UK Citizens Extradition Fight

December 28, 2008

Amateur pyrotechnics couple face US-extradition hearing in January

No UK trial to establish evidence of supplying global crystal-meth labs By Billy Briggs.

A SCOTS couple who have four children face the possibility of prison and extradition to America next month despite having not stood trial in a court for the crime of which they are accused.

In a case that highlights the controversial impact on British justice of the post-9/11 extradition treaty signed between the UK and the US, Brian and Kerry Howes of Bo’ness, West Lothian, are facing extradition to America on allegations of supplying chemicals over the internet in a conspiracy to produce crystal meth.

The couple, who deny the charges, face a preliminary extradition hearing at the high court in Edinburgh on January 14. They fear they will be remanded in custody and their four children will go into care ahead of their removal to America.

Kerryandbrianhowes

Under the terms of the treaty, the US can apply to have someone extradited without any trial taking place in the UK. On signing the Extradition Act 2003, the then home secretary, David Blunkett, removed the obligation on US law enforcement agencies to present British courts with prima facie evidence of criminality. Thanks to the Royal Prerogative, the treaty became law without parliamentary debate, which means that the US must only provide “written information” relating to an alleged wrongdoing.

Crystal meth – a form of amphetamine that has been crystallised so that it can be smoked – is a highly dangerous and addictive drug that has pervaded the poorer sections of American society for the past 20 years. Pseudoephedrine, iodine and red phosphorus are the three main chemicals required to make the drug, which produces a high that may last 12 hours or more.

BRIAN HOWES EXTRADITION FIGHT 003Brian Howes – an amateur pyrotechnician who sold chemicals in the UK legally – denies that he and his wife broke the law by selling iodine and red phosphorus through their internet business. But federal prosecutors at the Drug Enforcement Agency in Arizona allege they were part of a drugs racket supplying a global network of meth labs in the United States, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and other countries.

Howes said their children will have to go into care if they are remanded in custody and that his wife, Kerry, is 23 weeks pregnant and faces giving birth to their fifth child on a chain gang in Arizona. “We just want a fair trial in the UK but that is not going to happen as the extradition treaty replaces the word evidence’ with information’ – and information is accepted as true, that is the wording of the act. We have no faith in these proceedings as the files from our previous solicitors have not arrived with our current solicitors after three months, so no defence has been able to be mounted.

“In England, people are bailed right up to the House of Lords and then the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), but we will be remanded during or after the high court hearing in Edinburgh. We need help with a fund to fight in the ECHR and then we may have a chance of bail. The Scottish legal aid system does not pay for this – in England it is even afforded to people who have confessed to a crime.”

Brian Howes Family

Brian Howes Family

While a passionate debate raged across Britain about the 42-day limit for terror suspects, Brian, 44, and, Kerry-Ann, 30, previously spent 214 days on remand in prison, a detention that lasted five times longer than the proposed terror suspect threshold passed by the House of Commons in June but recently rejected by the House of Lords.

People can be held on remand indefinitely under the extradition treaty.

December 27, 2008

Justice delayed: Kyle’s babysitter spent three years in prison for a crime she did not commit

Three years ago Suzanne was jailed for a little boy’s murder. But a damning investigation by the Mail found police had missed key evidence. Days after being released, she tells her haunting story to the man who helped clear her.
By John Sweeney
Last updated at 2:50 AM on 27th December 2008

Kyle-1

Kyle Fisher, with his obvious eye injury

For Suzanne Holdsworth, the long, dark December nights were always the worst. But then, every minute she spent incarcerated in Low Newton prison, County Durham, was a living nightmare.

As the monotonous weeks and months stretched on, she would often sit and wonder how her partner and two daughters were coping without her.

But it was at night, in her sparse, cramped cell, that the 38-year-old mother would lie awake, weeping silent lonely tears and wondering if she would ever spend another Christmas and New Year with her family again.

‘Everybody who’s got children and who’s in prison knows that every day is hell, but birthdays, Christmas Day and New Year’s Eve are the worst days of your life,’ she says. ‘Everyone else is having a happy time with their families, but you are locked inside.

‘You can’t have visits on Christmas Day: you have phone calls, but only at certain times of the day. All that me and the other girls wanted to do was talk to our children all day.

‘But there’s nothing you can do but close the door behind you and cry and cry and cry.’

Were Suzanne a cold-blooded killer, or even a part-time petty criminal, it might be hard to feel any sympathy.

But the fact is she was serving a life sentence for a crime she did not commit.

