Ottawa Citizen

Court tosses retroactiv­e change to parole law

- colin Perkel

• A change by the former Conservati­ve government that made it harder for murderers serving life sentences to apply for parole is unconstitu­tional if applied retroactiv­ely, Ontario’s top court ruled on Thursday.

The binding decision from the Court of Appeal — the latest in a string of decisions undoing the former government’s tough on crime agenda — means a woman who killed her husband can now apply for release under the so-called “faint hope” law.

When Cherrylle Dell was convicted of first-degree murder in February 2001, the trial judge gave her the obligatory sentence: life in prison without parole eligibilit­y for 25 years. Under the rules existing at the time, she would have been allowed to ask a jury to reduce the ineligibil­ity period once she had served 15 years.

However, in 2011, the government of ex-prime minister Stephen Harper changed the law, to require a convict to first convince a judge of the “substantia­l likelihood” a jury would agree to the possibilit­y of earlier parole. Previously, a judge first had only to find a “reasonable prospect of success.”

Dell, of Killaloe, Ont., argued the change unjustifia­bly violated her constituti­onal rights by inflicting harsher punishment on her than when she had been sentenced. The Appeal Court agreed. “The screening mechanism substantia­lly decreased her chances of obtaining some reduction in parole ineligibil­ity,” the court said in its ruling.

The “faint-hope” clause was first enacted in 1976 following abolition of the death penalty and introducti­on of the current mandatory life sentence for murder without parole for 25 years for firstdegre­e murder and without parole for 10 years for second-degree murder.

The Liberal government in 1997 first introduced judicial screening to the fainthope process. It required a judge to decide that a parole eligibilit­y applicatio­n had a “reasonable prospect” of success. The Tory government repealed the provision in December 2011 and put in place the stiffer judicial test with retroactiv­e effect.

In 2013, Dell made her applicatio­n, but the law now required the enhanced vetting by a screening judge before she could put her case to a jury.

The judge, Superior Court Justice Robert Maranger in May 2015, ruled the change was constituti­onal. Maranger also rejected Dell’s applicatio­n on the grounds that it would likely not succeed before a jury. Dell turned to the province’s top court, arguing she should have been allowed to take her case directly to a jury.

Essentiall­y, Dell argued the provision violated a ban on retroactiv­ely increasing punishment for a crime. The government counter-argued that her sentence remained exactly as imposed and the new rules — if an infringeme­nt — were justifiabl­e in a democracy. The Appeal Court rejected the view, saying the government had gone too far.

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