| It was June 1953. Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania natives,
17-year old Richard Lindsey, his father Eugene Lindsey and 20
year-old Frederick Claar
left home for a bear hunting trip in the Gaspé. About a month
later, their bodies, or what was left of them after bears had mauled
them, were found in the bush. Around the bodies and scattered
by the bears, were the victim's clothing showing telltale signs of
gunshot wounds.
Shortly thereafter, Wilbert Coffin,
a woodsman and mining prospector was arrested, charged with murder
and later hanged for a crime he probably did not commit.
Was Coffin guilty? Was he the
victim of circumstance? Was he the victim of government and
legal mismanagement or even malfeasance?
Wilbert Coffin was
born in 1913 and grew up with a desire to explore. He became a mining prospector, met a women and fathered,
in 1953, a child named James. He was described as "kind". Wilbert spent a lot of time in
the bush and was sought out by many hunters to guide them to where
the bears were.
When the American hunters turned up shot dead in the woods, Coffin
made was the prime
suspect. He was the last person seen with one of the hunters, after
giving him a ride to town to get gas. He also had some of the men's possessions, which, he later
admitted that he stole.
Coffin was found guilty of murdering one of the men and was
sentenced to death by hanging, the maximum sentence.
The story should have ended there had it not been
for a group of very determined lawyers who smelled something rotten
in Gaspé.
| Lawyers fighting to clear his name say all the evidence against
him is circumstantial, his defence lawyer was clearly incompetent
and that his trial -- a case rife with political pressure -- was a
sham. There were no eyewitnesses.
"The Duplessis government, by all accounts, needed a quick
resolution of this case," said Elisabeth Widner, co-president for
the Association in Defence of the Wrongfully Convicted. "Hunting was
and probably still is a big business in that part of Quebec. And
this was extremely damaging publicity that these three American
hunters had come in and were essentially murdered."
"What's really unfortunate in this case is that he didn't testify
at his trial and was never in a position to explain to the jury how
he came to be travelling around with the hunter's possessions," said
Widner.
An affidavit later provided to the Supreme Court of Canada said
he stole the items from the hunters' truck.
Coffin's lawyer announced he was going to be calling up to 100
witnesses to defend his client, said Widner, but when the Crown's
case ended, he stood up and said "the defence rests."
"He didn't present one piece of evidence to support his client,"
she said.
His sentence was appealed, and made it all the way to the Supreme
Court of Canada, which upheld his conviction.
In the debate over his conviction, there was even a Royal
Commission to review the case. It also upheld the verdict.
But a small group of Canadians have continued to champion
Coffin's cause. The federal department had to address the case after
writer Alton Price made a formal application for it to be reviewed
in 1998.
He was railroaded," said Vancouver writer Lew Stoddard. "He was
the fall guy." |
Many believe Wilbert Coffin was a scapegoat for a province
determined to make a quick arrest and salvage its lucrative American
tourist trade. Quebec Premier Maurice
Duplessis, not known as a soft touch, hand-picked the prosecutor and lead detective, who
interrogated Coffin in vain for 16 days.
Raymond Maher, a Quebec City lawyer and Duplessis supporter, showed
up in Gaspé and volunteered to represent Coffin. Described as drunk for much of the trial, Maher barely cross-examined any
witnesses and even worse, he didn't call Coffin to testify.
Coffin had "a problem" because items belonging to the hunters were
in his possession but Maher did not bother to ask a question about
how that came to be. In an interview with police before his trial, Coffin
said he met the trio on June 10, 1953, while driving into the bush
to prospect. Their truck had broken down, so he drove them into town
for a new fuel pump and back to the camp, promising to check in on
them in a few days. He stated that one of the hunters, Eugene Lindsey, paid him $40 in U.S.
bills for his trouble and Lindsey's son, Richard, gave him a pocket
knife.
When he checked back later, the camp was deserted except for the
truck, Coffin added that he waited several hours and took the old
fuel pump and some clothes from the truck before leaving. He said he
was drunk at the time. This evidence was never brought up at trial.
In his closing jury address, the prosecutor said the "eyes of
America" were on the trial and counting on a conviction.
Coffin
was described as very gentle, fun-loving and incapable of murder.
"He was a person who couldn't stand to see even a little rabbit
caged up." But Maher never brought that up in court.
"You can't underestimate the role politics played in this case,"
Widner said.
Jim Coffin said his father "was guilty of only being a good
Samaritan."
"He hung for helping a man. And I don't think that's right."
|
Young Jimmy Coffin, who was 8 when his father was hanged on Feb. 10,
1956, said his mother sheltered him from news reports about the
execution. Once she finally told him the truth, "it was never
mentioned around the house for quite a few years. It was very
painful."
She later moved to northern Quebec, where his father's family gave
her some land, and Jim Coffin built her a house. She visited Gaspé
from time to time, but it became tough. "I think emotionally it was
too hard."
So here we are 54 years after the death of three
men in Gaspé and the hanging of a probable innocent man 51 years
ago. Are we any safer? Can we trust the justice system
to protect us when we need it? Was Wilbert Coffin guilty of
the crime for which he was put to death?
In 1956 they were so sure. But in 2007,
the Federal justice department is investigating a new tip.
Evidence had recently surfaced
suggesting a man named Philippe Cabot was the murderer and his own
son might have been a witness! |