Edmonton Journal

Jean says he would lay down the law on crime

Ex-Wildrose leader says he would tackle violence, opioid crisis, rising rural crime

- EMMA GRANEY egraney@postmedia.com twitter.com/EmmaLGrane­y

Former Wildrose leader Brian Jean pledged a series of toughon-crime policies Thursday as he continued his bid for the United Conservati­ve Party leadership.

Jean was in Grande Prairie to unveil his latest policy planks, including tougher penalties for people who commit violent crimes, more resources for sexual assault victims and tackling the opioid crisis.

Jean said if his party formed government, he would introduce legislatio­n barring dangerous offenders, murderers, rapists and others on the sex-offender registry from changing their names, improve probation monitoring and increase resources to stop human traffickin­g in Alberta.

“We must protect the dignity of every man, woman and child in our province,” he said in a statement.

“That means treating those harmed by the impacts of crime with incredible compassion, but keeping dangerous people off our streets.”

Pointing to increased trial delays in Alberta of late, Jean’s new policies include a commitment to reallocate more resources to Crown prosecutor­s and pressure the federal government to hire more judges.

In June, more than 1,400 cases, including serious and violent crimes, were at risk of being thrown out in Alberta for violating new time guidelines set out by the Supreme Court of Canada.

The issue was born out of the 2016 Jordan decision, which set specific time frames for reasonable limits on how long an accused can wait for trial.

The ruling has put tremendous pressure on courts across the country.

Alberta created nine additional Court of Queen’s Bench positions in 2016, but there are still judicial vacancies across the province’s courts.

Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley has called on Ottawa to appoint more judges, and has said the case backlog and judiciary gaps were created by decades of positions not being filled.

The Wildrose has been critical of the province’s handling of fallout from the Jordan decision, and Jean reiterated that Thursday.

He also pledged to tackle rising rural crime by working with the RCMP and ALERT.

 ?? SHAUGHN BUTTS ?? Susan Hughson, executive director of the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team, announced Thursday that three charges of theft under $5,000 and three charges of breach of trust had been laid against an officer with the Edmonton Police Service.
SHAUGHN BUTTS Susan Hughson, executive director of the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team, announced Thursday that three charges of theft under $5,000 and three charges of breach of trust had been laid against an officer with the Edmonton Police Service.
 ??  ?? Brian Jean
Brian Jean

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