|
Cohen's
appeal | The innocence Project is looking at his case (December,
2003) | Michael Cardamone
Ivan Cohen
& the Porn Police
Statement of Nancy Cohen
May 5, 2001
I am Nancy Cohen, wife of Ivan
Cohen, who was charged and convicted of possession and distribution
of Child Pornography.
Last week, Radio, TV and the
newspapers stated the court of Appeal decision to uphold the
conviction, but, to reduce the sentence from 14 months in jail,
to 14 months of house arrest.
After 4 years of silence, I,
my husband and our children want our side of the story told.
This won't change what has happened, but, as a family, we want
the community to know the facts that were never told.
In July of 1997, and during
the raid of our house, over 1,200 floppy diskettes were seized,
along with all our computer equipment, hard drives, CDs, printers,
right down to power bars, as well as our VCR, video tapes, and
the like. Not one image of child pornography was found in our
home, or in any of the seized material. The computer hard drives
were sent to the RCMP forensic labs in Ottawa, where they were
dissected in minute detail, and we have since learned, they can
find material on a hard drive long after it's been deleted by
a user. They reported no images found.
What was shown in court was
images received by an undercover police officer, and they say
they can prove the sender to be Ivan. They said it was Ivan,
because the ISP address, the information the computer uses as
an electronic street address, was the same. As an analogy, this
would be like sending a letter through the mail, but, putting
someone else's return address on the back.
So, where did we go wrong?
Our original Defense council
could never persuade the fact that anyone, anywhere, can send
anything through someone else's computer and make it appear to
be you. Our original Defense council never used the services
of a computer expert, since we were told it would be too much
trouble to gather the necessary background papers on the expert
to present to the court to validate the expert status.
Our second lawyer, handling
our appeal, Lawrence Greenspon, stated as he read the transcripts
that this trial was a witch hunt, and Ivan never had a chance.
It was only during the appeal hearing that we realized how wrong
this had gone. Since the original lawyer handling our case had
not objected to any of the details surrounding evidence presented
by the Crown, the appeal court justices could not object either.
During the appeal, one of the judges of the appeal court stated,
"Unfortunately, Mr. Greenspon, we are not here to retry
the case and we must use the facts we have". In fact, the
written decision handed down by the appeal court numerous times
referenced the lack of the original Defense council to challenge
or present information.
I'd like to
review some facts with you.
1. No photographic child pornography
images were found in the house. Nothing in print, nothing on
hard drives, nothing on floppy drives, CDs or tapes. Nothing.
2. The police officer, using
the nickname Bam-Bam corresponded with the perpetrator of this
crime by email as well as chat sessions. No emails or logs were
found in our computers to indicate any correspondence with Bam-Bam.
3. It is extremely difficult
to remove all traces of material from a hard drive and a forensic
investigation would certainly find tell-tales of this type of
material if it existed. Nothing was found.
4. A friend of my eldest son
worked at BCONNEX, the internet service provider where we had
our internet account. He had access to all the files, login names
and passwords, since they were all kept in hardcopy in a unlocked
file cabinet. This information and lack of security at BCONNEX
was verified at the preliminary hearing by staff of BCONNEX called
to testify at that hearing. This information about the Internet
Service Provider was never presented at the trial. Further evidence
presented to the preliminary hearing proving the existence of
child pornography on the newsgroup server of the BCONNEX system
was not presented at trial.
5. This friend's name came
up during the trial, and the police sought out and found this
individual, and brought him in for questioning. He admitted to
stealing logins and passwords from Future Shop in Barrie, by
going into the store, and emailing them from the store to himself.
This person was never called to testify, and the interview was
never presented in court, and the jury was never made aware of
this information. Why? Our Defense council told us he expected
the trial to last one week, he had only charged us for one week,
and the trial had gone on for three weeks at that time. This
same friend had spent many nights at our home and was sometimes
found on our computer, on the internet in the middle of the night
after our son has fallen asleep. He knew all the information
about our family that was shared during chat room discussions
and served to be the basis for police believing the culprit was
my husband. He had a dislike for my husband because he got in
trouble at home for missing school, and it was common knowledge
the schools attendance voice notification system was installed
by my husband. This individual had a falling out with my son
over a common girlfriend. This individual had disappeared until
the police found him during the trial, and brought him in for
questioning. The purpose of the questioning was to discredit
my son's testimony of these facts during the trial. Once the
interview was completed and the admission was made regarding
theft of Future Shop's information, the Crown decided not to
bring this person to testify. Instead, a copy of the interview
transcript was given to the Defense council, who did not act
upon it. Further, because both Crown and Defense were aware of
this, this information could not be brought up during the appeal
process even though it was not presented at trial. The appeal
court can only consider new evidence and then, there are strict
rules on the presentation of new evidence during an appeal. Since
the Defense and Crown knew this information, it was our loss.
