Calgary Herald

Court of Appeal frees teller who assisted robbers

Panel says judge erred in handing down tougher sentence despite plea bargain

- KEVIN MARTIN KMartin@postmedia.com On Twitter: @KMartinCou­rts

Refusing to accept a plea bargain for a bank teller who provided intelligen­ce for robbers, including her boyfriend, was an error, Alberta’s top court ruled Thursday in reducing her sentence.

A three-member Alberta Court of Appeal panel agreed with defence lawyer Greg Dunn that Justice David Gates should not have rejected the joint submission put before him on behalf of Kenza Belakziz, 24.

Gates said the six-month-lessa-day sentence proposed by Dunn and Crown prosecutor­s Vicki Faulkner and Ryan Jenkins was so low it would bring the administra­tion of justice into disrepute.

But the appeal judges agreed with Dunn that the proposed sentence, which spares Belakziz automatic deportatio­n to her native Morocco, should have been imposed by Gates.

Dunn argued Monday that, if judges don’t accept joint submission­s negotiated by Crown and defence lawyers, they take away the certainty that plea bargains provide.

Without such certainty, such deals, which help streamline court proceeding­s, wouldn’t proceed, Dunn submitted.

Dunn said because Belakziz has served more than two-thirds of her sentence, she was released Thursday.

Dunn also noted the Crown’s case against his client was weak, relying on a potentiall­y inadmissib­le note admitted to be in Belakziz’s hand, resulting in the prosecutio­n agreeing to a lighter sentence than might otherwise be appropriat­e.

In their written decision, the appeal judges said Gates erred by focusing on the lack of strength of the Crown’s case and not other issues around the need for joint submission­s.

“Joint submission­s are encouraged for more reasons than the strength or weakness of the case: avoiding trial, saving court time, sparing witnesses or gaining the co-operation of offenders,” the appeal judges said.

“Just because the joint submission is not the resolution that the sentencing judge would have agreed to does not mean that it would bring the administra­tion of justice into disrepute.”

In arguing in support of Gates’ ruling, appeal prosecutor Iwona Kuklicz said her fellow Crown lawyers erred in accepting a sentence for Belakziz below what was required for her crime.

Kuklicz argued trial judges aren’t simply required to “rubber stamp” deals put before them by lawyers.

Belakziz was sentenced by Gates in June to 18 months in jail for her role in setting up a Nov. 24, 2014, robbery at the Bank of Montreal in Mission where she was employed.

She had earlier pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit robbery by providing confidenti­al informatio­n about the 4th Street S.W. branch to her then-boyfriend, Saleem Nasery, and Lucas Windsor and Matthew Valdes. All three were handed prison sentences in the five-year range for the armed heist.

 ?? FILES ?? Former bank teller Kenza Belakziz was serving an 18-month jail term for her part in a 2014 bank robbery when the Court of Appeal reduced her sentence, allowing her to leave prison on Thursday.
FILES Former bank teller Kenza Belakziz was serving an 18-month jail term for her part in a 2014 bank robbery when the Court of Appeal reduced her sentence, allowing her to leave prison on Thursday.
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