In 2005, she was convicted of the murder of two-year-old Kyle Fisher, the son of a 19-year-old single mother who had left him in her charge. Suzanne has always denied harming the little boy in her care.

She was jailed for life for Kyle’s murder. In May this year, however, the Court of Appeal ruled that her conviction was unsafe after new medical evidence emerged suggesting the baby may have died from an epileptic seizure. A retrial was ordered, and at the new trial a jury unanimously found Suzanne not guilty.

Just eight days ago, on December 18, Suzanne was freed. She stood, hand-in-hand with her partner Lee Spencer, on the steps of Teesside Crown Court, enjoying her first taste of freedom in more than 1,000 days.

She is now home, spending Christmas and New Year with Lee and daughters Lesley, 20, and Jamie-Leigh, 14, as well as her new grandson, Matthew.

She falters as she speaks: ‘Did I ever think this day would come? No. I thought I would be in prison forever.’

Holdsworth-family

An emotional Suzanne Holdsworth leaves Teeside Crown Court after being found not guilty in her retrial for the murder of Kyle Fisher

At the time of Kyle’s death, police investigating accused Suzanne, from Seacroft, Leeds, of repeatedly smashing his head against a banister in a fit of rage.

‘I never harmed him, I loved him,’ she said, and certainly it left family and friends bewildered that the woman they called a modern-day Mary Poppins could have any connection to such horror.

But Cleveland police were adamant: Suzanne Holdsworth, a former supermarket shelf-stacker, was a brazen liar and a baby killer.

Only something didn’t quite add up. If there was a smashing of Kyle’s head into a wooden banister, why was there no sign of impact? No blood, no hair, no traces of Kyle’s skin anywhere in Suzanne’s house. Why had no DNA test  -  which could have cleared Suzanne in the first instance  -  ever been carried out?

‘It was horrendous’

Kyle also suffered from myriad problems. First, heterotopia  -  brain matter in the wrong place, which can cause fits; second, megalencephaly  -  an abnormally big brain, which can cause fits; third, hydrocephaly  -  water on the brain, which can also cause fits; fourth, subdural haemorrhage, which can also cause fits.

Fifth, Kyle had been accidentally stabbed in the brain, in someone else’s care, a year before he died  -  a terrible injury that caused his eye to droop as his damaged brain squeezed down ‘like toothpaste through the tube’. It was pressing down through a hole in his eye socket onto the back of his eye.

Stabbing, squeezing and scarring of the brain can cause fits, too. And fits can kill.

These five brain disorders, any one of which could trigger an epileptic fit, eluded Cleveland Police’s ‘relentless investigation’.

So when Suzanne told the first trial jury in 2005 that Kyle had suffered from a fit, no one believed her.

‘I remember the verdict coming,’ says Suzanne, who even now is traumatised when talking about her ordeal. ‘I remember seeing my partner Lee. Next minute, I was in a prison cell with just a bed and a CCTV camera looking at me. It was horrendous. Having no freedom, having people tell you what to do all the time.

Clare Fisher, Kyle’s mum, had gone out clubbing and left her son in Suzanne’s care.

Clair-fisher

‘Missing my two children was the most terrible thing, and to begin with some of the other prisoners called me names: nonce, child killer. It didn’t matter that I knew I’d done nothing wrong, no one can ever understand what that feeling is like  -  to be locked away in such a dreadful place and for murder no less, when you have done nothing wrong.’

Today, as they prepare to welcome in 2009, she and Lee, a lorry driver, want to put the past behind them. But they are angry and bitter at how such a grotesque miscarriage of justice could tear their family apart for over four years.

I first reported on the possibility that Suzanne was in jail thanks to a grotesque miscarriage of justice a year ago for BBC2′s Newsnight.

Since 2001, I have helped free or clear the names of eight people who have been wrongly accused of child murder and manslaughter, starting with cot death mothers Sally Clark, who died of grief last year, Angela Cannings and Donna Anthony.

All eight stories are double tragedies: the death of a child compounded by the false conviction of an innocent parent or carer. In seven of the eight cases, police and the courts were misled by rogue experts such as Professor Sir Roy Meadow or disputed scientific theories such as ‘shaken baby syndrome’.

I was approached about Suzanne’s case by her lawyer, whom I had worked with on previous occasions and court cases. The minute he showed me all the evidence  -  NOT taken into account by police officers working on the original murder inquiry  -  it seemed obvious that this was one of the worst miscarriages of justice I had ever encountered.

And it was also deeply troubling because it raises questions about the thoroughness of the original inquiry carried out by Cleveland Police.