6. One of the appeal court
judges raised the question as to whether the images received
by the police officer were actually photographs, or digitally
prepared images, not of real people, and questioned if this was
looked at during the trail. It was not.
7. Books were found in our
bedroom and one was called Nap Time. The book was never read,
or seized by the police. At trial, the police used this book,
and the judge referred to this book during his charge to the
jury to show the more likelihood that my husband was the perpetrator
of the crime. Truly, this is really judging a book by it's cover.
Let's go back and look at how this book came to be in our home.
A close girlfriend of mine I've known since high school was completing
her degree in Criminology, and wanted to be a parole officer.
This book was part of the reading material for her course. She
knew my husband was interested in courtroom drama books and gave
this one to us. The book is a journalists account of a day-care
child abuse case in the U.S. After the trial and before the sentencing
hearing, this book was given to Doctor John Bradford, one of
the top Forensic Psychiatrists in Canada, associated with the
Royal Ottawa Hospital. Doctor Bradford is recognized by all levels
of the court up to and including the Supreme Court of Canada
as one of the premiere experts in his field. Dr. Bradford had
one of his student read the book. Doctor Bradford stated to me
"Mrs. Cohen, there is nothing sinister about this book and
this book has no relation to Ivan's case at all. The perpetrator
in the case is female, and the case does not relate to child
pornography in any way.
Another book in the same drawer
was from the author Max Hanes, a collection of short stories
about major criminal cases and their proceedings. Hanes has a
weekly syndicated newspaper distribution of these same stories.
8. My husband has maintained
his innocence throughout all this. Judge Weeks stated that since
my husband showed no remorse he should be judged harshly.
9. The crown attorney at the
jury trial stated only the FBI and the CIA hack computers and
the jury accepted this information as fact. There was no opportunity
to rebut the crown's summation to the jury. We all know from
recent media attention that computer hacking is an epidemic and
even a 14 year old can hack into computers, and create havoc
for legitimate users. Most of the jury members were seniors,
with little or no understanding of the internet. With no effort
to the contrary from my lawyer during the trial, and the lack
of an internet expert to show how easily hacking is to carry
out, they had no choice, and in fact, no knowledge of the internet
to believe otherwise and accepted the crown's statements as truth,
when this was a deceitful statement.
Before the sentencing hearing,
the Crown forwarded all the court materials to a criminal psychologist
for an assessment. This doctor, without ever meeting or talking
to my husband, presented a very damaging report profiling my
husband as a very bad person. To correct this, my husband went
to Ottawa for testing by Doctor Bradford. This testing was of
our choice, and was not demanded by the court. The testing procedure
is very intense, absolutely accurate and cannot be falsified.
The tests included blood tests, written and computer based testing,
as well as stimuli testing with probes attached to the phallus.
The stimuli testing included both still image and video forms,
in addition to audio stimuli testing and written materials. The
result of these test concluded my husband was determined to be
a normal male in every way. Again, these tests were on our own
recourse, since we wanted the court and our community to know
what kind of man Ivan Cohen is. This report was forwarded to
the crown and subsequently, to the OPP criminal psychologist
for comment. He agreed with and accepted the report, stating
had he met my husband, he would have completed the same tests.
Even with this confirmation, the OPP still submitted the original,
damaging report to the court for consideration.
Family Hardship.
1. Detective Constable Anton
Litchfield, on returning for the second search of our home, said
that if he didn't get my husband, and he pointed at our 17 year
old son, "I'll be coming back for you"
2. The police arrived at our
home at 5:50am on July 2, 1997. They pulled our eldest son out
of bed and had him dress in front of the officers. As they were
going into our youngest children's room, 10 and 11 at the time,
I stopped them and got the children up.
