The Standard (St. Catharines)

UNUSUAL SENTENCE:

Judge’s decision in Quebec City mosque shooting trial will likely be appealed, experts say

- MORGAN LOWRIE

MONTREAL — A Quebec judge’s “unusual” decision to modify the Criminal Code as he sentenced six-time murderer Alexandre Bissonnett­e to a life sentence with no possibilit­y of parole for 40 years highlights the ongoing legal debate over consecutiv­e life sentences in Canada, according to legal experts.

On Friday, Quebec Superior Court Justice François Huot rejected the Crown’s call to sentence Bissonnett­e to 150 years with no chance of parole, arguing a sentence of 50 years or more would constitute cruel and unusual punishment under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Sentences that exceed an offender’s life expectancy and offer no reasonable hope of release are “grossly disproport­ionate and totally incompatib­le with human dignity,” he wrote in his 246-page decision.

But instead of sentencing Bissonnett­e to serve his six sentences concurrent­ly, Huot rewrote the 2011 consecutiv­e sentencing law, section 745.51 of the Criminal Code, to give himself the discretion to deliver consecutiv­e life sentences that are not in blocks of 25 years, as had been the case. (First-degree murder carries an automatic sentence of life in prison with no possibilit­y of parole before 25 years.)

In the end, Huot decided Bissonnett­e will serve at least 40 years in prison.

Bissonnett­e, 29, pleaded guilty last March to six counts of firstdegre­e murder and six of attempted murder after he walked into the mosque at the Islamic Cultural Centre in Quebec City on Jan. 29, 2017, and opened fire.

Kent Roach, a law professor at the University of Toronto, described Huot’s decision as “innovative.” “Charter challenges to the 2011 provisions had previously been denied on the basis that the judge was not forced to increase parole ineligibil­ity for multiple murders,” he wrote in an email.

“It may very well be appealed by both the Crown (who wanted far more than 40 years) and the defence, which may argue that if the judge thought the provision violated the charter he should have imposed only 25 years of parole ineligibil­ity.”

But Renald Beaudry, a criminal lawyer who was at Bissonnett­e’s sentencing, doesn’t think the sentence would be easy to overturn.

He noted that Huot’s lengthy decision included a comprehens­ive overview of worldwide jurisprude­nce on the issue of consecutiv­e sentences, the philosophy behind the fundamenta­l principles of Canadian law, and a summary of House of Commons debate on the issue.

“He really backed himself up, to use the expression,” Beaudry said.

On Friday, lawyers for both the Crown and defence said they would study the decision before deciding whether to appeal the sentence. A spokespers­on for the Quebec Justice Department also indicated its lawyers were studying the possibilit­y of appeal.

Lisa Silver, a law professor at the University of Calgary, said the decision reflects the ongoing conversati­on in Canada surroundin­g the law that allows judges to “stack” life sentences for multiple murders instead of serving them concurrent­ly.

“(The decision) does seem unusual, but it’s also very consistent with what some judges are saying, not just about this section, but about sentencing and the larger discussion about these sections in the Criminal Code,” she said.

Recent high-profile sentencing decisions across Canada have reflected different judicial approaches to the idea of multiple life sentences.

The longest prison sentence in Canada to date is 75 years without parole, which has been given to at least five triple killers including Justin Bourque, who murdered three RCMP officers in a shooting spree in New Brunswick in 2014.

But other judges have rejected calls for consecutiv­e sentences, including the Toronto judge who on Friday sentenced Bruce McArthur to life in prison with no parole for 25 years for murdering eight men with ties to Toronto’s gay village.

Silver said the difference in sentences can be problemati­c because it leads to comparison­s, such as the perception that a gay or Muslim person’s murder isn’t “worth” as much as that of an RCMP officer. But she said people should understand that a sentence isn’t about putting a numerical value on a person’s life.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Crown prosecutor­s Thomas Jacques, left, and François Godin walk to a news conference to react to the judge’s sentencing of Alexandre Bissonnett­e, who pleaded guilty after killing six people in 2017.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS Crown prosecutor­s Thomas Jacques, left, and François Godin walk to a news conference to react to the judge’s sentencing of Alexandre Bissonnett­e, who pleaded guilty after killing six people in 2017.

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