Clément Fortin's reply to Mr. Scullion's letter of May 15, 2014
Saint-Sauveur, May 22nd, 2014
Mr. Kerry Scullion, Director/General Counsel
Criminal Conviction Review Group
284 Wellington Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0H8
Re.
Wilbert Coffin – Request for pardon
Dear Mr. Scullion
Many thanks for your reply dated May 15, 2014.
In my request for Coffin’s pardon, I mentioned post-traumatic stress and
abuse of alcohol as examples of the changes that have taken place in the means
of defense that accused may invoke since Coffin's trial was held. But if the
impossible were to happen and Coffin's trial were held today, such facts would
certainly be introduced as evidence
Having addressed my request to the Minister of Justice and the Minister
of Public Safety, I was expecting an answer from them telling me that they
launched the process whereby pardon may be granted posthumously to Wilbert
Coffin for his criminal conviction of the murder of Richard Lindsey.
Under the Royal Prerogative of Mercy, the Queen has granted a posthumous
pardon to Alan Turing convicted of gross indecency. In the maze of Canadian
laws and regulations you could surely find a way to achieve the same result in
favor of Wilbert Coffin. I hoped that you would help me in seeking Coffin's
pardon, and that you should find a way to convince your superiors of the
necessity and humane generosity of such a deed.
I do not think that the Coffin family cares about what Ministers are
empowered to grant pardon to their beloved one. Let me
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remind you that many politicians, including the current Minister of
Public Safety, pledged support to the Coffin family. Marie Coffin, Wilbert's
sister, believed their promises and went around the Gaspé Peninsula selling
calendars in the hope that the money she collected would help her brother's
case.
Furthermore, it seems preposterous that Crown Ministers would have to
wait for a submission from The Association in Defence of the Wrongly Convicted
(AIDWYC) to exercise their powers when they know it will never come.
If the Minister of Justice and the Minister of Public Safety tell me
that they do not receive my request, I will ask the Prime Minister. In the
negative, as a last resort, I will implore the representative of the Queen in
Canada.
This affair has been dragging on for more than seven years and thanks to
your help it may now come to fruition.
I am sending a copy of your letter and of this letter to the Minister of
Justice and Attorney General of Canada and the Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness asking them again to reply to my request.
Yours truly,
Clément Fortin, retired lawyer
40 de la Marquise
Street
Saint-Sauveur
(Québec) J0R 1R4