3. I was questioned by Det.
Cst. Litchfield and another officer in my backyard, wearing only
a housecoat, having been taken out of a bath. I was not wearing
undergarments and was not permitted to return to my bedroom to
get dressed, not even with an escort, even though I was having
my period. After this interrogation, where I was told to tell
them everything I knew and that my husband had already confessed,
I ran down the street to a neighbour, in only my housecoat. This
incident was never presented in court.
4. Det. Cst. Litchfield attended
at our son's high school, Barrie North Collegiate, flashing a
business card identifying himself as an "Investigator, Child
Pornography", Project P, offering his card to the office
staff and seeking to speak with our son. The Principal was concerned
and phoned us at home. He found this visit highly irregular,
as police officers know they cannot question a minor without
the presence of a parent or guardian. When the principal refused
to allow our son to be questioned, the officers left immediately,
causing the principal to make notes of the visit for future reference
since this was a highly irregular procedure for police. He felt
this visit was to create awareness and embarrass our son, and,
had the police wanted to pick our son up for questioning, they
could have picked him up off the street less than 15 minutes
later when school ended. Our son was in his OAC year and due
to the stress and harassment at school, he was unable to complete
his winter semester.
5. The search of our home took
about 12 hours, and was performed by approximately a dozen officers.
I have never had the feeling of having been so violated as returning
to our home after this was over. At the commencement of the search,
I told the officers where to reach me if they needed access to
anything in our home. Rather than contact me, they pried open
and broke my son's new briefcase, a special gift received as
a bar mitzvah present from his grandfather and uncle, and then
hid the damaged briefcase under a bed in a corner. When I returned
to our home at about 4 o'clock, the house was in shambles. I
demanded the officers return the house to the condition they
found it in. Since they were not finished their search I had
to again leave, and when I returned at 8 o'clock that evening,
the house was in a visually improved condition. They had simply
jammed everything in drawers.
6. My husband was employed
by RadioShack as Manager, National Sales Promotion. After the
charges were laid, he was placed on leave of absence, and subsequently
terminated by RadioShack. Ivan found a sales position with Modular
Telephone Interface Limited, now Lexsys Networks, in Oakville.
His performance in this position led to promotion to Sales Manager,
even though they were aware of the proceedings against him. However,
they felt the trial publicity and the calls to the company by
the media at the start of the trial were too detrimental and
Ivan again was terminated. Ivan is now employed in another field,
outside of sales.
7. The harassment of our youngest
children at their school and in the neighbourhood by both children
and adults, including one adult who was one of his Navy League
Cadet leaders was too hard to bear and we relocated to another
community to rebuild our lives.
8. The current publicity surrounding
the appeal has again put our family in the limelight, and our
new community, where we had been accepted for who we are, now
regard us in distain. This is perhaps the most important reason
for this statement, to tell our side of the story.
Actions of
the police.
There were many incidences
of police activity that show the investigation was targeted and
subjected to tunnel vision, with disregard for information that
would exonerate my husband. Throughout the preliminary hearing,
information coming to light that would help prove innocence was
ignored, however, any possible evidence to convict was vigorously
followed up.
During the trial, our eldest
son became aware of some of the information contained in the
RCMP report on our hard drives. In addition to information regarding
his former friend found on a broken hard drive seized from our
home, there was additional information on another user, who used
an almost identical nickname on the chat areas. Emails were found
where this individual was attempting to procure young female
friends. When investigated, at this person's home page, we discovered
he was employed as a senior technical for Sprint Internet which
gives him considerable knowledge about the workings of the internet.
That evening, Justin searched and found him in a child pornography
area on the internet. Justin, pretending to be a young person,
engaged him in a conversation and the individual indicated he
had hundreds of child pornography images. During the direct-connection
conversation, Justin performed two system tests that confirm
the identity of the chatter. These tests are NETSTAT and TRACERT.
The police did not follow up this information. It is important
to note these tests were never attempted during conversations
with the perpetrator of the crime for which my husband was convicted,
or if they were, the information was never released.
In reading the chat logs created
by the police during their investigation and presented by the
police to the court, there were several times the chatter offered
to meet the undercover police officer. I'm at a loss to understand
why they never arranged such a meeting and resolve this matter
at that time with an arrest.
About a year and a half before
the trial, the OPP contacted the Ministry of Transportation,
and advised them of my husband's "Record of Convictions"
and had his Class B driver's license rescinded. Ivan had no convictions
of any kind at that time.
