In
the Suárez Rosero Case,
the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, composed of the following judges*
Antônio
A. Cançado Trindade, President
Hernán
Salgado-Pesantes, Judge
Héctor
Fix-Zamudio, Judge
Alejandro
Montiel-Argüello, Judge
Máximo
Pacheco-Gómez, Judge
Oliver
Jackman, Judge
Alirio
Abreu-Burelli, Judge;
also
present,
Manuel
E. Ventura-Robles, Secretary, and
Víctor
M. Rodríguez-Rescia, Interim Deputy Secretary;
pursuant
to Articles 29 and 55 of the Rules of Procedure (hereinafter "the Rules
of Procedure"), renders the following judgment in the instant Case.
I
1. On December 22, 1995, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
(hereinafter "the Commission" or "the Inter-American Commission")
submitted to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (hereinafter "the
Court" of "the Inter-American Court") an application against
the Republic of Ecuador (hereinafter "the State" or "Ecuador")
originating in a petition (No. 11.273) received at the Secretariat of the
Commission on February 24, 1994. In
its application the Commission invoked Articles 50 and 51 of the American
Convention on Human Rights (hereinafter "the Convention" or "the
American Convention") and Articles 26 et
seq. of the Rules of Procedure then in force.
[1]
The Commission submitted
this Case for the Court to rule as to whether Ecuador had violated, to the
detriment of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, Articles 5 (Right to Humane Treatment),
7 (Right to Personal Liberty), 8 (Right to a Fair Trial), and 25 (Right to
Judicial Protection), all in conjunction with Article 1 (Obligation to Respect
Rights) of the Convention, resulting from
Mr.
Suárez's arrest and detention in violation of a preexisting law; the failure
to duly bring Mr. Suárez before a judicial official once he was in detention;
the holding of Mr. Suárez in incommunicado detention for 36 days; the
failure to respond adequately and effectively to his attempt to invoke the
domestic judicial guarantees, as well as the State's failure to release him
or show any intention of so doing, within a reasonable time, or to guarantee
that he would be tried within an equally reasonable time to substantiate the
charges brought against him.
The
Commission asked the Court to rule that Ecuador had violated Article 2 of
the Convention with its failure to adopt the domestic legal provisions for
the enjoyment of the aforementioned rights and that
a.- it must adopt such measures as are necessary to ensure Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
release and guarantee an exhaustive and prompt trial of his Case;
b.- it must ensure that violations such as those denounced in the instant
Case do not recur in future;
c.- it must initiate a prompt and thorough investigation in order to establish
responsibility for the violations in this Case and punish those responsible;
and
d.- must make reparation to Mr. Suárez-Rosero for the consequences of the
violations committed.
2. The Commission also asked the Court to declare
[that
t]he exclusion of all persons accused under the Law on Drugs and Psychotropic
Substances from the provision that requires a prompt trial or release, introduced
in Law 04, denies juridical protection to persons in that category, in violation
of Article 2 of the American Convention[.]
II JURISDICTION
3. The Court is competent to hear the present Case. Ecuador has been a State Party to the American
Convention since December 28, 1977, and recognized the compulsory jurisdiction
of the Court on July 24, 1984.
III
4. The instant case was initiated by the Commission on March 18, 1994,
as a result of a petition submitted on February 24 of that year.
On April 8, 1994, the relevant information was transmitted to Ecuador
and it was granted a period of 90 days to furnish whatever information it
considered relevant. The State submitted its reply on August 2, 1994.
5. The State's reply was transmitted to the petitioners on August 12,
1994. On September 15 of that year the Commission held a hearing in the Case,
which was attended by a representative of Ecuador.
6. On September 28, 1994, the Commission placed itself at the disposal
of the parties to initiate the friendly-settlement proceeding provided for
in Article 48(1)(f) of the Convention.
7. No friendly settlement having been reached, on September 12, 1995,
the Commission adopted report 11/95 which established in its final paragraphs
that:
1.
On the basis of information produced and the observations made, the
Commission decides that in the case of Mr. Iván Rafael Suárez-Rosero the State
of Ecuador had not fulfilled the obligation set forth in Article 1 of the
Convention to respect the rights and freedoms recognized therein.
2.
The Commission maintains that in the present Case the State of Ecuador
has violated and continues to violate Mr. Iván Suárez right to personal liberty
established in clauses 1 to 6 of Article 7; his right to a fair trial pursuant
to Article 8(2) in general, and clauses (d)
and (e) in particular. The State has violated his right to humane treatment
provided for in Article 5(1) and (2); and his right to judicial protection
enshrined in Article 25. The State
has also contravened Article 2 with the exclusionary provision of Article
114 (sic) of the Criminal Code.
3.
The Commission also condemns Mr. Suárez's prolonged preventive detention
and recommends that the Government:
a.
adopt such measures as may be necessary to release him without prejudice
to the continuation of his trial;
b.
adopt effective measures to guarantee the thorough and prompt trial
of this case, and the measures necessary to ensure that such violations are
never repeated in future;
c.
institute forthwith a full inquiry to determine responsibility for
the violations in this Case;
d.
award Mr. Suárez reparation for the injuries suffered; and
e.
adopt the necessary measures to amend Article 114 (sic) of the Criminal
Code so as to comply with the American Convention and give full effect to
the right to personal liberty.
8. This report was transmitted to the State on September 25, 1995, with
the request that it inform the Commission of the measures taken, within 60
days of the date of notification.
9. On November 30, 1995, at the request of the State, the Commission granted
a special extension of seven days for the submission of documents.
Despite that extension, the Commission received no further communications
from the State.
10. As decided at its 90th Regular Session (supra, para. 7), the Commission submitted
the petition in this Case to the Inter-American Court.
IV
11. The application before the Court was introduced on December 22, 1995.
The Commission appointed Leo Valladares-Lanza as its delegate, David
J. Padilla, Assistant Executive Secretary, and Elizabeth Abi-Mershed as its
attorneys, and Alejandro Ponce-Villacís, William C. Harrell, Richard Wilson
and Karen Musalo as their assistants. On
March 12, 1996, the Inter-American Commission informed the Court that at its
91st Regular Session it had appointed Mr. Oscar Luján-Fappiano to replace
Mr. Valladares-Lanza as its delegate in this Case.
12. The application was notified to the State by the Secretariat of the
Court (hereinafter "the Secretariat"), together with its attachments,
on January 16, 1996, following a preliminary examination by the President
of the Court (hereinafter "the President"). On January 19, 1996,
Ecuador asked the Court for a two-month extension for filing preliminary objections
and answering the application. After consulting the other judges of the Court,
on January 23, 1996, the President granted Ecuador a two-month extension for
filing preliminary objections and a two-month extension for answering the
application.
13. On January 29, 1996, the State informed the Court that
it
[was to] be [understood] that it had received official notice of [the] application
when it [was] received at its Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Spanish, which
is its official language under its Political Constitution.
On
the same day the President informed Ecuador that
the
application in this case [was] duly and officially notified to the Republic
of Ecuador on January 16, 1996, pursuant to Article 26 of the Rules of Procedure
of the Court [and that ...] precisely in consideration of the fact that Spanish
is the official language of Ecuador, this Court granted [...] a two-month
extension for replying to the petition and a two-month extension for filing
preliminary objections.
14. On February 27, 1996, the State informed the Court that it had appointed
Ambassador Mauricio Pérez-Martínez as its agent and on April 9 of that year
it appointed Mr. Manuel Badillo-G. as its alternate agent. On April 3, 1997 Ecuador communicated its appointment
of Counsellor Laura Donoso-de León as its agent to replace Ambassador Pérez-Martínez.
15. On May 29, 1996, the State submitted to the Court
certified
copies of note No. 861-CSQ-P- 96 of April 29, 1996, signed by the President
of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito and the judicial decision issued
on April 16, 1996, by the First Chamber of that Court, in which it [reported]
that it [had] ordered the release of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero.
