National Post

Refugee was given ‘artificial sentence’

- Maura Forrest

OTTAWA • The Manitoba Court of Appeal has ruled a judge gave an excessivel­y light sentence to a 23-yearold Somalian refugee to prevent him from being deported, after the man rammed his car into a police vehicle and threatened to kill the officers who arrested him.

The court ruling Oct. 31 increased Mustaf Ahmed Yare’s sentence to more than 13 months, from five months and 25 days. In their decision, the judges found the longer sentence “may result in his deportatio­n,” but was necessary because the sentencing judge “failed to impose a sentence that was proportion­ate to the gravity of the offences.”

The case sheds light on how judges weigh the severity of crimes committed by non-citizens against the consequenc­es of jail time for those who could be deported, after Harper-era changes to immigratio­n rules attempted to make it easier to remove criminals.

Yare’s family is Somali, and he was born and raised in a refugee camp, his lawyer said. He and his family moved to Canada in 2009 and he lived with his parents, according to the appeal court ruling. In September 2017, he was arrested after he refused to pull over during a traffic stop, instead accelerati­ng, ramming into the police car and causing it to stall. He then drove off at high speed with other police cars chasing him, crashed into a metal sign post and fled on foot.

After he was arrested, according to the court decision, he told police officers: “I’m going to get my gang and I’m going to find you and kill you. I’m a real gangster and you will die. Trust me, you f---ing goofs.” Less than two weeks after he was released on bail, he was arrested again while in breach of his curfew. According to the ruling, he was already on probation at the time of his arrest, and has a “lengthy and related criminal record.”

Yare pleaded guilty to charges including fleeing from police and uttering threats. During his sentencing hearing, the judge found he “ought to be jailed for about a year for these charges,” but ultimately decided on a much shorter sentence — five months and 25 days.

Permanent residents can lose their status and be deported from Canada if they’re convicted of a crime with a possible jail sentence of 10 years or more, or sentenced to more than six months in prison. A sentence of six months or longer also strips them of their right to appeal deportatio­n.

Knowing this, the sentencing judge decided to go easy on Yare. “I am not inclined to subject you to deportatio­n hearings, but you need to know how lucky you are,” he told him.

The appeal court, however, found the lower court judge “imposed an artificial sentence” to prevent Yare from being deported, and raised his total sentence

I’M GOING TO GET MY GANG AND I’M GOING TO FIND YOU AND KILL YOU.

to 13 months and 10 days, acknowledg­ing the punishment “will affect his right of appeal … and may result in his deportatio­n.” Yare had already served the jail time prior to the appeal hearing.

Yare’s Winnipeg-based lawyer, Edmond Murphy, said it’s hard to say whether his client will be deported imminently or not, as Yare has since been arrested again and is back in custody on charges of assault with a weapon and uttering threats.

The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that judges should consider immigratio­n consequenc­es in sentencing, said Sergio Karas, an immigratio­n lawyer and analyst, but the punishment must still fit the crime.

It’s unfair, he said, for a non-citizen to get a much lower sentence than a citizen for the same crime, simply to avoid deportatio­n.

“You can’t have that, because otherwise it’s like playing favourites.”

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