarantee fairness
for Canadians whose freedom and lives are at risk."
Diab is
still waiting for the French Court of Appeal to deliver a ruling on
whether the court will uphold the decision that saw him released from
jail." The entire story can be read at:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/hassan-diab-extradition-france-1.5226033
Read the full Segal report on the Diab extradition: \
Hassan Diab and his lawyer are accusing the federal government
of perpetrating a "whitewash" after an external review, released today,
concluded government lawyers acted ethically and followed proper
procedures in extraditing him to France for a terrorism case that later
fell apart.
Former
deputy attorney general of Ontario Murray Segal, tasked by the federal
government with the external review, wrote in the conclusion of his
report that "(counsel) acted in a manner that was ethical and consistent
– both with the law and … practices and policies."
Diab was
arrested by the RCMP in November 2008 and placed under strict bail
conditions until he was extradited to France in 2014. Diab,
a 65-year-old Ottawa university lecturer, was accused by French
authorities of involvement in a 1980 bombing outside a Paris synagogue
which killed four people and injured more than 40.
"My suffering and that of my family was prolonged by
senior officials at the Department of Justice," Diab told a press
conference this afternoon. "I trusted the government's promise that what
happened to me would never happen to anyone else.
The
Ontario judge who ordered the extradition wrote that France had
presented "a weak case; the prospects of conviction in the context of a
fair trial seem unlikely." That proved to be the case. Diab was
never charged — but he spent more than three years in near-solitary
confinement while France investigated his alleged involvement in the
terror attack. He was returned to Canada in January 2018 after French judges dropped his case due to a lack of evidence.
If France wins its appeal, it could seek to extradite Diab a second time, or to try him in.
That court was supposed to hold a hearing in October of last year. No hearing took place.
Hassan
Diab and his lawyer are accusing the federal government of perpetrating
a "whitewash" after an external review, released today, concluded
government lawyers acted ethically and followed proper procedures in
extraditing him to France for a terrorism case that later fell apart.Anything goes in an extradition, and you can't defend yourself. This will happen again.
- Lawyer Donald Bayne
Speaking at a press conference this afternoon, Diab and his lawyer Donald Bayne ripped into Segal's report.
"It's
a one-sided report. Its purpose is not to provide accountability. Its
purpose is to absolve the Department of Justice of any accountability,
and to shield senior officials at the department of any accountability,"
Diab said.
"This is basically a report that says nothing wrong was done by anybody ... Nothing to see here, folks, move on," Bayne added.
"If
Canadian prosecutors and the justice system … all got it so right, why
then did (Diab) languish in solitary confinement over three years … an
innocent Canadian in a French jail? The standards we are using are
clearly wrong.
"Anything goes in an extradition, and you can't defend yourself. This will happen again."
Rights
groups such as Amnesty International and the B.C. Civil Liberties
Association (BCCLA) called for a public inquiry last year after CBC News
revealed the steps Canadian government officials took to help secure
Diab's extradition.
But Segal concluded those concerns were unfounded.
"Counsel
acted properly in vigorously advancing France's case," Segal wrote. "We
would expect French authorities to do the same when Canada makes an
extradition request."
No rules broken
Documents
obtained by CBC News show that France was aware of — and failed to
disclose — fingerprint evidence that helped to clear Diab of involvement
in the terrorist attack when it made its formal extradition request to
Canada.
Fingerprint
analysis conducted by Canadian officials showed that Diab's prints did
not match prints thought to belong to the suspected bomber. Diab's
lawyers say this information was never shared with the extradition judge
— denying the defence key evidence of his innocence.
But Segal found no rules were broken.
"Counsel
also complied with their obligations to the extradition judge and their
disclosure obligations," Segal wrote. "I note that, in the course of
the extradition proceedings, counsel for Dr. Diab twice brought abuse of
process applications relating to the conduct of DOJ counsel (among
other grounds). Neither application was successful, and the rulings were
not appealed."
But while Segal
concluded that Diab's case was handled properly by the Department of
Justice, many of his recommendations appear to be aimed directly at
criticisms of the department's actions.
His first
recommendation, for example, calls for a "buffer, where
appropriate, between officials in the requesting state and the litigator
in Canada advancing the case for committal" — an apparent reference to
instances of coordination between the Department of Justice and French
authorities working on Diab's case.
Segal also recommended
that states requesting extradition "be encouraged to complete their
investigations in relation to the person sought before making a request
for extradition, subject, of course, to public safety concerns."
In
what appears to be a direct reference to the fingerprint evidence,
Segal suggested that "counsel for the Attorney General advancing a case
for extradition should consider sharing evidence — particularly relevant
and exculpatory or potentially exculpatory evidence — even when they
are not required or obligated to do so."
Segal also called on
Justice to "find out from the requesting state how long the person
sought can be detained" before a decision is made whether to go to
trial — a direct reference to Diab's three years in prison without
charges — and should consider updating the extradition treaty with
France "to specifically address issues of delay and timely proceedings."
Speaking
to CBC News by phone today, Segal said that while he believes the
Extradition Act "is working," he acknowledged that none of his
recommendations would have been likely to prevent Diab's extradition in
the first place.
"I don't think anyone had a solid idea that he
could spend three and a quarter years in custody before the decision was
made not to proceed with charges," he said.
"The law was followed here ... It was not the strongest case."
'It's appalling'
Robert
Currie, a professor of law at Dalhousie University who studies
extradition, said the mere fact that the law was followed in Diab's case
proves the law must change.
"The case that satisfied the
Canadian courts that extradition should be granted (with the resultant
three years of Dr. Diab rotting in a cell and subject to the strange
whims of the French system) didn't even satisfy the French courts — they
threw it out," he said in a text message to CBC News.
"It's
appalling to me, and should be appalling to Canadians, that in a case
where everything proceeded in accordance with law/policy, that this
should have happened."
Speaking in Halifax today, Justice Minister David Lametti said he would be reviewing Segal's recommendations closely.
"The
extradition process and the process that determines guilt or innocence
are two different procedures," he said. "Obviously I have a great deal
of sympathy for Dr. Diab and his family. Nobody wants to see anybody sit
in prison in a foreign country for that period of time waiting to be
tried. You can always make a process better.
"There's a balance
in an extradition process between the rights of the person being
extradited and the rights of us in maintaining our treaty
obligations. It's an extradition proceeding ... we're not looking at
guilt or innocence at that stage. We rely on those (foreign) legal
systems to make the final determination of guilt or innocence."
'Damage control'
Segal's
mandate fell short of the judge-led public inquiry — with full subpoena
power and cross-examination of witnesses — that Diab and his supporters
had been demanding.
So Diab boycotted this review, arguing the
scope was too narrow and appeared to be nothing more than a "concerted
damage-control effort."
Diab's objections are spelled out in a letter written by Bayne and sent to Segal in July of last year.
"These
terms of reference are a disservice to Dr. Diab and to all the
suffering he and his family have been put through," Bayne wrote in the
letter, which was also sent to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and
then-justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould.
Segal's conclusion
that the Department of Justice did nothing improper in Diab's case seems
to contradict the views of the prime minister, who criticized the
outcome.
"I think for Hassan Diab we have to recognize first of
all that what happened to him never should have happened," Trudeau said
in June 2018. "This is something that, obviously, it's an extremely
difficult situation to go through for himself, for his family, and
that's why we've asked for an independent external review to look into
exactly how this happened and make sure that it never happens again." The
B.C. Civil Liberties association said this afternoon that Segal's
report only proves that "Canada's extradition law is severely broken and
must be changed."
"This report makes clear that our extradition
laws are deeply unfair. Dr. Diab was shipped off for lengthy
imprisonment in a foreign country on a flimsy case, without even having
the right to see and to respond to the evidence against (him)," the
BCCLA said in a media release.
"Canada's laws must be changed to
prevent anything like this from happening again in the future. The
report makes suggestions as to how federal lawyers might conduct their
cases better in order to protect Canadians' rights — with respect,
that's not good enough. The law must be changed to guarantee fairness
for Canadians whose freedom and lives are at risk."
Diab is
still waiting for the French Court of Appeal to deliver a ruling on
whether the court will uphold the decision that saw him released from
jail." The entire story can be read at:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/hassan-diab-extradition-france-1.5226033
Read the full Segal report on the Diab extradition : In his report, Mr. Segal wrote that
government lawyers had been criticized for the “energy they dedicated to
advancing what appeared to be a weak case, allegedly withholding
exculpatory evidence and making false representations to the extradition
judge.” However, he continued,
after reviewing materials and interviewing members of the parties, he
concluded that none of the criticisms made against the government
lawyers “have any merit." “My
conclusion that DOJ counsel acted in a manner that was ethical and
consistent – both with the law and IAG [international assistance group]
practices and policies – is based on firm factual foundation. “DOJ
counsel acted properly in vigorously advancing France’s case. We would
expect French authorities to do the same when Canada makes an
extradition request.”
PUBLISHER'S
NOTE: I am monitoring this case/issue. Keep your eye on the Charles
Smith Blog for reports on developments. The Toronto Star, my previous
employer for more than twenty incredible years, has put considerable
effort into exposing the harm caused by Dr. Charles Smith and his
protectors - and into pushing for reform of Ontario's forensic pediatric
pathology system. The Star has a "topic" section which focuses on
recent stories related to Dr. Charles Smith. It can be found at:
http://www.thestar.com/topic/charlessmith. Information on "The Charles
Smith Blog Award"- and its nomination process - can be found at:
http://smithforensic.blogspot.com/2011/05/charles-smith-blog-award-nominations.html
Please send any comments or information on other cases and issues of
interest to the readers of this blog to: hlevy15@gmail.com. Harold
Levy: Publisher: The Charles Smith Blog;