29 février 2008

CORONER'S INQUEST COFFIN AFFAIR









EXCERPT FROM THE BROSSARD REPORT

Vol. 2, Part VII, chapter 4

CORONER’S INQUEST


(My literal translation)
I only mention that, for memory sake, at the time of the trial of a person accused of murder, nothing, absolutely nothing of what was said at the Coroner’s inquest must be brought to the attention of the jury that is hearing the case on the merits.
There has been no proof laid before us leaving to believe that this rule was infringed.
In other respects, no proof was submitted to us tending to establish that the twelve jurors of the Percé jury had been informed by whomsoever of what had taken place at the Coroner’s inquest, more particularly, regarding the verdict of the Coroner’s jury and the circumstances wherein it was rendered.
However, the proceedings before the Coroner are part of the whole process, which culminated in Coffin’s condemnation ; the Commission has investigated on the doings of those who were involved in the presentation of the proof before the Coroner’s jury.
Truly speaking, there were two Coroner’s inquests, a first one, in two sittings on the 18th and 27th of July 1953, when a verdict was rendered whereby the three American hunters had been assassinated by one or more unknown persons, and a second inquest, which was theoretically the resumption of the first one which had taken place on the 27th of August 1953.
The three sittings were presided by Doctor Lionel Rioux, then Coroner for the District of Gaspé, and who had occupied this function for several years.
Doctor Rioux was no doubt an honourable physician, honest, competent, and knowing well his medical science and devoted to his clients.
Unfortunately, one may not say the same thing regarding his competence and legal knowledge to act as Coroner.
Without it being necessary to overwhelm furthermore this physician and honest citizen, I find myself in the difficult obligation to point out the following facts which were brought to the knowledge of the Commission...
If one may judge him by the answers he has given us, Doctor Rioux knew nothing of the terms, meaning and the effects of the protection that must be granted a witness who appears before the Coroner’s inquest and who asks for it so that his answers may not incriminate him.
Doctor Rioux was so little certain of his rights and obligations as Coroner, that before the last sitting of the inquest, which was to be held on the 27th of August, deemed necessary to consult the then Solicitor General, the honourable Antoine Rivard, (who had become justice of Quebec Court of Queen’s Bench) as to the rights he might have to attempt to obtain from Wilbert Coffin admissions, and, at the end of the inquest, to call to his help Mtre Noël Dorion, then Crown prosecutor, for him to give the jurors, who had momentarily withdrawn from the court, instructions on their own duty and on the nature of the decision they had to reach.
Having received from the honourable Solicitor General the information that he had the right to ask any questions, apparently relevant, in order to obtain the truth from each witness, he appeared to have come to the conclusion that he had received from the Solicitor General full liberty to try to obtain admissions from Wilbert Coffin.
I shall come back later on what happened at the end of the sitting of the 27th of August. I shall first continue to enumerate errors and irregularities committed by Doctor Rioux.
At the sitting of the 27th of July, while the doctor did not have at his disposal an official stenographer, but had however the services of his secretary, the doctor took his own notes himself of what witnesses had declared while heard by him, more particularly, Wilbert Coffin. Then, an unwordable thing occurred, he had sheets signed in blank by the various witnesses, on which he would subsequently transcribe the testimony of each one of them. One or two days after the inquest, with the help of his own notes and that of his secretary might have taken, he transcribed on those sheets, so signed in blank, the witnesses’ testimonies. A second unwordable thing happened, all the depositions were transcribed in the French language, while the majority of witnesses had been heard in the English language. A third unwordable thing happened, he had obtained Coffin’s signature on two white sheets, one having been used for the transcription of Coffin’s deposition in the French language and the other in the English language. The Assistant Attorney General, Mtre C.E. Cantin, informed us that he had given formal instructions to correct this irregular procedure, and having, consequently, ignored, regarding Doctor Rioux, the irregularities which were revealed at the present enquiry.
Therefore, at the enquiry, the Doctor was examined at length on the exactness of Wilbert Coffin’s affirmations, transcribed by him in the English language; he certified their exactness more specifically with regard to the description given by Wilbert Coffin of the jeep he pretended having seen as well as his occupants. He affirmed categorically that Coffin had spoken of a jeep « which looked like an old army jeep, something like a panel”. He also affirmed that Coffin had not mentioned a station-wagon, contrarily to what he, Doctor Rioux, had declared on television, in December 1963 ; he explained that on television, having been « taken a little by surprise », he may have used the expression station-wagon, involuntarily, rather then that of an « army jeep ».
