CAT/C/72/D/992/2020
6.4
The Committee recalls that the rule of exhaustion of domestic remedies does not apply
if the application of such remedies is unreasonably prolonged or unlikely to bring effective
relief.13 In the present case, the Committee notes that more than eight years have elapsed
since the complainants first filed a complaint so that an investigation would be opened into
the acts of torture in question, and that, despite the fact that the Public Prosecution Service
had the information necessary to conduct a prompt and effective investigation that would
allow those allegedly responsible to be identified and prosecuted, that recommendation
5/2018 of the National Human Rights Commission called for a prompt investigation 14 and
that the Commission submitted complaints, dated 28 February and 30 August 2018,
respectively, to the internal affairs unit of the federal police and to the Specialized Unit for
the Investigation of Crimes Committed by Public Servants against the Administration of
Justice of the Counsel General’s Office (see para. 2.18 above), no significant progress has
been made in any of the investigations. The State party has not provided any justification for
that considerable delay.
6.5
Under these circumstances, the Committee considers that domestic remedies have
been unreasonably prolonged. Accordingly, the requirements of article 22 (5) (b) of the
Convention do not preclude the Committee from examining the complaint on the merits.
6.6
The Committee considers the complainants’ claims under articles 1, 2 and 11 to 15 of
the Convention to be sufficiently substantiated for the purpose of admissibility and thus
declares them admissible and proceeds to its consideration of the merits.
Consideration of the merits
7.1
The Committee has examined the complaint in the light of all the information
submitted to it by the parties, in accordance with article 22 (4) of the Convention.
7.2
Before proceeding to examine the complainants’ allegations as they relate to the
articles of the Convention which they have invoked, the Committee must determine whether
the acts to which Mr. Gallardo Martínez was subjected constitute acts of torture within the
meaning of article 1 of the Convention.
7.3
The Committee takes note of the complainants’ allegations that, during Mr. Gallardo
Martínez’s arrest, he was beaten and dragged half-naked to a van in which, for approximately
two hours, police officers forced him to assume degrading and painful positions, threatened
to rape and kill his daughter and his partner and to murder his parents, pretended to execute
him with a weapon and caused him to choke. The Committee also takes note of the
complainants’ allegations that, once the journey had ended, Mr. Gallardo Martínez was held
for approximately 30 hours in a secret detention centre, where he was deprived of water and
sleep and prevented from defecating, was again beaten on the testicles, stomach, back, face
and head, was choked, was forced to witness acts of torture against other detainees, and was
forced to listen as death threats were made against his relatives. In addition, while he was in
detention at the premises of the Office of the Assistant Attorney General for the Investigation
of Organized Crime, he was given unauthorized injections, and, again, officers threatened to
kill his partner, daughter and parents, and he was deprived of water, food and sleep. The
complainants claim that this treatment was meted out to force Mr. Gallardo Martínez to
confess to an alleged crime, and he signed blank sheets of paper that were subsequently used
as alleged evidence of self-incrimination. Lastly, during the five years and seven months he
spent in Puente Grande maximum security prison in Guadalajara, he was again beaten on his
back, kicked in the buttocks and screamed at in the ear; subjected to body cavity searches
(anal); forced to live in overcrowded conditions, placed in solitary confinement, confined to
his cell for 22 hours per day and deprived of sleep; and denied adequate and timely surgery.
7.4
The Committee also notes that the State party has argued that the injuries noted by the
doctors attached to the Counsel General’s Office could have been sustained during his arrest
or if he had gone over on his ankle without, however, providing any further information. The
13
14
12
See, inter alia, A.E. v. Switzerland (CAT/C/14/D/24/1995), para. 4; Evloev v. Kazakhstan
(CAT/C/51/D/441/2010), para. 8.6; and Ramírez Martínez et al. v. Mexico (CAT/C/55/D/500/2012),
para. 16.4.
Third recommendation.
GE.22-01556