The Welland Tribune

Liberals say bill will cut costs, improve jury selection

- JOANNA SMITH AND GEORDON OMAND

OTTAWA — The federal government is proposing major changes to the criminal justice system to address criticism that it’s biased against Indigenous people and other marginaliz­ed groups, as part of sweeping legislatio­n introduced Thursday.

The massive bill, tabled by Justice Minister Jody WilsonRayb­ould, makes good on a Liberal promise to change the way juries are selected but makes no movement on reducing the use of mandatory minimums.

If passed, it would eliminate the use of peremptory challenges, which allow lawyers to reject jury candidates during the selection process without providing a reason for doing so.

That measure comes in the wake of criticism that a number of visibly Indigenous people were excluded from the jury that last month acquitted Saskatchew­an farmer Gerald Stanley, 56, in the shooting death of Colten Boushie, 22, a member of the Red Pheasant First Nation.

“Our criminal justice system must be fair, equitable and just for all Canadians,” Wilson-Raybould said.

Lawyers would still have the right to challenge a potential juror for cause, but the legislatio­n would empower the judge to decide.

Speaking through a family friend, Boushie’s mother, Debbie Baptiste, said she’s pleased about the proposed changes and hopes the presence of Indigenous jurors will translate into more justice for Indigenous Peoples.

The prospect of something good coming out of her son’s death gives her hope for the future, Eleanore Sunchild said on behalf of Baptiste.

The bill includes other measures aimed at tackling court backlogs plaguing the criminal justice system, including by restrictin­g the use of preliminar­y inquiries to cases where an adult offender is facing the possibilit­y of a life sentence, such as for murder or kidnapping.

That would reduce the number of preliminar­y inquiries across the country — about 9,100 of them in 2014-15 — by 87 per cent, said officials from the Justice Department who provided a technical briefing to reporters.

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