The proof has moreover revealed to us that one of the six members who had seated on the jury during the first two sittings of the inquest, one Mr. De Grouchy was replaced, for the second sitting by a new juror, notary Gabriel Bernard and that the Coroner did not think to read again to the jury, notwithstanding the replacement of one of the six members, the depositions which had been received and signed at the sitting of the 27th of July. (This change was unknown to Mtres Dorion and Maher).
In other respects, doctor Rioux informed the Commission that, while it was his desire to hear Coffin anew, he was dissuaded in so doing by Mtre Noël Dorion, the Crown attorney, and that he therefore did not call Coffin to be heard, who was at the time outside of the house where the inquest was being held.
Doctor Rioux pretended once more that it was at the request of Mtre Dorion, himself, who invited the latter to go before the members of the jury, behind a folding-screen, to give them instructions, and this, after the president of the jury, Mister Lloyd Annett, had come to see him in the course of the jury deliberations to inform him that the jury was not prepared to find Coffin « guilty » or « criminally responsible », (he does not know too well), because of an insufficient circumstantial evidence as to his responsibility for the murder, while he was satisfied as to his responsibility regarding theft. It is because, with reason, he did not consider a verdict in this direction satisfying that he accepted Mtre Dorion’s offer to go and give members of the jury explanations.
Mtre Dorion explained this morning to the Commission that, before going to the room where it was supposed to be held, he had informed the Coroner that it would be preferable not to hear Coffin, and that the latter seemed to have accepted his reasons, which were the following : he considered then, as always, unjust for an individual seriously suspected of being the author of a murder that he be examined at the inquest where he may be found criminally responsible for the death of the victim.
Mtre Dorion explained that, while the inquest was in progress, he had talked about it with Mtre Maher, Coffin’s attorney, who had not only been in agreement with him but he also had declared that it was his own desire that Coffin not been heard. As to his visit to the members of the jury, Mtre Dorion explained that it was not from his own initiative, but at the request of the Coroner himself, that he went to give them instructions and that he did so in the presence of the Coroner and Mtre Maher : On that point, Mtre Dorion was corroborated by Mtre Maher
Then, it appears that when he gave information to the members of the jury, while telling them that they must listen to the dictations of their conscience and base their verdict on the proof they had received, Mtre Dorion deemed timely to inform them that, whatever their verdict, Coffin would be charged of the murder of the Americans, and that, in accordance with the instructions he had received from the Department of the Attorney General. The proof submitted to us confirms that such instructions had effectively been given to Mtre Dorion before the inquest was held.
Mtre Dorion’s explanations, confirmed by Mtre Maher, were also, in substance, confirmed by the six members of the jury. However, it stems out from the testimonies of the jurors, that it was with a certain hesitation that they held Coffin criminally responsible and that it does not appear doubtful that they were strongly impressed by the information that, whatever their verdict, Coffin would be charged.
These numerous irregularities committed by the Coroner, the ignorance of the importance of stating what protection the witness is entitled to, the subversion of the Coroner to the Crown Attorney’s legal knowledge, his advice and to a certain extent to his instructions, the intervention of the Crown prosecutor with the members of the jury to let them know the decision of the Attorney General to charge Coffin of murder whatever their verdict, the obtaining a blank signature of witnesses on sheets designed to receive the transcript of their testimonies, transcripts of those testimonies in a language other than the one they had been given, were no doubt without legal significance on Coffin’s accusation ; it leads us to believe that they also did not have any effect on the jury, at trial, since they were not brought to their knowledge. Surely, the proof does not reveal that Mtre Noël Dorion had personally imposed himself while informing the Coroner, though his strong personality might have had an influence on him and on the members of the jury. Nonetheless, these facts laid in proof before us support the claims of those, and they are numerous, who believe that our Coroner’s act should be reassessed, revised and deeply modified. I shall have, at the end of this report, recommendations in this regard.
It is amusing to realize that the proof submitted to us, on the circumstances of the Coroner’s inquest, was not the subject of any criticisms or accusations, either in the books of Messrs. Belliveau and Hébert or on television.

