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  1. #1
    Administrator Jean's Avatar
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    'Help save what's left of my life'

    http://www.canada.com/theprovince/news/ ... 450eab2c56

    'Help save what's left of my life'
    B.C. dad sees no end of jail fights, beatings, meals of garbage

    Susan Lazaruk
    The Province


    Wednesday, January 31, 2007



    CREDIT: Ric Ernst, The Province
    Jessica Kimber holds a family photo of her father Peter Kimber.

    MEXICO - A B.C. construction worker jailed for more than two years in Mexico over a building contract that went sour says he's been wrongly imprisoned by a corrupt system.

    "Get me out of here," a frustrated Peter Kimber said yesterday from his prison cell in Huatulco, where he suffers from kidney problems and other ill health.

    He said he has endured dozens of beatings and atrocious conditions because he can't pay bribes to get out.

    "I want somebody to actually help save what's left of my life," he said. "I've tried it on my own for two years and four months. There's absolutely no way for a human being to fight against these people legally."

    Kimber, 44, lived in Mission before moving to Mexico in 2001 with his then common-law wife, her four daughters and his three children from a previous marriage.

    He said he was arrested on Oct. 15, 2004, after a couple from the U.K. reneged on a contract to have Kimber build them a home.

    He said Kevin and Tess Hunneybell, who run the Oaxaca Hotel bed-and-breakfast in Huatulco, had him arrested for fraud.

    The Hunneybells couldn't be reached for comment.

    Kimber related the horrors of living in inhumane conditions, where "dog-eat-dog" fights over food are common because prisoners are given $25 a month to buy food, drinking water, clothing and toiletries.

    "I never envisioned eating out of garbage cans that people have been spitting in all day or beating the living hell out of someone because I want his food," he said.

    Kimber estimated he's been in 150 fights and was stabbed by a blood-filled syringe during a jail robbery.

    He said money he's paid for bribes to get out of the prison has been wasted and he's been asked to sign blank documents and confessions to crimes he didn't commit.

    His family was deported back to Canada after his arrest.

    It never occurred to Kimber or his eldest daughter, Jessica, 21, who is caring for her brother, 17, and Julia, 15, in Abbotsford to go to the media before now, he said.

    Jessica said she and her siblings are torn apart by their dad's imprisonment and they send him money for food when they can.

    "You just don't know if every time you talk to him if it's going to be the last time," she said.

    It was a chance meeting his daughters had with North Vancouver author and radio personality Anne Marie Evers at a women's fair in Abbotsford last October that put the spotlight on Kimber's case.

    Evers told her friend, John Joseph Kennedy, an entrepreneur who is running as a Democrat for the 2008 U.S. presidential election.

    Kennedy, who with his sister had helped free their brother from a wrongful conviction in Thailand in the 1990s, kicked into action.

    He set up a website, www.freepeterkimber.com, and fired off letters to the prison warden demanding an end to Kimber's ill treatment and to the International Criminal Court.

    "It just made me furious the way he's been treated," Kennedy said from his Georgia home. "It's one of the cruelest injustices toward humanity. It's turned into a nightmare. It's so corrupt in that area of Mexico, with rioting and violence, it's a dangerous place. I knew I had to go over the heads of the government."

    Canadian Foreign Affairs sent a representative on Jan. 21 to "follow up on the health and security issues," said spokesman Alain Cacchione. He would not elaborate.

    Lawyer Peter Benning, a friend of Kimber's, said it's up to Canada to pressure the Mexican government.

    He said the situation is urgent because jail authorities are acting with increasing aggression toward Kimber every time he speaks out.

    Kimber's imprisonment "came out of a business disagreement, the kind of thing that would be resolved in small-claims court in Canada and he's been in jail for two years and four months and it's not even clear if he's had a trial yet," Benning said.

    Mauricio Guerrero, press attache at the Mexican Embassy in Ottawa, said unless the Canadian authorities ask for concrete action, the embassy would not get involved because the dispute is in the jurisdiction of local Mexican authorities.
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  2. #2
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    I had a friend who was involved in a wreck while racing the Carrera Panamericana race and was jailed and basically held for ransom. It was a scary situation, but once the goverment determined that the race was not going to pay to free him and that failure to release him could cause the loss of the race and the revenues it generated, they released him "voluntarily."

    Basically, as a foreigner in Mexico, you are walking around with a price on your head. Give the authorities the slightest excuse for arresting you and the slightest idea that there may be a huge payday for your release and you're royally screwed.

  3. #3
    Senior Member swatchick's Avatar
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    There is government corruption over there and that includes the police. People from countries like that often think our law enforcement agencies operate the same way. Many of them will actually offer police officers money when pulled over for a traffic stop as they would do back home.

    I strongly suggest that no Americans or Canadians go to Mexico for any reason whatsoever.
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