16. On June 7, 1996, Ecuador submitted its reply to the petition in this
case, stating that the evidence it would invoke was "essentially instrumental" and asked
the Court to
[r]efuse
the petition and order it to be set aside, especially since it ha[d] been
irrefutably prove[n] that Mr. Suárez-Rosero [had been] an accessory to such
a serious crime which threatened not only the peace and security of the Ecuadorian
State but, more particularly, the health of its population.
17. On June 10, 1996, the Secretariat, in accordance with the Order issued
on February 2 of that year, in which it decided that it "[would]
admit only such evidence as is indicated in the application and answer",
requested the State to specify which "essentially
instrumental" evidence it would produce in this case. On July 16, 1996, Ecuador presented thirteen
documents as evidence.
18. On June 29, 1996, the Court asked the State and the Inter-American
Commission to report whether they were wished to file, pursuant to Article
29(2) of the Rules of Procedure then in force, other written pleadings on
the merits of the instant Case, for which it granted them until July 17, 1996.
The Commission responded on July 18, 1996, stating that it did not wish to
submit other pleadings at that stage in the proceedings. Ecuador did not respond to the Court's request.
19. On September 9, 1996, Ecuador submitted to the Court a brief in which
it challenged three of the witnesses proposed by the Commission and asked
for three new witnesses to be summoned to the hearings on merits in this case.
On September 11, 1996, the Court issued an Order in which it decided
to "[h]ear the statements of Mr. Rafael Suárez-Rosero, Ms. Margarita Ramadán
de Suárez, and Mr. Carlos Ramadán, the value of which [would] be assessed in the final judgment." That same day, the President informed the State
that the Court had deemed the proposal of oral evidence at this stage of the
case to be time-barred and asked it to clarify whether any of the reasons
that would justify the late presentation of evidence would be applicable to
the proposal made.
20. On October 4, 1996, the State submitted a brief to the Court, in which
it repeated its request that the evidence proposed be allowed, and enclosed
a certified copy of the judgment issued on that date by the President of the
Superior Court of Justice of Quito, in which he declared that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
had been an accessory to the crime of illicit traffic in narcotic drugs and
psychotropic substances and sentenced him to two years in prison and a fine
of two thousand times the normal minimum living wage. On February 5, 1997, the Court rejected the
State's proposal of oral evidence.
[2]
21. On March 18, 1997, the President summoned the parties to a public hearing
to be held at the seat of the Court on April 19 of that year in order to hear
the statements of the witnesses and the expert report furnished by the Inter-American
Commission. Likewise, the President instructed the Secretariat to inform the
parties that they could, immediately after that evidence was received, present
final oral arguments on the merits of the case.
22. On April 19, 1997, the Court heard the statements of the witnesses
and the expert witness proposed by the Inter-American Commission.
There
appeared before the Court,
for
the Republic of Ecuador:
Laura
Donoso-de León, agent; and
Manuel
Badillo-G., alternate agent;
for
the Inter-American Commission:
David
J. Padilla, Assistant Executive Secretary;
Elizabeth
Abi-Mershed, attorney;
Alejandro
Ponce, assistant; and
Richard
Wilson, assistant;
as
witnesses proposed by the Inter-American Commission:
Margarita
Ramadán de Suárez;
Carlos
Ramadán;
Carmen
Aguirre; and
Rafael
Iván Suárez-Rosero;
and
as expert witness proposed by the Inter-American Commission:
Ernesto
Albán-Gómez.
23. The following is the Court's summary of the statements of the witnesses
and the expert's report.
a. Testimony
of Carlos Alberto Ramadán-Urbano, brother-in-law of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero
On
the night of June 23, 1992, he was informed by telephone that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
had been arrested by the police and was being detained at the Interpol offices
in Quito. He did not know whether Mr. Suárez-Rosero had
had any previous problems with the police.
He was unable to see him personally until July 28, 1992, but took him
clothes and food and exchanged brief notes with him through "pasadores". As of July 28, 1992, when he was able to see
him for the first time, he took his sister Margarita to visit her husband
twice a week. In addition to visiting his brother-in-law, he devoted all his
time to arrangements for securing his release, such as retaining attorneys
and seeing to other formalities. It being a drugs case, the attorneys were
unwilling to take it on, so that numerous visits had to be made before he
eventually found one who would.
b. Testimony
of Margarita Ramadán de Suárez, wife of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero
In
June 1992 she was living in Quito with her husband, who worked as a security
agent at the firm of Challenge Air Cargo. They have one daughter born in 1994. On June 23, 1992, she learned that Mr. Suárez-Rosero had been arrested.
She tried to contact a lawyer the next day and went to the Comisión
Ecuménica de Derechos Humanos [Ecumenical Human Rights Commission] (CEDHU)
to seek help and discover how her husband was.
During one of her early visits to his place of detention, she wrote
a few words in a note and gave it to an officer, who later handed her a very
brief note in which she recognized her husband's handwriting. She received his clothes every night and was
struck by the fact that they always smelled strongly of damp. During the entire month that her husband was
held incommunicado she tried to
find an attorney and did so three days before the official police report was
issued. She was not aware that she
could have had access to a public defender nor did she know how many public
defenders there were in Quito in 1992. In her view, the attorney was not guilty
of the delaies in the case nor of lack of interest, and her brother helped
with the arrangements. She was seldomly
allowed to write to her husband between June 23 and July 28, 1992; she would
scribble a few lines on the outside of the bag in which she sent his clothes.
On July 28, 1992, she saw her husband for the first time since his arrest. She was allowed to visit him twice a week from
then on. Mr. Suárez-Rosero was released
on April 29, 1996; the order for his release had been ready 15 days before
but was not executed because the officials charged with doing so kept forgetting
and delaying matters. She has had a
difficult time as a result of this Case; her husband is sometimes extremely
depressed or suffers sudden mood swings.
c. Testimony
of María del Carmen Aguirre-Charvet, former official of the Ecumenical Human
Rights Commission (CEDHU)
In
June 1992 she was working in the legal department of the Ecumenical Commission. Margarita Ramadán made contact with her on June 24, 1992 or thereabouts.
She helped her look for Mr. Suárez-Rosero and, to that end, spoke with
Leonardo Carrión, Adviser to the Minister of the Home Office.
Since this yielded no results, she presented an official note to the
Adviser, who told her that she could not even leave the note in his office
since the case was drug-related and he informed her that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
would be incommunicado for approximately one month.
d. Testimony
of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, alleged victim in this case
He
never saw an arrest warrant. He was apprehended in the early hours of June
23, 1992, together with Mr. Nelson Salgado, by two hooded individuals traveling
in an unmarked vehicle, who informed him that he was being arrested in connection
with a report that the occupants of a "Trooper" were burning drugs
in the Zámbiza ravine. They were taken
to the Interpol offices, where they were placed in the cells at the back. He never saw or discovered the name of the person
who had made the report. He had never taken part in the acts imputed to him.
He was not allowed to inform his family of his arrest. He was imprisoned, and threatened in order to
make him confess to his involvement. He
was beaten throughout the afternoon; a bag was placed over his head and injected
with tear gas; they threatened to place him in an electrified metal structure
and a tank filled with water and accused him of trafficking in drugs; they
threatened to summon his wife and put pressure on her to talk. Within 24 hours of his detention he gave a statement
to the Third Prosecuting Attorney, who did not inform him that he had the
right to a public legal counsel. His
cell, measuring some 15 square meters, in which there were 17 people, was
situated in a basement about two and a half meters below the level of the
courtyard; it was damp and had no windows, ventilation or bed. He slept on
a newspaper for 30 days. He caught
pneumonia and was given a pain-killer and, at the end of his period of isolation,
he was administered penicillin provided by his family. On July 23, 1992, a group of policemen from
the Intervention and Rescue Squad beat him all the way to the courtyard with
other detainees, made him place his hands on the nape of his neck and go down
on all fours, forced him to confess that he was a drug trafficker and beat
him; he was threatened and, after being blindfolded, he was forced to run
around the courtyard. They told him
they were going to kill him. During
the period in which he was held incommunicado
he lost 30 to 40 pounds because he was afraid to eat the food; he became allergic
to certain substances and foods. On
July 28, 1992, he was allowed to see his family. He was held in preventive detention for four years in a cell approximately
four meters by two; he was allowed into the courtyard for four hours each
day. Interviews with his attorney were
always conducted in the presence of a policeman. He never appeared before a court. Since his release he has been in constant fear,
and becomes agitated by the mere sight of police officers.
e. Report
of expert witness Ernesto Albán-Gómez, former Dean and Professor of Criminal
Law at the Pontificia Universidad Católica of Ecuador
An
arrest in Ecuador requires a warrant, with the sole exception of detention
for investigative purposes and detention in
flagrante delicto. Unlawful detention is an offense established
as such in the Criminal Code. Ecuadorian
law allows a 24-hour maximum period for holding a person incommunicado. The maximum period for a detained person to make a statement to a
magistrate is 24 hours, which may be extended by a further twenty-four hours
only at the request of the detainee or because the magistrate deems it necessary.
There is a special law that limits the period of preventive detention to a
ratio of the maximum penalty to which the detainee could be sentenced but,
in discriminatory manner, this law is not applicable to persons accused of
trafficking in drugs or narcotics. The
Law on Narcotic and Psychotropic Substances establishes the presumption of
guilt instead of the presumption of innocence. A police barracks is not the appropriate place
to keep someone in lawful preventive detention, since the law provides that
it is in the social rehabilitation centers established in the Code of Penalties
that prisoners in preventive detention or serving final sentences are to be
housed. The writ of habeas corpus must
be filed in writing; the decision must be taken within 48 hours and, while
the law does not set art the precise deadline within whic the court must call
and hear the person filing the writ, that period could also be 48 hours. In no circumstances does the law permit preventive
detention of an accessory, and the maximum sentence for that crime is two
years in prison. The judge has the
obligation to appoint defense counsel at the preliminary stage of a criminal
case; while public defenders do exist, detainees cannot be said to have effective
access to them. Under Ecuadorian law, the criminal proceeding must be completed
within approximately 180 days. There is systematic delay in the administration of justice, one of
the grave problems of the Ecuadorian judicial administrative system, and even
more so in criminal matters. Over 40
percent of the persons in Ecuador's jails have been detained for drug-related
offenses. Article 20 of Ecuador's Political
Constitution provides that all the political, civil, social, economic and
cultural rights established in the international Conventions, Covenants, or
Declarations are applicable to all persons living in its territory.
24. On June 16, 1997, the Secretariat, on instructions from the President,
informed the State and the Commission that it had set the deadline of July
18, for presentation of final written arguments on the merits of the case.
On July 16, the Commission asked the President for a four-day extension
of that deadline. On July 18, Ecuador asked for the deadline to
be extended until July 31. On July
21, the Secretariat informed Ecuador and the Commission that the President
had granted an extension until August 11, 1997.
25. The briefs containing the final arguments were submitted by the Commission
and the State on July 22 and August 8, 1997, respectively.
V
26. On March 15, 1996, the Commission requested the Court to "[t]ake
such measures as are necessary to ensure that Mr. Iván Suárez-Rosero [was]
released immediately, pending continuation of the procedures." In
support of its request, it alleged that Mr. Suárez-Rosero had been held
in preventive detention for approximately three years and nine months, that
during that period he had not been housed separately from condemned prisoners
and that a court order had been issued for his release.
On April 12, 1996, the Commission requested the Court to expand the
Urgent Measures to include Mr. Suárez-Rosero's wife, Mrs. Margarita Ramadán
de Suárez, and her daughter, Micaela Suárez-Ramadán, owing to an alleged attempt
on Mr. Suárez-Rosero's life on April 1, 1996, and the threats and harassment
to which he and his family have been subjected.
27. By orders of April 12 and 24, 1996, the President asked the State to
adopt, forthwith, such measures as may be necessary to effectively ensure
the physical and moral integrity of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, his wife,
Ms. Margarita Ramadán de Suárez, and their daughter, Micaela Suárez-Ramadán.
28. On June 28, 1996, the Court decided to close the Urgent Measures inasmuch
as the Commission had informed it that Mr. Suárez-Rosero had been released,
so that his safety and that of his family was not at risk.
VI
29. As attachments to its application, the Commission submitted copies
of 32 documents connected with the Mr. Suárez-Rosero's detention and the criminal
action brought against him by the State. For its part, Ecuador submitted certified copies
of ten court documents referring to the Case against Mr. Suárez-Rosero and
the official authorized text of the Code of Criminal Procedure of the Republic
of Ecuador, and, at the request of the Court, it submitted the official authorized
text of Ecuador's Law on Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances and its
Criminal Code. Those documents were
not challenged or contested in the instant Case, nor was their authenticity
questioned, for which reason the Court deems them to be valid.
30. No objections were made either to the statement of witness Ms. Carmen
Aguirre or the expert report by Dr. Ernesto Albán-Gómez. The Court therefore deems the facts stated by
the former and the expert's observations on Ecuadorian law to have been proven.
31. The State, invoking Article 38(1) of the Rules of Procedure then in
force, objected to the Court's hearing the testimony of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero,
Ms. Margarita Ramadán de Suárez and Carlos Ramadán in its brief of September
9, 1996. Ecuador advanced the following
reasons for its objections:
first
because he had been accused in criminal case No. 181‑95 brought against
Mr. Hugo Reyes-Torres for drug trafficking, and was a defendant in that case
as an accessory to the crime. Second
and third, on the ground that they were not qualified as they could not be
independent, they being his wife and brother-in-law, who had a direct relationship
with the principal perpetrator in the instant Case.
On
September 11, 1996, the Court decided to "[h]ear
the statements of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, Margarita Ramadán de Suárez,
and Carlos Ramadán, the value of which shall be assessed in the final judgment."
32. It is the well-settled jurisprudence of this Court that any interest
which a witness may have in the outcome of a case, is not enough, per se, to disqualify such witness. This principle is eminently applicable to the
evidence given by Margarita Ramadán
de Suárez and Carlos Ramadán. Moreover,
their statements were not contested by the State and referred to facts of
which the witnesses had direct knowledge.
Consequently, those statements must be admitted as suitable evidence
in this Case.
33. With regard to the statement of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, the
Court considers that, since he is the alleged victim in this case and has
a possible direct interest in it, his testimony should be assessed in the
context of all the evidence in the Case. However, the Court deems it necessary
to make one stipulation on the value of this testimony. The Commission argues that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
was held incommunicado by the State
from June 23 to July 28, 1992. If this
were proven, it would necessarily imply that only Mr. Suárez-Rosero and
the State would be aware of the treatment the former received during that
period. Consequently, they would be
the only ones entitled to present evidence on those conditions in the proceeding.
In that regard, the Court has already established that
in
the exercise of its judicial functions and when ascertaining and weighing
the evidence necessary to decide the cases before it, the Court may, in certain
circumstances, make use of both circumstantial evidence and indications or
presumptions on which to base its pronouncements when they lead to consistent
conclusions as regards the facts of the case (Gangaram
Panday Case, Judgment of January 21, 1994. Series C No. 16, para. 49).
In
accordance with this principle, since it has been proven (infra,
para. 34(d)) that Mr. Suárez-Rosero was held incommunicado during the period
indicated by the Commission, his testimony on the conditions of his incommunicado detention acquires a highly
presumptive value, especially when one considers that the State declared that
it "could not confirm or guarantee
anything" relating to the
treatment meted out to Mr. Suárez-Rosero during the time he was held incommunicado.
VII
34. From an examination of the documents, the witnesses' statements, the
expert's report, and the remarks of the State and the Commission in the course
of the proceedings, the Court deems the following facts to have been proven:
a. Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero was arrested at 2:30 a.m. on June 23,
1992, by officers of the National Police of Ecuador, in connection with police
Operation "Ciclón", the
aim of which was to "disband one
of the largest international drug-trafficking organizations", by
a police order issued when residents of the Zámbiza sector of Quito reported
that the occupants of a "Trooper" were burning what appeared to
be drugs (police report of the Pichincha criminal investigation office of
June 23, 1992; statement of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero during the inquiry proceedings
of June 23, 1992; answer to the application; testimony of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero);
b. Mr. Suárez-Rosero was arrested without a warrant from the competent
authority and not in flagrante delicto
(statement by the alternate agent of the State during the public hearing;
testimony of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero; constitutional warrant of imprisonment
No. 158‑IGPP‑04 of July 22, 1992; warrant authorizing preventive
detention, of August 12, 1992);
c. on the day of his arrest, Mr. Suárez-Rosero gave an initial statement
to police officers in the presence of three prosecutors from the Ministry
of Public Affairs. No defense attorney
was present during the questioning (statement of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero
during the inquiry proceedings of June 23, 1992; police report of the Special
Investigations Unit of July 7, 1994; official communication No. 510‑CSQ‑P‑96
of the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito; testimony of Mr.
Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero; order Number Seven delivered by the First Chamber
of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito at 10:00 a.m. on April 16, 1996,
seventh paragraph);
d. from June 23 to July 23, 1992, Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero was held
incommunicado at the "Quito
Number 2" Police Barracks situated at Montúfar and Manabí streets in
the city of Quito, in a damp and poorly ventilated cell measuring five meters
by three, together with sixteen other persons (police report of the Special
Investigations Unit of July 7, 1994);
e. on July 22, 1992, the Commissioner-General of Police of Pichincha ordered
the Director of the Men's Social Rehabilitation Center to keep Mr. Suárez-Rosero
and other persons in detention until a court had issued an order to the contrary
(constitutional warrant of imprisonment Number 158-IGPP-04 of July 22, 1992);
f. on July 23, 1992, Mr. Suárez-Rosero was transferred to the Men's Social
Rehabilitation Center of Quito (former García Moreno Prison), where he remained
incommunicado for five more days
(constitutional warrant of imprisonment Number 158-IGPP-04 of July 22, 1992;
testimony of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero; order delivered by the President of
the Superior Court of Justice of Quito at 10.00 a.m. on July 10, 1995);
g. during the entire period of his incommunicado detention, from June 23 to July 28, 1992, Mr. Suárez-Rosero
was not allowed to receive visits from his family or communicate with an attorney.
During that time, his only contact with his relatives was limited to
the exchange of clothes and scribbled notes, which were censored by the security
staff. This exchange was made possible through "pasadores",
civilians with the means to deliver such things to prisoners (police report
of the Special Investigations Unit of July 7, 1994; testimonies of Rafael
Iván Suárez-Rosero, Margarita de Suárez, and Carmen Aguirre);
h. from July 28, 1992, onwards Mr. Suárez Rosero was allowed to receive
his family, lawyer and members of human rights organizations on his days of
visitors. The interviews with his lawyer
were conducted in the presence of police officers (testimonies of Rafael Suárez
Rosero, Margarita Ramadán de Suárez and Carlos Ramadán);
i. on August 12, 1992, the Third Criminal Court of Pichincha issued an
order of preventive detention against Mr. Suárez-Rosero (constitutional warrant
of imprisonment Number 125 of August 12, 1992);
j. on September 3, 1992, the Third Criminal Court of Pichincha declined
to try the case against Mr. Suárez-Rosero and the other persons detained
in Operation "Ciclón,"
inasmuch of one of the accused in that case was promoted to the rank of Infantry
Major, and transferred the file to the Superior Court of Justice of Quito
(order of the Third Criminal Court of Pichincha issued at 3:00 p.m. on September
3, 1992);
k.. on two occasions, on September 14, 1992, and January 21, 1993, Mr. Suárez-Rosero
requested that the order authorizing his preventive detention be revoked (written
statement of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero of September 14, 1992, and written
statement of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero of January 21, 1993);
l. on November 27, 1992, the President of the Superior Court of Justice
of Quito ordered the initiation of the first phase of the pre-trial proceedings.
In that order, Mr. Suárez-Rosero was charged with transporting drugs
for the purpose of destroying them and hiding the evidence (initiating order
of November 27, 1992);
m. on December 9, 1992, the President of the Superior
Court of Justice of Quito ordered investigative proceedings to be instituted
in connection with the case; these were held between December 29, 1992, and
January 13, 1993 (statements by Marcelo Simbana, Carlos Ximénez, Rolando Vásquez-Guerrero,
Lourdes Mena, Luz María Feria, and José Raúl Páez; judicial record of September
31, 1992; expert report of December 31, 1992; judicial record of January 4,
1993; judicial record of January 5, 1993; expert report of January 8, 1993,
and expert report of January 13, 1993);
n. on March 29, 1993, Mr. Suárez-Rosero filed a writ of habeas corpus
with the President of the Supreme Court of Justice of Ecuador, under the provisions
of Article 458 of the Code of Criminal Proceedings of Ecuador (communication
from Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero of March 29, 1993);
o. on August 25, 1993, the President of the Superior Court of Justice
of Quito requested the Public Prosecutor of Pichincha to render his opinion
on Mr. Suárez-Rosero's request to have his detention order revoked (order,
subparagraph m., of the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito
of 11.00 a.m. on August 25, 1993);
p. on January 11, 1994, the Prosecutor of Pichincha rendered an opinion
on the request for abrogation of Mr. Suárez-Rosero's detention order (supra,
subparagraph o.), stating that
for
the time being, the police report which serves as the basis for initiation
of the instant criminal case, as well as the preliminary statements, suggests
that the accused [...]: Iván Suárez-Rosero [...] appear[s] to be responsible,
so that it would be improper to revoke the order for [his] preventive detention
(report
of Dr. José García-Falconí, Public Prosecutor of Pichincha of January 11,
1994, line 16);
q. on January 26, 1994, Mr. Suárez-Rosero's request to have the preventive
detention order against him revoked was denied (supra, subparagraph k.) (order of the
President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 10:00 a.m. on January
26, 1994, subparagraph h.). That same
day, the officers who had arrested him were summoned to give statements, but
did not appear, nor did they do so when they were again summoned on March
3 and May 9, 1994 (order of the President of the Superior Court of Justice
of Quito of 1:30 p.m. on March 3, 1994, lines six to 10, and order of the
President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 11:00 a.m. on May 9,
1994, subparagraph e.);
r. on June 10, 1994, the President of the Supreme Court of Justice denied
the writ of habeas corpus filed by Mr. Suárez-Rosero (supra, subparagraph n.), on the ground
that
[t]he
petition presented [. did] not provide any information showing the category
or nature of the proceeding indicating that he was deprived of his liberty,
the district in which the President of the Superior Court of Justice that
had issued the order was located, the place of detention, the date on which
he was deprived of his liberty, the reason, etc., so that it cannot be processed
and is therefore denied and ordered to be struck from the list.
(order
of the President of the Supreme Court of Justice of Ecuador of 9:00 a.m. on
June 10, 1994);
s. on November 4, 1994, the President of the Superior Court of Justice
of Quito declared the preliminary proceedings to be at an end and referred
the case to the Public Prosecutor of Pichincha for his final pronouncement
(order of the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 11.45
a.m. on November 4, 1994). The prosecutor
was to make a determination, within six days, but there is no record of the
date in which he did so (Art. 235 of the Code of Criminal Proceeding of Ecuador);
t. on July 10, 1995, the President of the Superior Court of Justice of
Quito declared open the plenary phase of the case against Mr. Suárez-Rosero,
on a charge of being accessory to the crime of drug trafficking.
That court also decided that in Mr. Suárez-Rosero's case the requirements
of preventive detention had not been met, and ordered his release (order of
the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 10:00 a.m. on July
10, 1995);
u. on July 13, 1995, the Public Prosecutor of Pichincha requested the
President of the Superior Court of Pichincha to expand his order of July 10,
1995,
so
as not to release any person until that order [had been] referred to the Superior
Court, in strict compliance with Article 121 of the Law on Narcotic Drugs
and Psychotropic Substances
(communication
from the Public Prosecutor of Pichincha of July 13, 1995, and communication
Number 510‑CSQ‑P‑96 of the President of the Superior Court
of Justice of Quito);
v. on July 24, 1995, the President of the Superior Court of Justice of
Quito ruled
[the]
petition [of the Public Prosecutor of Pichincha of July 13, 1995] to be in
order, inasmuch as the norm previously invoked in this type of violation is
mandatory, since it deals with the crime of drug trafficking, governed by
the Special Law on Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances [... and that]
the order of release granted to accessories and to those whose cases were
provisionally suspended should also be reviewed.
Consequently,
the units were revised by the First Chamber of the Superior Court of Justice
of Quito on July 31, 1995 (order of the President of the Superior Court of
Justice of Quito of 10:00 a.m. on July 24, 1995; order of the President of
the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 10:00 a.m. on July 31, 1995);
w. on April 16, 1996, the First Chamber of the Superior Court of Justice
of Quito ordered Mr. Suárez-Rosero's release (order of the First Chamber of
the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 10.00 a.m. on April 16, 1996).
That order was complied with on April 29, 1996 (official communication
Number 861-CSQ-P-96 of the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito
on April 29, 1996; testimonies of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, Margarita Ramadán,
and Carlos Ramadán);
x. the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito, in his judgment
of September 9, 1996, decided that Mr. Suárez-Rosero is
Mr.
Suárez-Rosero was also fined two thousand times the minimum living wage (judgment
of the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito of 4.00 p.m. on
September 9, 1996), and
y. at no time was Mr. Suárez-Rosero summoned to appear before a competent
judicial authority to be informed of the charges brought against him (testimony
of Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero).
VIII
35. Once the Court has indicated the proven facts it regards as significant,
it must examine the arguments of the Inter-American Commission and of the
State in order to determine the State's international responsibility for the
alleged violation of the American Convention.
36. The Court deems it necessary to conduct a preliminary review of a statement
made by the State in its answer to the application to the effect that Mr.
Suárez-Rosero was tried on a charge of "grave crimes against Ecuadorian children, youth,
and the public at large." The
State requested that, for the above reasons, the petition be rejected and
that it be struck from the list,
The
State repeated that request in its brief containing its final arguments.
37. On the above-mentioned argument by the State, the Court deems it pertinent
to point out that the instant proceeding is not concerned with Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
innocence or guilt in the crimes imputed to him by the Ecuadorian courts.
The duty to adopt a decision on those matters lies exclusively with
Ecuador's domestic courts, inasmuch as this Court is not a criminal tribunal
before which an individual's responsibility for crimes committed may be debated. Therefore, the Court considers Mr. Suárez-Rosero's innocence or guilt
to be unrelated to the merits of the instant Case. In the light of the foregoing, the Court declares
the State's request inadmissible and will determine the legal consequences
of the facts that have been proven.
IX
38. In its application the Commission asked the Court to declare that Mr.
Suárez-Rosero's initial detention was unlawful and arbitrary, in violation
of Article 7(2) and 7(3) of the American Convention, since both this instrument
and the Ecuadorian laws require such acts to be performed by order of the
competent authority in accordance with the procedures and terms established
by law. A further requirement, according
to the Commission, is that the detention be necessary and reasonable, which
has not been proven in this case. Lastly, the Commission argued that during the
initial period of Mr. Suárez-Rosero's arrest, he was held in facilities unsuitable
for persons in preventive detention.
39. The State, for its part, contended that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's arrest
"was carried out in connection
with a lawful inquiry and as a result of actual events, of which he was one
of the protagonists."
40. In its brief of closing arguments the Commission stated that, in the
course of the proceeding, not only had Ecuador not denied that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
had been arrested in violation of Ecuadorian law, but that, on the contrary,
the alternate agent of the State had admitted at the public hearing before
the Court that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's arrest had been arbitrary.
41. Ecuador maintained in its closing arguments, on the subject of Mr.
Suárez-Rosero's arrest, that "[i]t is surprised [...] that the
defendant has described a frightful scenario of detention and arrest and yet
he is the only person to have appealed to the Commission to demonstrate such
monstrous facts."
42. Article 7(2) and (3) of the American Convention on Human Rights establishes
that
2.
No one shall be deprived of his physical liberty except for reasons
and under conditions established beforehand by the constitution of the State
Party concerned or by a law established pursuant thereto.
3.
No one shall be subject to arbitrary arrest or imprisonment.
43. The Court has said that no one may be
With
regard to the formal requirements, the Court observes that the Political Constitution
of Ecuador provides in Article 22(19)(h)
that:
[n]o
one shall be deprived of his liberty except by written order of the competent
authority, as appropriate, for the period and according to the procedures
prescribed by law, save in the case of flagrante
delicto, in which case he may not either be held without a trial order
for more than twenty-four hours. In
either case, he may not be held incommunicado
for more than twenty-four hours
and
that, pursuant to Article 177 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of Ecuador,
[t]he court may issue a writ of preventive imprisonment
when it deems it to be necessary, provided the following procedural data are
presented:
1.
Evidence leading to a presumption of the existence of a crime that
warrants the punishment of deprivation of liberty; and,
2.
Evidence leading to a presumption that the accused is the author of
or accomplice in the crime in question.
The
evidence on which the order of imprisonment are based shall be stated in the
records.
44. It was not demonstrated in the instant Case that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
was apprehended in flagrante delicto.
His arrest should therefore have been effected with a warrant issued
by a competent judicial authority. However,
the first judicial proceeding relating to his detention only took place on
August 12, 1992 (supra, para. 34(i)), that is, over a month after his arrest, in violation of
procedures previously established by the Political Constitution and the Code
of Criminal Procedure of Ecuador.
45. The Court deems it unnecessary to voice an opinion on the evidence
or suspicions that may have led to a detention order. The relevant point is
that such an order was only produced in this case long after the victim's
arrest. This was expressly acknowledged
by the State during the public hearing, when it said that "Mr. Suárez was the victim of arbitrary detention."
46. As to the place in which Mr. Suárez-Rosero was held incommunicado, the Court deems it to have
been proven that he spent from June 23 to July 23, 1992, at a police station
unsuitable as accommodation for a prisoner, according to the Commission and
the expert (supra, para. 34(d)),
in addition to all the violations of the right to liberty to the detriment
of Mr. Suárez-Rosero.
47. For the above reasons, the Court finds that the Mr. Suárez-Rosero'
arrest and his subsequent detention from June 23, 1992, were carried out in
violation of the provisions contained in Article 7(2) and (3) of the American
Convention.
48. The Commission requested the Court to find that the fact that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
incommunicado detention for 36 days
generated a violation of Article 7(2) of the American Convention, inasmuch
as it violated Ecuadorian law, which establishes that such detention may not
exceed 24 hours.
49. Ecuador did not challenge that argument in its answer to the application.
50. The Court observes that, pursuant to Article 22(19)(h) of the Political
Constitution of Ecuador, the incommunicado
detention of a person may not exceed 24 hours (supra,
para. 43). Nevertheless, Mr. Suárez-Rosero
was held incommunicado from June
23 to July 28, 1992 (supra, para.
34(d)), that is, for a total of 35 days in excess of the maximum period established
by the Constitution.
51. Incommunicado detention is
an exceptional measure the purpose of which is to prevent any interference
with the investigation of the facts. Such isolation must be limited to the period of time expressly established
by law. Even in that case, the State
is obliged to ensure that the detainee enjoys the minimum and non-derogable
guarantees established in the Convention and, specifically, the right to question
the lawfulness of the detention and the guarantee of access to effective defense
during his incarceration.
52. The Court, bearing in mind the maximum limit established in the Ecuadorian
Constitution, finds that Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero's incommunicado detention from June 23 to
July 28, 1992, violated Article 7(2) of the American Convention.
X
53. The Commission argued in its application that the State had not fulfilled
its obligation to bring Mr. Suárez-Rosero before a competent judicial authority,
as required by Article 7(5) of the Convention, for, according to the arguments
of the petitioner ‑not contested by the State before the Commission‑,
Mr. Suárez-Rosero never appeared in person before such an authority to
be informed of the charges against him.
54. In its answer to the application in that regard, Ecuador stated that
"Mr. Suárez-Rosero has been exercising
his legal rights to express his views and make his legitimate claims during
his legal process."
55. Article 7(5) of the American Convention provides that
[a]ny
person detained shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer
authorized by law to exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to trial
within a reasonable time or to be released without prejudice to the continuation
of the proceedings. His release may be subject to guarantees to
assure his appearance for trial.
56. The State did not contest the Commission's claim that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
never appeared before a judicial authority during the proceeding.
The Court therefore deems that claim to have been proved and rules
that this omission on the part of the State constitutes a violation of Article
7(5) of the American Convention.
XI
57. The Commission asked the Court to rule that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
incommunicado detention violated
Article 7(6) of the American Convention in that it denied him contact with
the outside world and did not permit him to exercise his right of habeas corpus.
58. With regard to the aforementioned guarantee, Article 7(6) of the Convention
provides that
[a]nyone
who is deprived of his liberty shall be entitled to recourse to a competent
court, in order that the court may decide without delay on the lawfulness
of his arrest or detention and order his release if the arrest or detention
is unlawful. In States Parties whose laws provide that anyone
who believes himself to be threatened with deprivation of his liberty is entitled
to recourse to a competent court in order that it may decide on the lawfulness
of such threat, this remedy may not be restricted or abolished. The interested party or another person on his
behalf is entitled to seek these remedies.
59. The Court has already ruled that a detained person must be guaranteed
the right of habeas corpus at all times, even when he is being held in exceptional
circumstances of incommunicado detention
established by law. That guarantee
is doubly entrenched in the law in Ecuador. Article 28 of the Political Constitution
provides that
[a]ny
person who believes that he is being unlawfully deprived of his liberty may
seek the remedy of habeas corpus. He
may exercise this right himself or through another person without the need
for written mandate ...
The
Code of Criminal Procedure of that State establishes in Article 458 that
[a]ny
person who is charged with infringing the precepts contained in [that] Code
and is kept in detention may apply to be released to a higher Court than the
one that has ordered the deprivation of his liberty.
[...]
The application shall be made in writing.
[...]
Immediately
upon receipt of the application, the Judge who is to hear it shall order the
detained person to be brought before him and shall hear his statements, which
shall be included in a record which shall be signed by the Judge, the Secretary
and the applicant, or, should the applicant be unable to sign, by a witness
on his behalf. Thereupon, the Judge shall seek to obtain all
the information he deems necessary for the purpose of arriving to a conclusion
and ensuring the lawfulness of his decision and shall, within forty-eight
hours, decide what he deems to be lawful.
60. The Court observes, first of all, that the aforesaid articles do not
restrict access to the remedy of habeas corpus to the persons who are held
incommunicado; in addition, the
Constitution allows that remedy to be sought by any person "without the need for written mandate." It also points out that no evidence has been
submitted to it to show that Mr. Suárez-Rosero attempted to file such an appeal
with a competent authority during his incommunicado
detention, nor did any other person attempt to do so on his behalf. Consequently,
the Court deems the Commission's claim in that regard not to have been proven.
* * *
61. The Commission claimed that Ecuador violated Articles 7(6) and 25 of
the American Convention when it denied Mr. Suárez-Rosero the right of
habeas corpus. On that point, the Commission claimed that the
inordinate time of fourteen and a half months between Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
filing the writ of habeas corpus on March 29, 1993, and the ruling on the writ is patently incompatible
with the reasonable time provided for in Ecuador's own legislation.
It further claimed that the State had therefore failed in its obligation
to provide effective judicial recourse. Lastly,
the Commission maintained that such recourse was denied for purely procedural
reasons, that is, because the petitioner had not indicated the nature of the
proceeding or the location of the court that had ordered the detention, nor
the place, date or cause of the detention.
Such formal requirements are not established in Ecuadorian Law.
62. Ecuador did not contest those arguments in its answer to the application.
63. This Court shares the Commission's view that the right enshrined in
Article 7(6) of the American Convention is not exercised with the mere formal
existence of the remedies it governs. Those remedies must be effective, since their purpose, in the terms
of Article 7(6), is to obtain without delay a decision "on the lawfulness of [his] arrest or detention," and, should
they be unlawful, to obtain, also without delay, an "order [for] his release". The Court has also held that
[i]n
order for habeas corpus to achieve its purpose, which is to obtain a judicial
determination of the lawfulness of a detention, it is necessary that the detained
person be brought before a competent judge or tribunal with jurisdiction over
him. Here habeas corpus performs a vital role in
ensuring that a person's life and physical integrity are respected, in preventing
his disappearance or the keeping of his whereabouts secret and in protecting
him against torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment or treatment
(Habeas Corpus in Emergency Situations
(Arts. 27(2), 25(1) and 7(6) American Convention on Human Rights), Advisory
Opinion OC‑8/87 of January 30, 1987. Series A No. 8, para. 35).
64. As indicated above (supra,
para. 34.(r)), the Court deems it to have been proven that the writ of habeas
corpus filed by Mr. Suárez-Rosero on March 29, 1993, was disposed of
by the President of the Supreme Court of Justice of Ecuador on June 10, 1994,
that is, more than 14 months after it was filed.
This Court also deems it to have been proven that the application was
ruled inadmissible, on the ground that Mr. Suárez-Rosero had omitted
certain information, whereas, under Ecuadorian Law, such information is not
a prerequisite for admissibility.
65. Article 25 of the American Convention provides that everyone has the
right to simple and prompt recourse, or any other effective recourse, to a
competent court or tribunal. The Court
has ruled that this provision
constitutes
one of the basic pillars not only of the American Convention, but of the very
rule of law in a democratic society in the sense of the Convention.
Article
25 is closely linked to the general obligation contained in Article 1(1) of
the American Convention, in assigning protective functions to the domestic
law of States Parties. The purpose of habeas corpus is not only to
ensure respect for the right to personal liberty and physical integrity, but
also to prevent the person's disappearance or the keeping of his whereabouts
secret and, ultimately, to ensure his right to life (Castillo Páez Case, Judgment of November 3, 1997. Series C No. 34,
paras. 82 and 83).
66. On the basis of the foregoing, and especially since Mr. Suárez-Rosero
did not have access to simple, prompt and effective recourse, the Court finds
that the State violated the provisions of Article 7(6) and 25 of the American
Convention.
XII
67. The Commission contended that by subjecting Mr. Suárez-Rosero
to prolonged preventive detention, the State violated:
a.- his right to be tried within a "reasonable time", as established
in Article 7(5) of the Convention,
b.- his right to be brought before a competent tribunal, as established
in Article 8(1) of the Convention, and
c.- the principle of presumption of innocence, as established in Article
8(2) of the Convention.
68. In that regard, Ecuador maintained in its brief of final arguments
that
one cannot ignore the important fact that the courts acted with the
greatest speed, given the Judiciary's personnel and financial constraints.
Its workload has been increasing with the expansion of the docket, which contains
over forty-three volumes --comprising more than four thousand three hundred
substantive pages-- owing to the large number of persons implicated in the
so-called Operation "Ciclón".
[...]
There
may have been some breaches of the terms and periods established for the substantiation
of an accusation, or non-observance at some time of the formalities in the
courts, but let it be said that in no way did the Ecuadorian State curtail
Mr. Suárez's action, since he was able at all times adequately to exercise
his legitimate right of defense. His
inalienable rights were not violated nor was his sentence unjust; it is, after
all, deserved, as the First Chamber of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito
found.
69. Article 8(1) of the Convention establishes that
[e]very
person has the right to a hearing, with due guarantees and within a reasonable
time, by a competent, independent, and impartial tribunal, previously established
by law, in the substantiation of any accusation of a criminal nature made
against him or for the determination of his rights and obligations of a civil,
labor, fiscal, or any other nature.
70. The purpose of the principle of "reasonable time" to which Articles 7(5) and 8(1) of the American
Convention refer is to prevent accused persons from remaining in that situation
for a protracted period and to ensure that the charge is promptly disposed
of. In the instant case, the first
act of the proceeding was Mr. Suárez-Rosero's arrest on June 23, 1992,
and, therefore, the time must be calculated from that moment.
71. The Court considers the proceeding to be at an end when a final and
firm judgment is delivered and the jurisdiction thereby ceases (cf. Cour eur. D.H., arrêt Guincho du 10 juillet 1984, Serie A nº 81, para. 29) and
that, particularly in criminal matters, that time must cover the entire proceeding,
including any appeals that may be filed. On the basis of the evidence contained in the Case before it, the
Court considers that the proceeding against Mr. Suárez-Rosero ended in the
Ecuadorian jurisdiction on September 9, 1996, the date on which he was convicted
by the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Quito. Although at the public hearing Mr. Suárez-Rosero
referred to an appeal of that conviction, his statement was not substantiated.
72. This Court shares the view of the European Court of Human Rights, which
in a number of decisions analyzed the concept of reasonable time and decided
that three points should be taken into account in determining the reasonableness
of the time in which a proceeding takes place: a) the complexity of the case, b) the procedural
activity of the interested party, and c) the conduct of the judicial authorities
(cf. Genie Lacayo Case, Judgment
of January 29, 1997. Series C No. 30, para. 77; and cf. Eur. Court H.R., Motta judgment of 19 February 1991, Series A No. 195‑A, para.
No. 30; Eur. Court H.R., Ruiz-Mateos
case v. Spain judgment of 23 June 1993, Series A No. 262, para. 30).
73. On the basis of the above considerations, after comprehensive analysis
of the proceeding against Mr. Suárez-Rosero in the domestic courts, the
Court observes that that proceeding lasted more than 50 months.
In the Court's view, this period far exceeds the "reasonable
time" contemplated in the American Convention.
74. Likewise, the Court considers that the fact that an Ecuadorian tribunal
has found Mr. Suárez-Rosero guilty of complicity in a crime does not
justify his being deprived of his liberty for more than three years and ten
months, when two years is the maximum in Ecuadorian law for that offense.
75. In view of the foregoing, the Court finds that the State of Ecuador
violated, to the detriment of Mr. Rafael Iván Suárez-Rosero, the right to
be tried within a reasonable time or be released, as established in Articles
7(5) and 8(1) of the American Convention.
* * *
76. The Court now turns to the argument put forward by the Commission to
the effect that the proceeding against Mr. Suárez-Rosero was in breach of
the principle of the presumption of innocence, enunciated in Article 8(2)
of the American Convention. That Article
provides that
[e]very
person accussed of a criminal offense has the right to be presumed innocent
so long as his guilt has not been proven according to the law [...].
77. This Court is of the view that the principle of the presumption of
innocence -inasmuch as it lays down that a person is innocent until proven
guilty- is founded upon the existence of judicial guarantees. Article 8(2) of the Convention establishes the
obligation of the State not to restrict the liberty of a detained person beyond
the limits strictly necessary to ensure that he will not impede the efficient
development of an investigation and that he will not evade justice; preventive
detention is, therefore, a precautionary rather than a punitive measure.
This concept is laid down in a goodly number of instruments of international
human rights law, including the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, which provides that preventive detention should not be the normal
practice in relation to persons who are to stand trial (Art. 9(3)).
This would be tantamount to anticipating a sentence, which is at odds
with universally recognized general principles of law.
78. The Court considers that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's prolonged preventive detention
violated the principle of presumption of innocence, in that he was detained
from June 23, 1992, to April 28, 1996, and that the order for his release
issued on July 10, 1995, was only executed a year later. In view of the above, the Court rules that the
State violated Article 8(2) of the American Convention.
* * *
79. The Commission requested the Court to rule that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
incommunicado detention for 36 days
violated Articles 8(2)(c), 8(2)(d) and 8(2)(e) of the American Convention, inasmuch
as it prevented him from exercising his right to consult an attorney. The Commission further pointed out that at other
times during the proceeding, Mr. Suárez-Rosero was unable to communicate freely
with his lawyer, which also violated the guarantee laid down in Article 8(2)(d).
80. Ecuador did not contest those arguments in its answer to the petition.
81. In the brief containing its final arguments, the Commission once more
raised the matter of incommunicado
detention, maintaining that the exchange of a few scribbled notes does not
allow a detained person to communicate with the outside world, to seek legal
counsel, or to invoke legal guarantees.
82. Article 8(2)(c), (d)
and (e) of the American Convention establishes minimum guarantees to which
every person is entitled, with full equality,
[a]dequate
time and means for the preparation of his defense;
[t]he
right of the accused to defend himself personally or to be assisted by legal
counsel of his own choosing, and to communicate freely and privately with
his counsel;
[and]
the inalienable right to be assisted by counsel provided by the state, paid
or not as the domestic law provides, if the accused does not defend himself
personally or engage his own counsel within the time period established by
law [.]
83. Owing to his having been kept incommunicado for 36 days of his detention, Mr. Suárez-Rosero
was denied adequate opportunity to prepare his defense, since he did not have
the legal assistance of a public defender and, once he was able to obtain
legal counsel of his own choosing, he was unable to communicate with him freely
and privately. Hence, the Court considers
that Ecuador violated Article 8(2)(c),
8(2)(d) and 8(2)(e) of the American Convention.
XIII
84. The Commission requested the Court to find that the incommunicado detention to which Mr. Suárez-Rosero
was subjected for 36 days violated Article 5(2) of the American Convention,
in that his isolation constituted cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment.
85. Ecuador did not contest that argument in its answer to the application.
86. In its closing arguments, the Commission again raised this matter,
claiming that communication through a third party did not enable Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
family to ascertain his physical, mental or emotional state.
87. In its closing arguments, Ecuador maintained that Mr. Suárez-Rosero
received adequate medical treatment during his incarceration, "as
attested to by the official medical records included in the docket".
88. Article 5(2) of the American Convention provides that
[n]o
one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment
or treatment. All persons deprived of their liberty shall
be treated with respect for the inherent dignity of the human person.
89. As the Court has stated (supra, para. 51), incommunicado
detention is an exceptional measure the purpose of which is to ensure the
results of an investigation; it may not be applied except in the conditions
previously established by law, in the sense attributed to it by Article 30
of the American Convention (The Word
"Laws" in Article 30 of the American Convention on Human Rights, Advisory
Opinion OC-6/86 of May 9, 1986. Series A No. 6, para. 38). In the instant Case, those conditions are established
in Article 22(19)(h) of the Political
Constitution of Ecuador, which states that "[i]n any case [the detained person] may not be held incommunicado for more than
24 hours". This precept is applicable by virtue of the
reference to domestic law in Article 7(2) of the American Convention (supra, para. 42).
90. One of the reasons that incommunicado detention is considered to be an exceptional instrument
is the grave effects it has on the detained person. Indeed, isolation from the outside world produces
moral and psychological suffering in any person, places him in a particularly
vulnerable position, and increases the risk of aggression and arbitrary acts
in prisons.
91. The mere fact that the victim was for 36 days deprived of any communication
with the outside world, in particular with his family, allows the Court to
conclude that Mr. Suárez-Rosero was subjected to cruel, inhuman and degrading
treatment, all the more so since it has been proven that his incommunicado detention was arbitrary and
carried out in violation of Ecuador's domestic laws. The victim told the Court
of his suffering at being unable to seek legal counsel or communicate with
his family. He also testified that
during his isolation he was held in a damp underground cell measuring approximately
15 square meters with 16 other prisoners, without the necessary hygiene facilities,
and that he was obliged to sleep on newspaper; he also described the beatings
and threats he received during his detention. For all those reasons, the treatment to which
Mr. Suárez-Rosero was subjected may be described as cruel, inhuman and degrading.
92. For the above reasons, the Court rules that the State violated Article
5(2) of the American Convention.
XIV
93. The Commission requested the Court to find that the unnumbered Article
which follows Article 114 of the Ecuadorian Criminal Code (hereinafter "Article
114 bis") violates "the
right to judicial protection" enshrined in Article 2 of the Convention. According to the Commission, it is an obligation
of a State to organize its judicial apparatus in such a way as to ensure "to
every person subject to its jurisdiction the free and full exercise of the
rights established therein."
94. In the brief containing its final arguments, Ecuador stated that it
had
initiated
the pertinent procedures for making that law conform to its Political Constitution,
which is the Supreme Law to which all other lesser laws and provisions are
subordinated.
95. The aforementioned Article 114 bis provides that
[p]ersons
who, having been kept in detention for a time equal to or greater than one-third
of the period established in the Criminal Code as the maximum sentence for
the offense with which they are charged, have neither had their case discontinued
nor been committed to trial, shall be immediately released by the judge hearing
the case.
Likewise,
persons, who have been kept in detention without sentence for a time equal
to or greater than half the period established by the Criminal Code as the
maximum sentence for the offense with which they are charged, shall be released
by the criminal court hearing the case.
These
provisions do not include persons charged with offenses punished under the
Law on Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances.
96. Article 2 of the Convention establishes that
[w]here
the exercise of any of the rights or freedoms referred to in Article 1 is
not already ensured by legislative or other provisions, the States Parties
undertake to adopt, in accordance with their constitutional processes and
the provisions of this Convention, such legislative or other measures as may
be necessary to give effect to those rights and freedoms.
97. As the Court has maintained, the States Parties to the Convention may
not order measures that violate the rights and freedoms recognized therein
(International Responsibility for the
Promulgation and Enforcement of Laws in Violation of the Convention (Arts.
1 and 2 American Convention on Human Rights), Advisory Opinion OC-14/94
of December 9, 1994. Series A No. 14, para. 36). Whereas the first two provisions of Article 114 bis of the Ecuadorian Criminal Code accord
detained persons the right to be released when the conditions indicated exist,
the last paragraph of the same article contains an exception to that law.
98. The Court considers that this exception deprives a part of the prison
population of a fundamental right, on the basis of the crime of which it is
accused and, hence, intrinsically injures everyone in that category.
This rule has been applied in the specific case of Mr. Suárez-Rosero
and has caused him undue harm. The Court further observes that, in its opinion,
this law violates per se Article 2 of the American Convention,
whether or not it was enforced in the instant case.
99. In conclusion, the Court points out that the exception contained in
the aforementioned Article 114 bis
violates Article 2 of the Convention in that Ecuador has not taken adequate
measures under its domestic law to give effect to the right enshrined in Article
7(5) of the Convention.
XV
100. The Commission contended that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's 36-day incommunicado detention constituted an
unwarranted restriction of his family's right to be informed of his situation,
thus impairing the rights established in Articles 11 and 17 of the American
Convention.
101. The State did not contest this argument in its answer to the application.
102. The Court is of the opinion that the effects that Mr. Suárez-Rosero's
incommunicado detention may have
had on his family would derive from the violation of Articles 5(2) and 7(6)
of the American Convention. Those consequences may be taken up by this Court at the Reparations
Stage.
XVI
103. Article 63(1) of the American Convention provides that
[i]f
the Court finds that there has been a violation of a right or freedom protected
by this Convention, the Court shall rule that the injured party be ensured
the enjoyment of his right or freedom that was violated.
It shall also rule, if appropriate, that the consequences of the measure
or situation that constituted the breach of such right or freedom be remedied
and that fair compensation be paid to the injured party.
104. In the application, the Commission requested the Court to decide
a. that Ecuador must release Mr. Suárez-Rosero forthwith, without prejudice
to the continuation of the case against him;
b. that Ecuador must guarantee an exhaustive and prompt trial of the case
against Mr. Suárez-Rosero, and adopt effective measures to ensure that this
type of violation does not recur in future;
c. that Ecuador must conduct an investigation to determine those responsible
for the violations in the instant case and punish them; and
d. that Ecuador must make reparation to Mr. Suárez-Rosero for the consequences
of the violations committed.
105. There is no point to the Commission's first request inasmuch as it
was made prior to Mr. Suárez-Rosero's release.
106. With regard to the Commission's second request, Ecuador presented the
Court with documents to prove that the case against Mr. Suárez-Rosero had
already been adjudicated (supra,
para. 71). The Commission did not contest
this fact and, although during the public hearing held at the Court Mr. Suárez-Rosero
mentioned the existence of an appeal of that judgment, there is no evidence
to support his statement (supra,
para. 71). It is therefore unnecessary
for the Court to refer to the first part of that request. Regarding the second part, the Court declares
that Ecuador is obliged, in accordance with the general duties to respect
rights and adopt provisions under domestic law (Article 1(1) and (2) of the
Convention), to adopt such measures as may be necessary to ensure that violations
such as those established in the instant case never again occur in its jurisdiction.
107. In view of the above, the Court is of the opinion that Ecuador must
order an investigation to identify and, as appropriate, punish those responsible
for the human rights violations referred to in this Judgment.
108. It is obvious that in the instant case the Court cannot determine that
the injured party be guaranteed the enjoyment of his right or freedom that
has been violated. However, it is proper
that reparation be made for the consequences of the situation that constituted
the violation of the specific rights in this Case, which must include fair
compensation and reimbursement of any expenses which the victim and his relatives
may have incurred in their representations in connection with this proceeding.
109. In order to determine the reparations, the Court will require sufficient
information and evidence, for which purpose it orders that the appropriate
stage of the procedure be initiated, and, to this end, authorizes its President
to adopt in due course such measures as may be necessary.
XVII OPERATIVE PARAGRAPHS
110. NOW, THEREFORE:
THE COURT,
unanimously
1. Finds that the State of Ecuador violated, to the detriment of Rafael
Iván Suárez-Rosero, Article 7 of the American Convention on Human Rights,
in relation to Article 1(1) of the same, in the terms indicated in paragraphs
38 to 66 of this Judgment.
unanimously
2. Finds that the State of Ecuador violated, to the detriment of Rafael
Iván Suárez-Rosero, Article 8 of the American Convention on Human Rights,
in relation to Article 1(1) of the same, in the terms indicated in paragraphs
57 to 83 of this Judgment.
unanimously
3. Finds that the State of Ecuador violated, to the detriment of Rafael
Iván Suárez-Rosero, Article 5 of the American Convention on Human Rights,
in relation to Article 1(1) of the same, in the terms indicated in paragraphs
84 to 92 of this Judgment.
unanimously
4. Finds that the State of Ecuador violated, to the detriment of Rafael
Iván Suárez-Rosero, Article 25 of the American Convention on Human Rights,
in relation to Article 1(1) of the same, in the terms indicated in paragraphs
61 to 66 of this Judgment.
unanimously
5. Finds that the final paragraph of the unnumbered article after Article
114 of the Criminal Code of Ecuador violates Article 2 of the American Convention
on Human Rights, in relation to Articles 7(5) and 1(1) of the same.
unanimously
6. Decides that Ecuador must order an investigation to determine the persons
responsible for the human rights violations referred to in this judgment and,
where possible, punish them.
unanimously
7. Decides that Ecuador is obliged to pay a fair indemnity to the victim
and his relatives and to compensate them for any expenses incurred in their
representations relating to this proceeding.
unanimously
8. Orders the initiation of the Reparations Stage, for which purpose it
authorizes the President to adopt in due course such measures as may be necessary.
Done
in Spanish and English, the Spanish text being authentic, in San Jose, Costa
Rica, on this twelfth day of November, 1997.
Antônio
A. Cançado Trindade
President
Hernán Salgado-Pesantes
Héctor Fix-Zamudio
Alejandro
Montiel-Argüello Máximo Pacheco-Gómez
Oliver Jackman
Alirio Abreu-Burelli
Manuel
E. Ventura-Robles
Secretary
Read
at a public session at the seat of the Court in San Jose, Costa Rica, on November
15, 1997.
So
ordered,
President
Manuel
E. Ventura-Robles
Secretary
* On September 16, 1997, the President
of the Court, Judge Hernán Salgado-Pesantes, pursuant to Article 4.3 of
the Rules of Procedure, and by virtue of his Ecuadorian nationality, relinquished
the Presidency to the Vice-President, Judge Antônio A. Cançado Trindade,
for the consideration of this case.
[1]
Rules of Procedure, approved by the Court at its XXIIIth Regular
Session held on January 9 and 18, 1991; amended on January 23, 1993; July
16, 1993; and December 2, 1995.
[2]
The organization Rights International, the Center for International
Human Rights Law, Inc. dispatched to the Court a communication as an amicus
curiae on June 14, 1997, and Mr. Raúl Moscoso-Álvarez submitted another
to the Court on September 11, 1997.