10 commentaires:

Anonyme a dit...

Hi everyone as i said i would be updating as to how the training has been going i have just crossed the 1001 km mark yesterday i began on Oct 23 2007 that was my dads birthday and since then i am now able to walk at a pace of 6.5 km an hour and i'm up to walking for nearly 4.5 hours without stopping i added that last km just for dad hopefully i'm not out of line when i ask for help of each family member there there is a lot of members in our family i don't know how to reach all of them but hope you can pass this message onto them and anyone you think who can help there are three things i will need to be able to fulfill my walk to Ottawa first i will need a loan of a motor home hopefully some one will come forth with one all so i will need some one who can drive the motor home along behind me as we cross Canada and the last thing and i hate to have to ask for money but it will cost around $11,000 to 15,000 hopefully the price of gas remains about the same there is about 100 members in our family across North America and around the world that works out to about $100.00 per family there is no guarantee i will be able to get dad's name cleared but i will be able to make a lot of people understand more about what happened to dad 52 years ago i was going to be able to handle the money part myself but since i've not worked since May 1 2007 i've had to let two big jobs i had on the books to be done but since i had to have a bone removed from my right hand after a fall at work and have limited use of my hand now and being still on workers comp also everyone is welcome to walk along with me if you wish also i will be selling calendar's for the year 2009 the calendars will be able to be personalized with a picture of me and who ever buys one as well as t-shirts if anyone has any idea's on how to help raise funds for the walk can get back to me at jimca1@hotmail.com or by mail at 1503 smith rd, Gibsons,BC,v0n-1v6 or you can call me at 604-886-9762 if anyone is on facebook or my space or other site that will be able to help please feel free to post this message i have to have everything in place by May 1 2008 to be able to make this walk work Aidwyc has said they will be helping with the media as well now that i'm 100% sure i can do the walk now is the time to move onto raising the funds to be able to finish the job with the help of all our family we will be able to hold our rally on the hill on Sept 23 2008 its a tuesday hope everyone can be there

Thanks to everyone we can get this done James Coffin

Anonyme a dit...

ps anyone not up to date on my dad's case can come to http://stoddardsviews.blogspot.com/to learn the real truth

Anonyme a dit...

There were blank pages of paper signed by wilbert coffin? nothing written on them at the time of signing, so at least he would have got to read what was written there, BEFORE he signed them???....i beleive this was against the law!!!

Clément Fortin a dit...

You’re right, it is against the law. That's why justice Brossard points this out in his report. Fortunately, this irregularity had no consequence on Coffin since nothing that was done or said before the Coroner’s inquest could be brought to the attention of the Percé jury. Dr. Rioux did that through ignorance and not maliciously.

Anonyme a dit...

Félicitations pour votre travail. Ça prend du courage pour aller à contre-courant.
Question qui n'a pas rapport au dossier, mais qui intrigue le peintre que je suis : cette toile, c'est de vous ?

Clément Fortin a dit...

Elle est de ma conjointe Andrée. Elle représente l'église de Saint-Sauveur. Vous la verrez au mois de septembre dans le calendrier 2008 de Saint-Sauveur

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