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Penal Reform in Oaxaca, Mexico

 

POWERFUL PENAL REFORM TALKS HELD

A mock murder trial marked the highlight of a recent conference regarding proposed revolutionary changes to Oaxaca's code of criminal procedure. About 4,000 lawyers, academics, bureaucrats and politicians including the governor and mayor packed two salons at Misi n de Los ?ngeles to first hear impassioned pleas for the passage of the draft legislation and then watch as a three judge panel evaluated evidence and submissions tendered by teams of barristers for the prosecution and defense.

Oaxaca is one of a handful of Mexico's 32 states pioneering a project intended to break down a Napoleonic inquisitorial system and replace it with the more British adversarial system as practiced in Canada and the USA. Chief Prosecutor Patricia Villanueva's discourse was one of a number of which was peppered with phrases such as due process, procedural fairness, judicial restraint and impartiality, and advancement of the principles of democracy, human rights and presumption of innocence.

Attendees witnessed first hand how the trial of "El Tigre" ? would unfold. He allegedly shot his neighbour, a couple of weeks after threatening to do so upon learning that his wife had been insulted by the deceased. The only eyewitness that early morning was a gentleman who'd been drinking and smoking marijuana all night, as a result of which his senses of observation had been dulled. But the forensic evidence pointed to the accused, a former drug dealer now in rehab, as the only possible suspect, fingerprint on the pistol and gunshot residue on his right hand. He admitted to being in a struggle to quell tempers, but no more. The realism was striking, right down to The Tiger's answer on cross-examination as to why he didn't phone police when he heard a ruckus on the street, rather than run outside: "I couldn't. My phone service had been cut off because I hadn't paid the previous month's bill." ? The retort struck a familiar chord with Mexicans as the audience roared.

Throughout the day a strong undercurrent could be sensed. Could Oaxaca actually create a more efficient and expedient criminal dispute resolution model which would arrest the sweeping and arbitrary powers of the Minsterio P blico (office of the Attorney General)? Is it realistic to even attempt to create procedures which would result in an entire criminal proceeding, from arrest to sentencing, concluding in 4 months as the moderator submitted would be the case, instead of the current snail's pace practice which can keep the innocent behind bars for years pending trial? It all seemed a little overly optimistic for a stunned crowd. In response to my questioning, a local lawyer commented "it's like something out of a movie," ? while a judge simply answered "radically different." ?

COMMENTARY: IS OAXACA RIPE FOR REFORM?

It took a while to sink in. Why the reticence to the dramatic changes proposed for the Mexican penal system, when civil rights groups have for years been craving major transformation towards "truth, justice and the American way?" ? When asked for the most important change that reform would bring to the current system, a lawyer attending the recent conference on Reform to the Superior Court of Justice's Penal Code answered: the Ministerio P blico (M.P.) would be stripped of its arbitrary and punitive powers which at present lack appropriate judicial sanction and supervision.

Currently, because of the command it wields, the M.P. strikes fear in the hearts of those Oaxacans not entirely on the side of righteousness. The mere allegation of wrongdoing can lead to a swift period of incarceration without a judicial finding of even a probability of guilt...not for only alleged breaches of society's more serious standards which north of the border would result in incarceration without bail pending trial (i.e. a murder charge), but rather for the purported committing of lesser faux pas more in the nature of civil wrongs such as theft, fraud and breach of trust. If it looks like on balance you probably did it, off you go, directly to jail: do not pass go, do not collect $200.

This liberal leaning writer is not convinced that penal reform should occur prior to the advent of more basic alterations to the Mexican social order. Thrice in the past year the power of the M.P. has served me well. Under similar circumstances to those which have befallen me here, in Toronto I would still be waiting for justice, and in fact its arrival might never have produced a just result. But in Oaxaca , noted for its incongruities:

1) The fellow who was living in and looking after our home pending our permanent residence in Oaxaca left us with outstanding utility bills and damaged contents, and he outright defrauded us of cash. The threat of contacting the M.P. caused his family members to agree to pay his debt, and they did. Otherwise, he was facing jail for breach of trust, theft, etc. North of the Rio Grande he might have been charged by the police, but would have entered into a plea bargain for a suspended sentence and probation. The civil proceeding to recover our losses would have taken years, and in the end our net recovery would have been half.

2) Our cleaning lady stole cash from us. If we went to the M.P. she was looking at immediate incarceration for perhaps 2 - 3 years...even though we had no documentary proof of the theft. After getting on her knees and showing my wife photos of her young children while begging and crying and initially denying the theft, she signed a payment agreement and in exchange for her honoring it we agreed to take no further steps. The result in El Norte? Same as the first case.

3) The secretary at the Honda dealership gave me an official receipt upon tendering her with my final cash installment for my motorcycle. When I returned for my factura, the official document enabling me to license the bike, the general manager exclaimed: "What last payment?!" ? Six of us including the scoundrel and her lawyer signed a lengthy legal document following which I received my factura. If she fails to pay Honda, you guessed it.

Will the foregoing fast and economic justice in civil and quasi-criminal matters be lost if we adopt a British common law model at this juncture in the transformation of Mexican society? Are there not such circumstances where the presumption of innocence and taking care not to pre-judge ought to take a back seat to swift sweet justice? Should there not be qualification to the adage it's better to let 10,000 criminals go than wrongly convict a single innocent? Will the impoverished in Oaxaca have even less access to fairness under the proposed regime if implemented now? Are there perhaps other more critical social concerns that should be addressed as a precursor to or at minimum alongside overhauling the legal system such as poverty and education?

Author: Alvin Starkman
 
Author Bio:

Alvin Starkman

Alvin Starkman, M.A., LL.B., is a resident of Oaxaca, Mexico, and together with wife Arlene operates Casa Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast, a unique bed and breakfast experience in the heart of Southern Mexico. Mr. Starkman received his Masters degree in Social Anthropology from York University in Toronto in 1978, taught for a few years, and subsequently began attending Osgoode Hall Law School, becoming licensed by the Law Society of Upper Canada in 1986. Until 2004 he was a partner at Banks & Starkman, Barristers & Solicitors, specializing in family law, with employment law, personal injuries and commercial litigation rounding out his practice. While a frequent traveler to Oaxaca since 1991, it was not until he ceased practicing law that he took up permanent residence in the state capital. In his spare time Mr. Starkman takes small groups of up to 4 people to tour the craft villages, towns on their market days, ruins and other sites depending on his clients? specific interests; writes restaurant reviews and articles about life and the rich multiplicity of cultural traditions in Oaxaca; does monthly translations from Spanish to English for a local monthly newspaper; and keep his legal mind working by writing a bi-monthly column for a national antiques newspaper called The Upper Canadian, about antiques, auctions and the law.

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