These, as well as many other
incidents of police activity were brought to the attention of
the Professional Standards Branch of the OPP. Although they initially
showed much interest, because the complaint to the PSB was over
six months past the time of the activities, and because this
was still before the courts, under the Police Act Section 59(4),
they did not have to investigate and considered the matter closed.
The appeal procedure for this is to OCCOPS, the provincial government/civilian
police review agency. We forwarded our information to OCCOPS,
who supported to OPP decision not that the officers were
right or wrong, but, because of the six month deadline, they
didn't have to investigate their own.
Summary
Nothing will ever change what
has been said in the media, and, after investing $70,000 in legal
fees, we can no longer fight. My husband will serve his 14 month
house arrest sentence and have a criminal record for a crime
he did not commit. Under the new Christopher's Law, he has been
branded a sexual offender and must now register with the OPP
sexual offender registry, every year, for life.
We want to live in peace and
harmony in the community where we reside. We want people to see
us as the people who have moved to this community, participated
in this community, helped in this community. We want to again
become active in this community, and hold our heads high. Our
children have flourished here, with the wonderful friends they
have met, through not only the schools, but the community itself.
Our friends have stood beside us throughout this entire affair,
and we want to thank those that know us and supported us. We
want the members of our new community who have come to accept
us for who we are and how we act to feel the same way now, as
they did prior to the adverse publicity of earlier this week.
Thank you.
Nancy Cohen
Child porn trial continues
Tracy McLaughlin: Special,
June 9, 1999
Anyone, anywhere, could have
accessed the computers owned by a Barrie man who is charged with
distributing child pornography over the Internet, a jury heard
in a Superior Court in Barrie this week.
Ivan Cohen, 43, has pleaded
not guilty to four counts of distributing child pornography over
the Internet and one count of possession. The charges followed
an eight-month investigation by OPP Child Pornography Unit known
as project P.
The Crown alleges Cohen used
several computer nicknames, including CanadaM, Ontdad and MMMale
on sex chat lines on the Internet, and sent several graphic images
of child pornography to people with whom he was web chatting.
Court has heard from three
witnesses who testified they received pictures of children having
sex with men, from someone using the same nicknames. Two of the
witnesses were OPP detectives from Project P who were posing
as chat line friends.
Det. Anton Litchfield testified
Cohen's computers were seized from the basement of his family
home and investigators retrieved files from the computer hard-drives
that matched the chat-line conversations he had with CanadaM.
Several other files that included the other nicknames also existed.
The jury also heard about one
file police retrieved that contained a computer chat line conversation
between someone using the Cohen computer and a person nicknamed
evildad.
The jury listened to transcripts
of that conversation when evildad said: "Do you do anything
with kids?" The person on the Cohen computer responded:
"I wish. I only have sons. I'd love to do a preteen."
And evildad replied: "I go to South America on business.
I get the young ones there ... easy to get ... costs 50 American."
But defence lawyer Walter Fox
said any computer "hack" could have accessed those
same computers and then "spoofed" the IP address.
"Pretty much anyone can
go into someone's computer and do anything they want," said
Fox, "and it would all leave logs on the computer hard-drive."
One witness who works with computers agreed Fox's suggestion
is possible.
The jury also heard that one
of Cohen's sons often brought one of two computers the police
seized from his home to "computer parties" where several
computer hobbyists connect their computers to play games.
Three of the hobbyists testified
they played computer games with Cohen's oldest son while all
of their computers were connected, but all testified they never
accessed or sent child pornography.
This week the jury also heard
from a female witness who testified her nickname was Blondi when
she met CanadaM on a chat line, then eventually met with him
in person on two occasions.
"And is that man in this
courtroom?" asked Crown attorney Frank Faveri.
"Yes, it's that man over
there," said the witness, and pointed to Ivan Cohen.
The trial is expected to end
this week.
|
Truth can never be
told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd.
William Blake, The Proverbs of Hell
Truth suppress'd, whether
by courts or crooks, will find an avenue to be told. Sheila Steele, injusticebusters.com
Publisher
Sheila
Steele
Got something
to say about this or any other stories on this site? Go to injusticebustersblog Participate!
- injusticebusters
court advice :
- How
to walk yourself through the justice system
-
- Why
you should dump your preliminary hearing (written
July 1998 and still valid)
-
- Sermonette:
The
Naked Truth(You
will find links to many more sermonettes in the sidebar on this
page
Index
to the stories on this website
This is not
regularly updated so if you are looking for a particular story
and you have a name or keyword, please use the site search engine(at
the bottom of the page) which IS regularly updated
Index to Saskatoon Police stories
This is a pretty good scrapbook
for the 1998-2002 period.
- For the most thoughtful, ongoing
discussions and essays of the zealous prosecution of innocent
people caught in the current craze of witch hunting activities
around the world, go to
- Inquisition
21.
-
- For this particular issue,
go to this
page
-
-
- Childporn Witchhunt from January, 2003: All that hysteria flowed from the sting
methods cited by Judge Chin
- Childporn witch hunt by OPP
- See Rick
Salutin's sensible column and an editorial from eye
- The witch-hunt for viewers
of child porn on the internet can be seen as the extension of
Martensville and
- the Foster
Parent case. Social workers took the witchhunt in one direction
as the Vopni children were apprehended.
- The climate produced the false
accusations against Abdulahi Mohamed.
- Then Ivan
Cohen was one of the first to be falsely charged -- and convicted
- under Project P.
- Don
Smith was a year later.
Smith's site, Perfectshots, was adult soft-core designed to share
special effects with fellow artists, but that did not stop Prosecutor
Christine Bartlett Hughes
and Judge Helen Pierce from instructing the jury as though it
was childporn
- Law
to force filtering fails
There have been too many of
these cases involving porn -- child and otherwise. It is a witchhunt,
pure and simple. Check out these cases: Ivan
Cohen | Don Smith | and
read Judith Levine | in the meantime,
be well aware that anyone with a computer can be ensnared. Catherine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin: reckless
crusaders | Real Pedophiles | Project
P | Defamation | Seizures
of domain names

Inquiry into the malicious prosecution of David
Milgaard untanling 36 years of Saskatchewan police and Crown
misconduct: : Opening day 1 | 2
| 3 | 4
| 5 | 6
| 7 |
- Stephen Williams:
Canadian writer subject to Stasi-like treatment by Canadian police
- Terry
Arnold: : Snitch a
suicide?
- RCMP
scenario stings: Brian
Hutchinson starts digging
- Gary
wells: Faulty eye-witness
testimony
- Tulia,
Texas
- Gilmer,
Texas
- Willie
Upshaw
- Wrongfully
convicted in Canada
- Foster
Parent false accusations
- Martensville
- Don
Smith obscenity trial: an obscene conviction
- James
Lockyer
- Hurricane
Carter
- Johnny Cochran speaks up for
Bill Sampson
- Vopnis
- Abdulai
Mohamed

The Terrible Story behind the Atif Rafay and
Sebastian Burns convictions

Trial
set for June 15
We
know part of this disclosure is a forged statement and perjured
affidavit from a Winnipeg cop
-
-
-
-

The
Crown is still fighting Fred Poirier -- and they are losing.
Secret Commissions Case from Nort
-
-
- Edmonton
police
- Halifax
- Toronto
police
- Vancouver police
- Winnipeg police
-
- 2005: In
the United States the proven wrongful convictions just keep coming
at us!
Canadians
who have been wrongfully convicted because of improper investigations
combined with zealous Crown
Supreme
Court orders new trial and quashes conviction in two more cases
with improper disclosure issues
A round-up of wrongful convictions in Canada
- Robert
Baltovich
- Michael
Burns
- Sebastian Burns
- Wilbert
Coffin
(hanged, 1953)
- Jason Dix
- Jim
Driskell
- Jody
Druken
- Randy
Druken
- Michel
Dumont
- Peter
Frumusa
- Walter
Gillespie and Robert Mailman
- Clayton
Johnson
- Yvonne
Johnson
- Herman
Kaglik
- Darren
Koehn
- Kulaveeringsam
"Kulam" Karthiresu
- Stephen
Leadbeater
- Donald
Marshall
- Chris
McCullough
- Michael
McTaggart
- Felix
Michaud
- David
Milgaard
- Guy Paul
Morin
- Shannon
Murrin
- Jamie
Nelson
- Greg
Parsons
- Benoit
Proulx
- Atif Rafay
- Louise
Reynolds
- Thomas
Sophonow
- Gary
Staples
- Steven
Truscott
- Joe
Warren
- Leon
Walchuk
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