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BLACK-SHEEP COMMENTARIES by THEY WALK THE CADMAN PATH TO JUSTICE April 1, 2009 IT is ordinary, quiet folk who constitute the great proportion of Canadian society; a solid base of people who give definition to our nation by maintaining and preserving moral and ethical characteristics handed down to us by so many dutiful generations. Today, ordinary people have internet communication
at their fingertips. With it they may combine together to make grassroots
politicking a major factor during an election: coalescing in support of
independent candidates; opposing specific government programs; or simply
raising Cain against servile party hacks seeking renewal of their
sinecures. In the early days of FACT, I was invited to a
meeting in their modest home in southeast Vancouver. About 10 people were
there, and I was peppered with questions about criminal justice. As I
answered them, the realization came to me that I was the only one present
who had not lost a family member in the worst possible way: murder. Yet
throughout our conversation they remained even tempered but very
passionate about the need to improve our justice system. I believe that Sandra Martins-Toner and David Toner have begun to walk the Cadman path to justice. Another of today’s grassroots activists is Langley’s Steve Brown, a gas contractor, in partnership with the late Ed Schellenberg until Oct. 17, 2007. Brown lost contact with his partner late that day and in the evening was informed by police that Schellenberg had been brutally murdered by gangsters during his last service call to a suite in a Surrey apartment building. Schellenberg and another innocent, Chris Mohan, were victims of cold blooded murder because they chanced upon a gangland execution of four known criminals. Since that fateful day Brown has worked tirelessly, along with Chris Mohan’s mother Eileen, to learn how our criminal justice system functions, particularly bail release, plea bargaining, sentencing and parole. He now advocates changes that will deter gangsterism in Canada. Brown has been a frequent guest on radio and television and in newspaper interviews where he comments on what he calls “the madness in our courts” and the “flaccidness of our politicians.” And his no-nonsense approach to reforming justice
has led to meetings with provincial Solicitor General Van Dongen; federal
ministers, Solicitor General Van Loan and Attorney General Rob Nicholson;
and Prime Minister Stephen Harper. David Marley of West Vancouver was first contacted by Cadman in the mid-‘90s (when Marley was still practising law) about commencing a civil action against the provincial government concerning the murder of his son. Cadman approached Marley because of a civil action Marley was pursuing on a pro bono basis for Paul Glover, a citizen in the best sense of the word, who had been viciously beaten when he tried to intervene in the vandalism of his neighbour's house by a group of teens. Over the years Marley had acted as legal counsel for Cadman and his wife and they became friends. Marley was one of the people who encouraged Cadman to enter politics. “Years later,” Marley told me, “when his Conservative Party nomination was essentially stolen by the sign up of ‘instant party members’, I urged him to run as an independent candidate. When he decided to do so, I raised a large percentage of his campaign funds from friends of mine across the BC Lower Mainland, none of whom resided within his constituency, but were people who had come to admire Chuck and what he, as one individual, could accomplish in Parliament. “In the year or so before he died, Chuck and I embarked on one last, extremely important initiative together, the "Nicholas Chow-Johnson case". With the help of Derek Cave, a top flight personal injury lawyer and West Vancouver resident, who was prepared to act without fee, we were able to bring Nicholas's three assailants to justice in the civil courts. In the result, Nicholas and his mother, Grace Chow, were awarded over $5.8 million against the three punks. Collection of this money is being pursued. Nicholas' assailants are learning a whole new meaning to the term ‘debt to society.’ “I believe in the primary importance of citizen initiatives and I subscribe to Edmund Burke's 18th Century dictum: ‘No man made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could only do a little.’ ” Marley is running as an independent candidate in West Vancouver Capilano in the upcoming provincial election. No matter the outcome, Marley is on the trail blazed by Chuck Cadman.
Published by the North Shore News on April 1, 2009.
Contact Judicial
Gadfly at:
wallace-gilby-craig@realjustice.ca |
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