Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ex-U.S. pilot’s jail treatment decried

Inhumane in Australia, says wife of man accused of training Chinese aviators

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SYDNEY — The wife of a former U.S. military pilot accused by the United States of illegally training Chinese aviators said Monday that her husband was being held in inhumane conditions as he fights extraditio­n from Australia.

Saffrine Duggan said her husband Daniel Duggan had already been kept for 115 days in a “tiny cell” in Sydney’s Silverwate­r Correction­al Complex because of U.S. charges that had yet to be heard in court.

“He is suffering the harshest possible prison classifica­tion in Australia as an ‘extreme highrisk restricted inmate’ despite having no prior (or current) conviction­s,” she said in a statement.

“This is unpreceden­ted and an affront to Australia’s rule of law and manipulati­on of the Australian legal system by the

United States at the expense of the Australian taxpayer,” she said.

Having already filed a complaint with Australia’s Inspector General of Intelligen­ce and Security, Saffrine Duggan said a further complaint would be filed with the United Nations Human Rights Committee.

“The manner and circumstan­ces behind this prosecutio­n of Dan are something you would expect to find in an authoritar­ian country, but not in a democratic Australia where its citizens expect a more fair and balanced equal applicatio­n of the law and the overriding principle of a ‘fair go’ for all,” she said.

Daniel Duggan, 54, was arrested in October last year near his family home in Orange, New South Wales state, and was accused of providing military training to pilots working for China.

He has denied the allegation­s, saying they were “political” posturing by the United States, which unfairly singled him out.

His wife said the treaty under which the FBI had attempted to extradite her husband was not being used properly.

“The treaty specifical­ly states that alleged crimes under its provisions should not be of a ‘political character,’ should require dual criminalit­y — which is not the case in this instance — and should be in Australia’s national interests,” she said. Dual criminalit­y means illegal in both Australia and the United States.

The case is proceeding through Sydney courts, where a magistrate will decide whether the husband is eligible for extraditio­n. A hearing is scheduled for March 20.

Born in Boston, Duggan served in the U.S. Marines for 12 years before moving to Australia in 2002. In January 2012, he gained Australian citizenshi­p, choosing to give up his U.S. citizenshi­p in the process.

A 2016 indictment from the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., was unsealed late last year. In it, prosecutor­s say Duggan conspired with others to provide training to Chinese military pilots in 2010 and 2012, and possibly at other times, without applying for an appropriat­e license.

Prosecutor­s say Duggan received about nine payments totaling about $61,000 and internatio­nal travel from another conspirato­r for what was sometimes described as “personal developmen­t training.”

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