It was led by Detective Superintendent Tony Hutchinson, who has since retired.

Hutchinson was Cleveland’s bullet-headed super-cop, leading dozens of murder inquiries, who shot to international fame when he nailed missing ‘canoe man’ John Darwin.

Hutchinson maintained after Suzanne’s first trial that she ‘must have known very quickly that she had inflicted serious, if not fatal, injuries, and while she called for medical assistance’  -  the 999 call  -  ‘she also began to manipulate the situation. She very calmly applied her mind as to how she would explain the injury to the authorities.’

Could she really be such a calculating killer, though? Naturally, Suzanne’s own version of events  -  and the 999 call itself, which was broadcast last week for the first time  -  does not appear to suggest it.

It was late evening on July 21, 2004, when Suzanne was babysitting Kyle because his mother Clare Fisher had gone out clubbing. Suzanne’s daughters were with Lee, who was working abroad.

Jon Taylor, Kyle’s father, has said he never believed Suzanne was responsible for his son’s murder

John-taylor

Suzanne explains the events of that terrible night: ‘Clare came over with Kyle, then went out to a nightclub with a friend. Kyle had his yoghurt and juice and we sat together, watching the reality show Big Brother on TV.

‘We were having a lovely evening and then I must have yawned, because Kyle said: “Suzie tired”. Then, as he shuffled to get off the sofa, his head went down, in a sort of flopping motion. I moved the coffee table out of the way and his head fell to the floor. I put him down on the sofa and threw water on him, the shock of it should have woken him because he hated water. Nothing. I dialled 999.’

A miscarriage of justice

The emergency call was played in court at Suzanne’s trial. In it, clearly panicking, Suzanne describes Kyle as going ‘all floppy, he’s not breathing, his eyes are rolling and everything’  -  a classic description of an epileptic fit.

Suzanne is screaming and sobbing so much the operator cannot understand what she is saying, hard to reconcile with Hutchinson’s concept of a calm, manipulative mind at work.

Then there is the so-called murder weapon. Andrew Robertson QC, prosecuting, alleged at trial and retrial that Suzanne had smashed Kyle’s head against a banister at her house. But nothing was visible on the banister  -  no dent, no blood, nothing.

At the first trial, Judge Grigson said that the evidence presented by the Crown’s forensic expert was of ‘breathtaking banality’.

At the second trial, the jury pointedly asked whether Kyle’s DNA was on the banister. The answer? No tests had been carried out.

Lee, Suzanne’s partner, shakes his head in disbelief, still unable to fathom why the police didn’t carry out tests on the banister.

‘They didn’t do a DNA test on the alleged weapon. I’m no Sherlock Holmes, but what kind of investigation was that?’ he says. ‘DNA profiling can distinguish between snot, tears, saliva, hair follicles, scalp. Technology can distinguish between all of them, but no DNA test was done.’

John-sweeney

The author, investigative reporter John Sweeney, who helped clear Suzanne Holdsworth of murder

Then there is the question of Kyle’s general well-being. Cleveland Police said that Kyle was an essentially healthy boy whom Suzanne had murdered.

‘They told me again and again, “You did it, you did it”,’ says Suzanne. ‘They were so wrong. Look at his drooping eye.’

On March, 15, 2003  -  more than a year before he died  -  Kyle was taken to hospital with an injury to that eye.

On that very day, Lee had noticed Clare Fisher cradling her injured son outside her house in Troutpool Close, Hartlepool. She explained that he had fallen from his pram onto a spike from a fireguard. His eye socket was filling with blood.

It was patched up, but months later when Kyle’s eye began to droop, he was taken back to the James Cook hospital in Hartlepool, and in February 2004 he was seen by face surgeon Professor Brian Avery and brain surgeon Sid Marks.

They carried out brain scans, found a hole in the eye socket through which the brain was squeezing ‘like toothpaste through the tube’ and planned to operate on him. This should have been crucial evidence in the investigation. But Cleveland Police never took statements from the two surgeons.

Suzanne is livid about what appears to be a gross lapse of normal police procedure: ‘The drooping eye should have been investigated properly by the police,’ she says.

‘Kyle died of a head injury. The droopy eye was a head injury.’

What angered Suzanne and Lee most, though, was that her own defence team didn’t call a single defence expert at her first trial.

Finally, a free woman

After Suzanne was convicted, Lee  -  who never doubted her innocence  -  found a new defence solicitor, Campbell Malone. He helped free wrongly convicted Stefan Kiszko, who spent 16 years in prison for the murder of schoolgirl Lesley Molseed.

