Vancouver Sun

Court issues persist years aFter Gladue decision

Landmark ruling found systemic factors need to be considered in sentencing

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Nearly two decades after a landmark court decision on sentencing Indigenous offenders, lawyers say there are no national standards for implementi­ng the ruling and too many Aboriginal people are still behind bars.

The Supreme Court of Canada’s Gladue decision in 1999 said judges must take note of systemic or background factors when determinin­g a sentence for Indigenous offenders in order to address their “serious over-representa­tion” in prison.

Indigenous people often feel removed from the justice system, said Mitch Walker, vice-president of the Gladue Writers Society of B.C., which promotes the best practices for writing Gladue reports that lay out the Indigenous background of an accused in pre-sentencing.

“For First Nations people, justice just kind of happens to them. It doesn’t happen with them, it doesn’t happen for them, it doesn’t happen for their benefit,” he said.

“And their interactio­ns with the justice system have historical­ly and contempora­neously been so negative that there’s a lot of fear.”

That may change if a Gladue report is written in their case, which requires getting in touch with an offender, their family and community, Walker said.

“It’s a very delicate and awkward conversati­on to phone somebody and introduce yourself and then proceed with some very, very personal questions, questions that they wouldn’t discuss with their closest friends and family members,” he said.

The accused is also interviewe­d and it’s often the first time they think deeply about how they ended up in trouble, Walker said.

“Gladue-report writers are sometimes the first contact that these individual­s have with the criminal justice system who aren’t immediatel­y making them feel as though they are a criminal, making them feel as though they’re being listened to.”

But some in the justice system say the reports have been underutili­zed.

Signa Daum Shanks, a lawyer and director of Indigenous outreach at Osgoode Hall law school in Toronto, said Gladue principles should be applied whenever an accused has Indigenous heritage, but it’s “stunning ” how often lawyers decide the background informatio­n isn’t relevant to a particular case.

Courts are consistent­ly provided with context about an accused, she said, such as if someone is struggling with English. But that doesn’t always happen with Indigenous people, despite the Supreme Court ruling, Daum Shanks said.

It’s “gut-wrenching ” that the data in those reports isn’t making its way into courtrooms, where judges could use it to tailor sentences that could help prevent crimes from happening again, she said.

Gladue principles aren’t intended to add an element of sympathy in sentencing an Indigenous person.

“It’s about making sure some things don’t happen again,” Shanks said.

There are still significan­t misconcept­ions about what Gladue principles are, even among people working in the criminal justice system, said lawyer Michelle Brass.

“It’s not a get-out-of-jail-free card, for example. It’s not a creation of a second justice system,” she said.

Brass is working with the Native Law Centre at the University of Saskatchew­an to research how and when the reports are used by looking at about 250 cases across that province. Part of the project’s aim is dispelling misunderst­andings by providing education for those in the justice system.

At stake, Brass said, is the continued over-representa­tion of Indigenous people in jails and prisons.

Data from Correction­al Service Canada shows Aboriginal people made up about 18 per cent of all federal inmates in 2001, but accounted for less than three per cent of the country’s population.

Indigenous offenders made up 23 per cent of the total offender population last year.

About five per cent of people across the country identified as being Aboriginal in the 2016 census.

For years, there’s been a substantia­l need for more Gladue reports across B.C., said Mark Benton, executive director of the Legal Services Society, the province’s legal-aid office.

The society traditiona­lly used non-government­al funding for the reports and, with each report costing about $1,740 and taking about eight weeks to complete, there was only enough money for about 80 per year.

Funding was dedicated to writing Gladue reports last year by the province, Benton said.

In 2017, there were 131 Gladue reports written in B.C. and about 400 will be produced this year.

Benton said he was concerned about the system a year ago, but now there’s real progress being made in B.C.

“I believe that we’re headed in the right direction now,” he said.

 ?? RICHARD LAM ?? For years, there’s been a substantia­l need for more Gladue reports across British Columbia, said Mark Benton, executive director of the Legal Services Society, the province’s legal-aid office.
RICHARD LAM For years, there’s been a substantia­l need for more Gladue reports across British Columbia, said Mark Benton, executive director of the Legal Services Society, the province’s legal-aid office.

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