Calgary Herald

Crown defends judge who rejected plea bargain

- KEVIN MARTIN KMartin@postmedia.com Twitter: @KMartinCou­rts

Trial judges aren’t required to “rubber stamp” plea bargains worked out between the Crown and defence, a prosecutor said Monday in supporting the sentence handed a bank teller who helped out a heist.

Crown lawyer Iwona Kuklicz said Justice David Gates was entitled to right what he perceived was a wrong when he rejected a joint submission of six months jail time for former teller Kenza Belakziz.

Kuklicz said prosecutor­s, like everyone else in the legal system, are capable of making mistakes, and Gates corrected one made by Crown lawyers who handled Belakziz’s case.

“In this particular circumstan­ce the trial judge found that the sentence that was being proposed by both counsel would bring the administra­tion of justice into disrepute,” Kuklicz told an Alberta Court of Appeal panel.

Prosecutor­s Vicki Faulkner and Ryan Jenkins, along with defence counsel Greg Dunn, agreed that a six-month sentence for Belakziz would be an appropriat­e punishment on a charge of conspiracy to commit robbery.

One of the reasons the two sides agreed on such a light sentence was a higher punishment would mean Belakziz, who was born in Morocco and never obtained Canadian citizenshi­p despite living in North America most of her life, would be declared ineligible to remain here.

But Gates ruled that despite her pending deportatio­n, a six-month sentence would be too low for Belakziz’s crime, which included providing three robbers, including her then-boyfriend, with inside informatio­n about her Bank of Montreal branch. Gates sentenced her to 18 months in jail.

The three appeal judges reserved their decision.

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