Malone contacted me and we set about gathering the evidence that would help clear Suzanne’s name. Malone found three experts on human brain disorders.

Dr Waney Squier, a neuropathologist at Oxford University, was the first to identify that Kyle was in danger of suffering fits from his brain abnormalities and his injury, and the conviction against Suzanne could be a miscarriage of justice.

Last December, while Suzanne was still in prison, Dr Squier told BBC’s Newsnight programme that Kyle had ‘abnormalities in his brain that would predispose him to having seizures. And seizures can kill.’

In her view it was ‘extremely unlikely’ Suzanne had killed Kyle.

Kyle12

Kyle’s eye was seriously injured in a freak accident a year before his death

After the second trial, expert for the defence Bill Dobyns, professor of neurology, paediatrics and genetics at Chicago University, told me: ‘It’s almost embarrassing the number of medical factors they (the police and prosecution) first completely missed, and when I and other defence witnesses pointed out, they then ignored.’

On top of this, there is also the ordinary evidence of Suzanne’s character. Trusted by friends and family as a babysitter, Suzanne was said to be ‘very good with children’.

Even Kyle’s father  -  who had long since split with Kyle’s mother  -  believed her to be innocent.

But the same could not be said for the character of Kyle’s own mother. One woman juror at the second trial was seen holding her hand in front of her mouth in horror as the court watched a video of Clare Fisher’s house: clothes strewn about, objects were lying around, and Kyle’s bedroom looked like a junkyard, with a broken cot on the floor.

Judge Grigson at the first trial told the jury that the house had been described as a ‘s***-pit’.

Clare even admitted at the second trial that she had been a negligent, ‘home-alone’ mother.

Four nights before he died, she had locked Kyle in a bedroom by blocking the door with a broom handle and tying it with a belt, before going out clubbing.

A neighbour heard Kyle crying and called the police. Suzanne only realised what had happened afterwards, but says Clare asked her to cover up and say she had been with Kyle that night to stop Clare getting into trouble. Suzanne agreed to help her friend and neighbour.

‘I was wrong to cover up for Clare,’ says Suzanne. ‘I told a white lie  -  but the prosecution made it much darker. I ended up paying for it for three years inside.’

Another issue at both trials was unexplained bruising on Kyle’s head. Both babysitter and mother deny causing the bruising.

Another expert, Professor Renzo Guerrini from the University of Florence, gave evidence that it could have been caused by Kyle himself, banging his own head in an unseen fit. And if the bruising had been caused by one of the two women, then which one?

As Suzanne adjusts to life back with her family, Cleveland Police have announced they will not be apologising for what they describe as a ‘thorough, diligent and professional investigation’.

Chief Constable Sean Price says: ‘I can’t criticise my officers for doing their job. The reason we have jury trials is so they can decide when they have heard all the facts.

‘I don’t really have any intention of speaking to Suzanne Holdsworth, and she probably just wants to be allowed to get on with things now.’

Suzanne and Lee are naturally disappointed, but not surprised, at the police’s reaction.

‘I spent three years in prison for a murder that didn’t happen so the chief constable is wrong,’ says Suzanne.

‘I’ll never forget Kyle. I loved him very much, but it is utterly wrong that I have had to suffer, too, for something I haven’t done. Yes, I’m thankful to be free, but an apology is something I would like very much.’

December 13, 2008

Censorship and the national press and media

BRIAN HOWES EXTRADITION FEAR

Newspapers are no longer interested in justice, they avoid the issues of national importance like the 2003 Extradition Act which allows the US to request any person in the UK for any reason and does not even need a shred of “evidence”.

Instead of the national newspapers reporting this injustice they report what the request is for and dramatise the allegations that the US have made making it even more unlikely that the person or persons being requested will not get bail or fair treatment, and it is a regular occurrence to be remanded to prison without evidence at the request of US to spend months and even years in prison without charge or evidence. The national Media do sometime highlight the 2003 extradition act if you are “rich”

When I first investigated how many people are currently waiting to be sent to the US with no evidence ever shown or the right to defend yourself in court with your own evidence of innocence, Mr Wood at the Home Office who is very close to Jacqui Smith agreed it was about 30 UK citizens waiting to be sent to the US, but on my further investigation it is double that about 60 people.

The sort of people being extradited range from alleged terrorists, alleged terrorist sympathiser’s, business men and women, ordinary people who are doing ordinary legal activities in the UK.  The US prosecutor is trained in the art of being liberal with the truth to get his extradition and the “UK government are aware of this” which is of even more concern.

