Aubrey Levin is a South African-born Canadian psychiatrist and former Colonel in the South African Defence Force who used abusive procedures on homosexual army conscripts and conscientious objectors in an attempt to cure them of supposed vices in apartheid eraSouth Africa. During the 1970s and 1980s, Levin subjected many homosexual men to electroshock or chemical castration, and over 900 conscripts were forced to undergo involuntary sexual reassignment surgery. In 1995 Levin moved to Canada and acquired a license to practice medicine. He became professor of clinical psychiatry at the University of Calgary. In 2010 he was arrested for sexual assault of a patient; thirty men claimed they were assaulted by Levin during counseling. Levin was tried and convicted for assault, sentenced to five years in prison, and his medical license was suspended.
Life and career
Levin was first licensed as a psychiatrist in South Africa in 1969. He was a Colonel in the South AfricanDefence Force, as well as the chief psychiatrist at the Voortrekkerhoogte military hospital during the 1970s, during which time he was the attending psychiatrist at Greefswald, an isolated detention barracks where harsh conditions were supposed to cure conscripts of supposed vices and conscientious objections. Among his patients was Gordon Torr who wrote about his experience in the book, Kill Yourself and Count to 10. Levin later served at Addington Hospital in Durban and at Fort England Psychiatric Hospital in Grahamstown.
Meanwhile, in 1995, Levin and his wife left South Africa and he became licensed by the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan, Canada and later by Alberta's college in 1998. In March 2010, the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta suspended Levin's license over accusations of abuse after a male patient secretly filmed the psychiatrist allegedly making sexual advances.
Trial and conviction
A pre-trial hearing determined that Levin was fit to stand trial although in the early stages of dementia. July 2010, police announced that 30 other men had come forward, claiming they were assaulted by Levin during counseling sessions. On October 11, 2012, Levin went to trial at the Court of Queen's Bench in Calgary. The Crown decided to go ahead with nine of the original 21 cases. During the trial, a jury was shown the graphic video of Levin touching a patient, which had been secretly recorded on the patient's . On January 28, 2013, a jury found Levin guilty of three charges of sexual assault against male patients, not guilty of two other charges of sexual assault, while a mistrial was declared in reference to a further four counts. February 7, 2013, police arrested Levin's wife Erica Levin, then aged 69, and charged her with obstruction of justice for alleging attempting to bribe a juror. The juror said she was approached on a train platform in January and offered $1000 or $10,000 in a white envelope, to bring in a not-guilty verdict. The juror informed police and was subsequently dismissed. Despite a 5-year prison sentence, Levin was released on $15,000 bail on February 13, 2013. The judge said that since his license to practice medicine has been suspended, he is "not a danger to the public." Levin awaits an appeal. On 23 April 2014 the Alberta Court of Appeal, in a unanimous decision, upheld the 2013 conviction. Levin was ordered to report, within 48 hours, to begin a five-year sentence at an unnamed institution.