VANCOUVER (CP) - The lawyer for a man
convicted in absentia in Italy for murdering 11 people at a
Nazi prison camp argued today against the constitutional
validity of sections of Canada's Extradition Act.
Italy has asked Canada to surrender Michael Seifert, now
79, so he can begin serving a life sentence imposed three
years ago by an Italian military court for offences that
occurred during the Second World War.
Seifert had been accused at the trial in Verona of
committing 15 murders. But he was convicted of torturing and
murdering 11 people at the SS-run Bolzano prison camp in Italy
between December 1944 and April 1945.
Defence lawyer Doug Christie told B.C. Supreme Court his
client's rights were breached under Canada's Charter of Rights
and Freedoms because Italy held the trial and reached a
verdict without the accused being there.
Christie told Justice Selwyn Romilly that he, not Canada's
justice minister, has jurisdiction to rule on the Extradition
Act's validity.
"The courts are moving away from the idea that just because
some other country chooses to indict that we automatically
rubber stamp these proceedings," Christie said, adding his
client is a Canadian citizen.
However, the Canadian government recently began the process
of stripping Seifert of his citizenship because the retired
sawmill worker lied to immigration officials about his past
when he came to Canada in 1951.
"A trial in absentia is fundamentally wrong and the
minister shouldn't have the power to give effect to it one way
or the other," Christie argued.
He also questioned whether Seifert's trial should have
occurred in the modern republic of Italy while the offences,
if they occurred, took place in what was not Italian territory
in 1944.
"It seems ridiculous that a country can request extradition
for an offence that occurred within their borders (but) that
occurred outside their borders," Christie said.
Federal prosecutor Roger McMeans told the court that such
historical debate is not part of the hearing.
Canada has extradition treaties with 50 countries and
people can be tried in absentia in 35 of those jurisdictions,
McMeans said.
He disagreed with Christie, saying Canada's justice
minister, not the judge, has jurisdiction to rule on the
constitutional validity of the Extradition Act.
"Extradition is a matter which only the minister may
grant."
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in 1994 that an
extradition judge should not be concerned with the territorial
aspect when a state requesting extradition has jurisdiction,
he said.
The highest court in the country also allows anyone who
wants to challenge the justice minister's surrender order for
extradition to seek a remedy through the Court of Appeal, he
said.
McMeans said Canada has had a treaty with Italy since 1873
to extradite those wanted for murder.
The Italian trial heard testimony about Seifert starving a
15-year-old prisoner to death, savagely beating another
teenager with a stick, hanging a prisoner on a fence until he
died, gouging a person's eyes out, beating prisoners before
shooting them and torturing a woman before killing her and her
daughter.
Canada's justice minister can refuse to grant a surrender
order in some cases, McMeans said.
That includes cases where it's believed extradition would
be unjust or oppressive, if it's based on a person's race,
religion or nationality or if the offence would be punishable
by the death penalty.
In such instances, the minister can get assurances from the
requesting state or make a surrender order subject to certain
conditions.