Conrad Black, who is set to appear in a Chicago courtroom on Friday, told CBC News that he hoped a judge would allow him to return to Canada.
"I hope that we'll get an agreement for me to go back to Canada. Apart from that it should be pretty straight forward," Black told CBC News exclusively as he arrived at a Miami airport to depart for Chicago.
Black has a gated estate in the exclusive Bridle Path area of Toronto.
Asked whether he had evolved during his time in jail, Black said: "I'm not getting into that now. No doubt I have but I'm not getting into it now."
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2010/07/22/conrad-black.htmlThursday, July 22, 2010 | 7:49 PM ET
Not a Canadian citizen. Has been arrested.
CODEPINK Activist Detained for Over 48 Hours at Canadian Border After Being Denied Entry to Canada
MEDEA BENJAMIN: Yesterday my colleague Tighe Barry from CODEPINK and I had an hour and a half free, and we thought, let’s go over to Canada and have lunch. We went there and were detained. They searched our car. They held me for questioning for about four hours and asked me everything about the Social Forum and what I was doing and what conferences I was taking part in. They asked if I was coming for the G20 summit. They even asked me who I voted for for president.
After four hours, they allowed me to return to the United States, but my colleague, Tighe Barry, was kept. He was held overnight, and he is still there for a second night in a row. They said that they can hold anybody who has any kind of record, a misdemeanor, a felony or anything, and they can hold them for as long as they want before they put them before a judge for deportation hearings. And one of the reasons they said they could do this is they said the United States does it all the time. So he has no charges against him, but he is being held now going on for forty-eight hours.
MIKE BURKE: Now, Medea, I know that both you and Tighe have traveled extensively around the world. Has this ever happened to either one of you before?
MEDEA BENJAMIN: No. We go everywhere. I mean, we’re constantly traveling, and Tighe is constantly traveling. He’s never had a problem. The issue with Canada is it’s the only country that shares the criminal database with the United States, so it has a record of everything that is in the criminal records here in the US computer system. So they can dredge up something from thirty years ago, which they did in the case of Tighe, as well as arrests that we’ve had making antiwar protests in Congress or in front of the White House. And it’s very dangerous, because this information sharing is starting with Canada and is supposed to then be extended to other countries that the US has special relationships with, like Mexico. So it’s important as activists that we really protest this now, before we’re not allowed to travel very far beyond our borders.
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/6/25/medea