Pubdate: Sun, 23 Mar 2008 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 The London Free Press Contact: http://www.lfpress.com/cgi-bin/comments.cgi?c=letters_editor Website: http://www.lfpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Greg Weston PRISONER HOPES TO SEE ENLIGHTENMENT OF DAY The federal public safety minister is tough on Canadians in foreign jails. If the tragic plight of Brenda Martin follows the expected course, the fate of this desperate Canadian trapped in a Mexican prison without trial for more than two years will likely come to rest in the hands of Stockwell Day. Hold the applause. Canada's public safety minister has the singular power to decide if Martin would be allowed to return home to serve any sentence she might receive in our penal and parole system. Generally speaking, Day's involvement in repatriating Canadians from foreign prisons does not call for champagne. Over the decades, Canada has negotiated international prisoner transfer treaties with 70 countries around the world, including Mexico, as an essential component of a foreign policy rooted in the federal government's caring for its citizens abroad. In the past 30 years, prisoner transfers have been the final lifeline for over 1,350 Canadians imprisoned in foreign hellholes. It is likely Martin's only hope. Now the subject of a 24-hour suicide watch, Martin could roll the dice with Mexican justice and continue her already long and likely futile quest to be exonerated on fraud charges. Alternatively, the Mexicans are apparently ready to convict her without a trial or let her plead guilty to a relatively minor offence, just to get rid of her and all the diplomatic kerfuffle her case is causing. Theoretically, a conviction could put her on a plane back to Canada as soon as the two governments could shuffle the paperwork for a prisoner transfer. With the more than two years she has already spent behind bars in Mexico, and the understanding of parole officials here, Martin would likely never see the inside of a Canadian jail. At least, that's how it would all work if Stockwell Day decided this particular Canadian is worthy of his grace. Until recently and with relatively few exceptions, most Canadians imprisoned abroad who have applied to transfer back to their home and native lockup have been automatically accepted where the countries holding them agreed to let them go. Ministerial approval in Canada, by and large, has been a rubber stamp. But all that quietly changed after the current Conservative government came to power in 2006 -- more precisely, after Day became public safety minister and resident salesman of all things supposedly tough on crime. As supreme arbiter of the prisoner transfer program, Day seems to have a philosophy perhaps best described as: Screw them. An internal government report obtained by Sun Media indicates that in Day's first year in office, transfer requests from desperate Canadians in foreign prisons simply piled up in his in-basket, delayed sometimes months at a time. Those that did clear the minister's desk were rejected in record numbers. The report shows that in the four years prior to the Conservatives coming to office, for instance, 362 Canadians successfully transferred from foreign prisons to Canadian lockups. During the first year Day took over approvals, the total number of transfers dropped by almost half. This was apparently no statistical anomaly. In fact, Day has taken to boasting about letting convicted Canadians rot wherever they happen to be arrested. In 2006, the minister wrote in a British Columbia community newspaper: "B.C. dope dealers busted in the U.S. are demanding to be transferred back to cosier Canadian jails and reduced prison times. "Memo to drug dealers: I'm no dope. . . . Enjoy the U.S." Aside from the political morality of Day's using his authority under the prisoner exchange program to impose his personal views, what's the point of it all? Most of the prisoner transfers turned down by Day are being rejected on grounds they "would jeopardize the safety of Canadians and the security of Canada." But those considerations were meant to apply to terrorists and organized crime. For all others, the whole point of the prisoner transfer program, as explained by Day's own department, is to facilitate rehabilitation in a Canadian institution and ensure supervised release on parole. The alternative is serious felons being deported back to Canada at the end of their foreign sentences, and dumped straight onto our streets. Perhaps faced with a growing threat of lawsuits and public protest from families of Canadians jailed abroad, Day has apparently been allowing prisoner transfers at more normal rates recently. As Brenda Martin reaches for what may be her only lifeline out of Mexican hell, she can only pray for the amazing grace of Stockwell Day. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek