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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | March 2008 

Canadian Detainee in Mexico Hospitalized
email this pageprint this pageemail usCharles Rusnell - Canwest News Service
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Canadian Brenda Martin

Ottawa Must Help Get Brenda Martin Out of Mexican Jail, Her Supporters Say

Harper Urged to Intervene in Martin Case

Canadian Detainee in Mexico Hospitalized

Canadian Prisoner in Mexico 'Hanging By a Thread' After Latest Case Delay

No Decision on Canadian in Mexican Jail

Mexican Judge May Rule on Legality of Case Against Jailed Canadian Woman

Canadian Jailed in Mexico Placed on Suicide Watch

Supporters Losing Hope for Jailed Canadian
 
Mexican prison authorities have removed Canadian Brenda Martin from the general prison population and hospitalized her under 24-hour guard to ensure she does not kill herself.

"They took her out of her cell on Saturday and she is extremely heavily sedated," said Martin's childhood friend, Deb Tieleman, who has led the campaign to have her released.

Martin's already tenuous condition worsened after Mexican court officials Friday reneged on a promise to rule on a constitutional challenge to the charges that have kept her in a Guadalajara prison without trial for more than two years. Martin had previously been placed on a suicide watch inside the prison.

"I spoke to her on the phone and she sounded like a zombie, like she wasn't there," she said.

A Feb. 22 e-mail, obtained by the Edmonton Journal, shows Mexico's Foreign Minister Patricia Espinosa had promised Helena Guergis, Canada's secretary of state for consular services, a decision on Martin's case would be rendered Friday. Canada had been assured there was a two-month deadline, which was Friday, for issuing the ruling.

But, as it turned out, Mexico's courts were closed on Friday for a holiday.

"How on top of this file is Guergis if her office didn't even know that the courts were closed Friday?" Tieleman said.

Tieleman, and Liberal consular services critic Dan McTeague have repeatedly called on Guergis to issue a diplomatic note demanding Martin's release due to breaches of her legal and human rights. Guergis told Global National Friday that a number of diplomatic notes had already been sent to Mexico.

McTeague doesn't believe Guergis understands what constitutes a formal diplomatic note.

"I met with the Mexican ambassador last week and he was unaware of any diplomatic notes and he would be," McTeague said.

Guergis also told Global National she is prepared to return to Mexico to put more pressure on Mexican authorities to expedite Martin's case. She travelled to Mexico City and Guadalajara in January for a series of meetings with officials, including that country's foreign minister and attorney general.

Martin, a former native of Trenton, Ont. was employed as a chef by a former Albertan, Alyn Waage, in Puerto Vallarta for 10 months in 2001. Posing as a successful businessman, Waage was actually operating what is believed to the be one of the largest Internet based fraud scheme in history. He bilked 15,000 investors worldwide out of about $60 million.

Waage was eventually arrested and is serving a 10-year sentence in an American prison. Five years after Waage's arrest, Martin was picked up by Mexican police and charged with money laundering and being part of a criminal conspiracy. Although Waage provided a sworn affidavit stating that Martin had no involvement in, or knowledge of, the scheme she has remained in jail since Feb. 17, 2006.

Martin's new lawyers from Canada say there is no evidence in the court record to support the charges and they say her rights under Mexican and international law were violated because she was never provided with a proper translator.

Tieleman spoke with the Mexican ambassador last week. He told her there is a federal prosecutor in Guadalajara who will not let go of the case.

"The government needs to issue a strong diplomatic note so Brenda's case is taken out of the courts and made a political issue. If they don't, she will die in that prison and she is innocent."



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