The Standard (St. Catharines)

Accused ordered extradited

Ontario medical student accused in cyber sex abuse case plans appeal

- DIANA MEHTA CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — An Ontario medical student alleged to have forced two American teenage sisters to engage in sexual acts while he watched via Skype has been ordered extradited to the United States.

A lawyer for Marco (Mark) Viscomi says a Superior Court judge in Toronto issued the extraditio­n order on Tuesday.

But Viscomi can appeal the latest order — he staved off another attempt in 2015 to remove him from the country — and his lawyer, Julianna Greenspan, says he intends to do so.

The case involving Viscomi arose in January 2012, when someone had a webcam chat with a 17-year old girl in Virginia Beach, Va.

According to court documents, the person allegedly used threats to force the girl to expose her breasts, and then to engage in explicit sexual and sexually violent activities with her 13-year-old sister.

American police tracked the communicat­ions through the Internet protocol (IP) address and informatio­n from an Internet service provider to a home in Stouffvill­e, Ont., about 50 kilometres north of Toronto. Viscomi was living there with his parents.

Ontario police arrested and charged Viscomi in March 2012, and released him on bail.

Five months later, they rearrested him at the request of American authoritie­s. They then withdrew the Canadian charges in favour of extraditio­n proceeding­s to the U.S., where he faced allegation­s of Internet child luring and child exploitati­on.

In May 2013, Ontario Superior Court Justice Ken Campbell ordered Viscomi sent to the U.S. for trial on the American equivalent of the Canadian crime of child luring.

But Ontario’s Court of Appeal found several problems with the evidence on which Campbell relied and quashed his extraditio­n order.

For one thing, the court said, there was no definitive proof that it was in fact Viscomi using the computer identified by the IP address.

Nor was there evidence proving that an IP address combined with other subscriber informatio­n allows police to compile an unassailab­le history of a person’s activity on the Internet, the court ruled.

“Everyone acknowledg­es that Internet child luring and exploitati­on occurred,” the appeal court said in its ruling last year. “However, the lynch-pin issue concerning the Viscomi proceeding­s is whether he is the ‘someone’ who was on the other end of the video call.”

There are three key stages to Canada’s extraditio­n process — the justice minister must decide whether to authorize the start of extraditio­n proceeding­s in Canadian courts, then the courts must decide if there’s sufficient evidence to justify the person’s committal for extraditio­n, and if a person is committed for extraditio­n, the justice minister must personally decide whether to order the person’s surrender to a foreign state.

A person can appeal their committal and can also seek judicial review of the minister’s surrender order.

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