The US has a wide range of extradition crimes and they have a manual they use in order to get an extradition granted even if it means making false statements to a Grand jury this is power for the cause for the US government as they feel that their law is our law and are going to enforce it whether the UK government like it or not. The US government in the extradition manual I will link to later sets forth the right of the US CIA and FBI to abduct UK citizens if an extradition is not granted. The term is “extraordinary rendition” and has been subject to many complaints from European Governments. “Here is an example of a just maximum security prison not Supermax where most extradition cases are held”

Unfair Illegal Extradition

Unfair Illegal Extradition

You may be thinking now that if you are abducted via an extraordinary rendition then when you go in front of a US Judge you can tell him you were kidnapped and he will release you? Well nothing could be further from the truth it is well established US law that the Judge can only look at the indictment he has on you and not the abduction.

Then bail must be thought about as it is important to get bail whether it is extraordinary rendition or extradition and yes it is looked at as that is US law but it is also well established in US law courts that anybody and I mean anybody extradited to the US will not get bail.

And then there is the matter of how long you might be remanded and it can be between one and three years depending how long the waiting list is.

Oh then it is now that we move on to a solicitor and you do not even get to choose the solicitor of your choice as it is given to you by the court and this person will defend you but in most cases 97% have to make a plea bargain or risk the rest of their life in prison as the offence even though not illegal in the UK will be Illegal in the US and the difference in prison terms for the same crime is sometimes tenfold.

If you are unlucky and end up in a Supermax prison also called control unit prisons then you will live in a concrete cell with a concrete bed, everything will be concrete and if this is not bad enough you will not be looking out the window as there is none, and the walls are sound proofed in order to stop you communicating with other prisoners. You do not even have contact with the prison officers and meals are put under your door.

Then there is activities or should I say the lack of them, no TV no Radio and the US call it sensory deprivation and it will break you until you agree to anything and will do anything they say and this is not a story book I am writing I am writing facts that the UK and US governments do not want you to see, facts that could get me arrested but who is going to speak of these things? Not the media it seems, so since I have the evidence I will speak out and then maybe some clever reporter may ask “is this really true” and report it for all to see.

Well at least the US have the best medical facilities money can buy but unfortunately you will never get any sort of treatment unless you are dying or have medical insurance, no prescriptions and no calls to the UK and this is if you happen to end up in a regular federal facility.

The UK national media have allowed this to happen not through ignorance but for two other reasons, the first is that they sell more papers by telling a dramatic story of whatever the US may or may not have evidence of as the person being extradited will never see it or will the press or any media organisation or Court.

The second reason is censorship the government have some sort of hold over the national media in that they quote legal proceedings or criminal investigations to stop the news media from reporting and while this is happening the person who is being extradited is told by most by solicitors and QC’s not to publicise what is happening or you may end up in jail with your bail revoked.

Even though you may not have even been to the US to commit an alleged crime, the US has already classified you as a Fugitive so the normal rights to disclosure of evidence in the US do not apply. You can make a motion for this disclosure but the Judge will rule that a Fugitive cannot have access as he is evading US Justice and thus by re writing the definition of Fugitive completely the US allows further injustices to occur.

These further injustices continue throughout the civil extradition proceedings in that the person being extradited is commonly referred to by the prosecutor as a Fugitive and must be returned when the person has in most cases never even been there, unfortunately the Magistrate also revels in this behaviour and the Magistrate or Sheriff refer in the proceedings as it being “their case”

The UK prosecutor works on the behalf of the US trying to secure an extradition as soon as is possible at the expense of the UK tax payer and this costs lots of money as with any person who wishes to resist this Illegal extradition must apply for legal aid, but the US have even covered themselves in this as many cases are refused the Senior council that is needed in complicated extradition cases where there is a real point of law that needs addressing.

Recently over 100 UK citizens have been extradited to the US and none have returned to the UK and that is another cause for concern as to extradite a US citizen the UK government needs to show evidence of probable cause and that is why US citizens are not being sent to the UK among other political reasons.

So it should also be mentioned that it is in the country that the proceedings are being held in, that country pays in full all costs in the case for the US and UK.

It is also not surprising then that your solicitor gives you no hope of winning the case and justice prevailing. The solicitor also knows that the US are monitoring his and his clients every phone call, emails and internet activity among other means at their disposal.

Here is a link to the prosecutors emails and threats.

I am going to update this page daily in order to get out the full extent of US extradition even though the US authorities have threatened me with arrest as they consider what I am writing Illegal.

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