The Province

JAIL IN PIPELINE

Two pipeline opponents handed seven-day sentences as court aims to deter civil disobedien­ce

- KEITH FRASER kfraser@postmedia.com twitter.com/keithrfras­er

Protesters Laurie Embree and Constance Lasheras each get seven-day sentences

Two protesters arrested at a Burnaby site of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project have received the first jail terms imposed for defying a court injunction ordering opponents to not disrupt constructi­on work.

Laurie Embree, who was arrested on June 19, and Constance Lasheras, who was arrested on June 30, were each handed seven-day jail sentences after pleading guilty to criminal contempt of court in B.C. Supreme Court.

Before the sentences on Tuesday, the 86 protesters who had either pleaded guilty or were found guilty following a trial had been sentenced to either fines or community work service.

The first protesters were arrested in March, after the injunction was imposed on March 15. But the large-scale civil disobedien­ce continued, and Crown counsel warned they would seek a seven-day jail sentence for anyone arrested after May 28.

In imposing sentence on Embree and Lasheras, Justice Kenneth Affleck said that although the pace of arrests — so far 214 people have been charged with contempt — has declined as the months had gone by, he couldn’t be confident there will be no further organized defiance of the injunction.

The two defendants could have lawfully and peacefully protested the pipeline project but instead chose to disobey the law in order to gain publicity for a cause in which they strongly believed, said the judge.

“That is not a basis on which anyone can expect to defy the law without any consequenc­e,” said the judge.

Affleck said that, while he had increased the fines and the number of hours of community work service imposed on protesters over time, it had not had an adequate deterrent effect.

“I am not persuaded that either of the persons before me today are likely to repeat their contempt, but I am concerned that there needs to be a general deterrence,” he said. “It is regrettabl­e that prison sentences must be imposed in the circumstan­ces of these proceeding­s, but I am satisfied that that must now be the outcome.”

Earlier, Crown counsel Monte Rattan told the judge that the continuing violation of the injunction at the site had called into question the effectiven­ess of the court’s order and the rule of law.

He said Embree in particular had been warned that if she didn’t stop blocking the site, she would face a jail term, but she did not stop, so nothing less than a jail term would be appropriat­e in the circumstan­ces.

Rattan said there was no reason to believe that the protests had come to an end, and in fact, the Crown understood that further protests were expected later Wednesday.

He said the court should not “throw up its hands and accept” the lawlessnes­s of the well-organized protesters.

Embree, who was representi­ng herself and did not have a lawyer, was asked by the judge whether she wished to make submission­s on whether a jail term was a fit sentence.

She chose instead to attack the injunction, which she called an unjust law.

“Our judicial system is still being manipulate­d by rich and powerful people that have the influence to make our legal system work for them,” Embree, 70, told the judge.

“I truly believe that, when we have laws that support injustice, it’s the duty of all good men and women to stand up and challenge those laws.”

Lasheras told the judge that she pleaded guilty to criminal contempt of court at the earliest opportunit­y, but did not consider herself to be a criminal.

“I believe the Crown’s presentati­on of a jail sentence to be unreasonab­le and unjust. I’ve heard that there were no arrests in July. That leads me to believe that whatever your Lordship has imposed as law has been respected.”

Lasheras, who is Aboriginal, said her intent was not to call into question the court’s authority, but to oppose the pipeline.

“I am a mother and I worry for the future of my children. I believe climate change is very real and as a society we must make a shift away from fossil fuels.”

To loud clapping in the packed Vancouver courtroom, the two defendants were taken away into custody.

Jail time for several high-profile B.C. residents appears likely in coming weeks. A small group of people who were arrested and charged on June 30 had their first court appearance on Tuesday. Among that group was anti-poverty activist Jean Swanson and former BCTF president Susan Lambert.

Swanson told the judge she intends to plead guilty as her next court appearance, on Aug. 15

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO/PNG ?? Laurie Embree was handed a seven-day jail sentence Tuesday. Here she holds a news conference before her hearing at B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver.
NICK PROCAYLO/PNG Laurie Embree was handed a seven-day jail sentence Tuesday. Here she holds a news conference before her hearing at B.C. Supreme Court in Vancouver.
 ?? NICK PROCAYLO/POSTMEDIA ?? George Rammell packs up his Trudeau model as Trans-Mountain pipeline protester Laurie Embree arrives to face the court on Tuesday. Embree was handed a seven-day jail term.
NICK PROCAYLO/POSTMEDIA George Rammell packs up his Trudeau model as Trans-Mountain pipeline protester Laurie Embree arrives to face the court on Tuesday. Embree was handed a seven-day jail term.

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