*************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; DESCHENE.008 = 1988-02-17 letter to Deschenes; 1993-10-07 *************************************************************************** Dear Subscribers: In his reply to my original letter, after a telephone call asking him to confirm receipt of the material, Justice Deschenes simply did not respond to my concerns. He did not reply to my letter below: --------------------------------------------------------------------------- February 17, 1988 The Honourable Jules Deschenes Cour Superieure du Quebec Palais de Justice 1, Rue Notre-Dame Est Montreal, Quebec H2Y 1B6 Dear sir: In your response of Dec. 17, 1987 to my letter to you dated Aug. 17, 1987, you completely ignore the three specific issues I raised. I therefore repeat them verbatim: (1) Have you read, or are you familiar with, Soviet Evidence in North American Courts, by Paul Zumbakis, and Nazi War Criminals in America, by Lydia Demjanjuk? If so, why have they not been included in the bibliography of the Report? (2) On page 827 of the Report, it is admitted that "In 96% of the cases which the Commission has investigated it has not communicated with the suspects." This decision is absolutely unacceptable in a free, democratic society. I would strongly urge you to inform all the people whose names have been submitted to hostile organizations and/or governments by the Commission and by Robert P. Kaplan. (3) Throughout the Report, the Office of Special Investigations is described in glowing terms. I personally view the terms of reference of the OSI, its collaboration with the Soviet KGB and its methods of operation as a very serious subversion of the U.S. system of justice. It is frightening that you appear to be either ignorant of, or indifferent to, the miscarriages of justice being perpetrated by the OSI. I must respectfully ask you to reverse your favourable opinion of the OSI. In the third paragraph of your letter, you erroneously state that I do not give the Commission credit for Recommendation 80 advising against setting up an OSI in Canada. In my CRITIQUE Recommendation 80 is treated both on page 6 (finding 20) and page 26 (point 4) where I state: "Although in two short paragraphs on pages 828-829 Justice Deschenes concludes that Canada should not set up a U.S.-style OSI, he does so for political and sociological rather than judicial reasons." Throughout the rest of the Report you describe the OSI in very positive terms including the statement that the OSI standards of evidence are "clear, unequivocal and convincing --- not leaving the issue in doubt" when, in fact, the opposite is the reality. Your failure to include the studies of Paul Zumbakis and Lydia Demjanjuk in the bibliography of the Report must lead one to conclude either that the Commission did not examine the OSI and its operations in sufficient depth or that the Commission made a deliberate decision to suppress views contrary to those of the OSI from its Report. As for the issue where you decided not to inform 96 percent of the suspects that they had been investigated, let me quote from page 25 of my CRITIQUE: "In a free and democratic society one does not spend 21 months ferreting into the lives and histories of hundreds of innocent people, publicize and sensationalize the proceedings, and then not even inform the potential victims that they have been the subject of a thorough investigation based on unjustified accusations." I would suggest that you (and/or the federal government) have a moral obligation to protect the innocent by at least informing them that their names have been exposed to future harassment and blackmail. As you state in your letter, I do indeed feel that the Commission was wrong in its choice of "a very limited time span, geographical area and historical circumstances", and reject your justification in accepting the narrow terms of reference implied by the Order in Council in referring to "war crimes related to the activities of Nazi Germany during World War II" (pages 17 and 38 of Report). As outlined on page 12 of my CRITIQUE, it is ironic that your argument that: "It does not belong to this Commission to pass judgement on the wisdom of this decision or on its 'moral validity'; nor should the Commission extend its mandate beyond the borders of its obvious meaning" is completely analogous to the common defense at the Nurnberg Trials: "I was only following orders." As a judge of the Superior Court of Quebec you should have been particularly sensitive to questions of 'moral validity' and judicial validity. In following the blatantly discriminatory terms of reference of Order-in-Council #1985-348 rather than examining the issue from a universal perspective, you have compromised the moral and judicial validity of your Report as well as the subsequent legislation arising therefrom. The sad truth is that the legislation incorporated in Bill C-71 is based on your Report which examined a small subset of the more general problem of "extraterritorial crimes committed by Canadians or residents of Canada". The appropriate analogy would be for a surgeon to prescribe a delicate operation on the spleen based upon the examination of a smashed finger. An examination of the evolution of Bill C-71 from conception to birth is not reassuring to Canadians interested in the health and well-being of their democratic ideals and system of jurisprudence: (a) As so well documented in the Deschenes Commission Report, Order-in-Council 1985-348 was conceived in the deceit of the "Mengele Affair" perpetrated with the connivance of the sensation-seeking mass media. (b) The ability of the people drafting the Order-in-Council to limit its mandate to discriminate against a select minority of Canadians points to some very serious shortcomings of our political system. (c) The failure of a Superior Court judge to reject the blatantly discriminatory terms of reference brings into question the independence of the judiciary from political pressure. (d) The unnecessarily convoluted construction of Bill C-71 appears to be specifically designed to limit the applicability of the legislation to a select clientele so as to avoid prosecution of criminals and crimes not covered by the Deschenes Commission Inquiry. It also implies a dangerous politicization and bureaucratization of our judicial system. (e) Collusion among the three federal political parties to hurriedly pass Bill C-71 without allowing for public scrutiny and discussion as well as appropriate parliamentary debate will surely be recorded in history as a low point in Canadian parliamentary democracy. Such has been the illegitimate conception and birth of Bill C-71. And it has already spawned a "50 man task force" reminiscent of the OSI as well as secret negotiations between the Canadian Department of Justice and the Soviet KGB reminiscent of the infamous Ryan-Rudenko agreement between the OSI and the KGB. The statement of the Honourable Ray Hnatyshyn in the House of Commons on Feb. 3, 1988 that following the six basic precautions set out in your Report will ensure that Canadian standards of justice will prevail is pure wishful thinking as explained on pages 28 to 31 of my CRITIQUE. Secondly his statement appears to imply that such evidence gathered from witnesses in the Soviet Union will be admissible in Canadian courts in lieu of the witnesses appearing in person. Such a procedure cannot be reconciled with Canadian standards of justice. It appears that the subversion of the Canadian system of jurisprudence is well under way. Yours truly, William W. Zuzak, Ph.D., P.Eng. cc/ Ukrainian Canadian Committee *************************************************************************** Will Zuzak; DESCHENE.008 = 1988-02-17 letter to Deschenes; 1993-10-07 ***************************************************************************