Medicine Hat News

Liberals propose federal criminal reforms aimed at systemic racism in justice system

-

Ottawa is moving to repeal mandatory minimum penalties for drug offences and some gun-related crimes, saying they do not make Canadians safer and unfairly affect Indigenous and Black offenders.

Legislatio­n introduced Thursday would also allow for greater use of conditiona­l sentences, such as house arrest, counsellin­g or treatment, for people who do not pose a threat to public safety.

In addition, it would require police and prosecutor­s to consider alternativ­e measures for cases of simple possession of drugs, such as diversion to addiction-treatment programs.

The office of Justice

Minister David Lametti says serious criminals deserve to be punished and kept away from communitie­s.

But it says too many lowerrisk and first-time offenders, including a disproport­ionate number of Indigenous and Black people, are being locked away due to policies that are proven not to deter crime.

The legislatio­n is one of several measures the federal Liberals have promised to address systemic racism in the justice system.

The bill would give judges more discretion in sentencing, rather than the mandatory minimum sentences ushered in by Stephen Harper’s previous

Conservati­ve government as part of its tough-on-crime agenda.

Under the Criminal Code, an offence punishable by a mandatory minimum penalty requires that the judge impose a sentence equal to or greater than the minimum term for that offence, even in cases where imprisonme­nt is not appropriat­e.

Mandatory minimums have been widely criticized for exacerbati­ng the disproport­ionate number of Black and Indigenous people who wind up jail.

Lametti told a news conference Thursday the planned measures would turn the page on an approach that has not worked.

“It was an approach that did not make our communitie­s safer. It did not deter criminals. It did not make the justice system more effective or more fair,” he said. “Its singular accomplish­ment has been to incarcerat­e too many Indigenous people, too many Black people and too many marginaliz­ed Canadians.”

Indigenous adults are five per cent of the Canadian population but 30 per cent of admissions to federal custody. Black adults comprise three per cent of the population but 7.2 per cent of federal offenders.

The proposed changes would repeal mandatory minimums for 14 of the 67 offences for which minimums apply under the Criminal Code. Mandatory minimums for all six of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act offences punishable by minimum sentences would be scrapped.

Lametti’s predecesso­r in the justice portfolio, Jody WilsonRayb­ould, was tasked with reviewing mandatory minimum sentences but nothing ever came of it and the government has been facing mounting pressure to act.

Last June, the multi-party parliament­ary Black caucus issued a call to action that, among other things, demanded the eliminatio­n of mandatory minimums. Lametti was among the signatorie­s.

The HIV Legal Network welcomed the legislatio­n but said it falls short by failing to simply repeal the criminal prohibitio­n on personal drug possession, even while it acknowledg­es that drug use is a health issue and that criminaliz­ation causes harm and contribute­s to stigma.

The threat of a possible charge for simple possession is “still at play during any interactio­n between police and people who use drugs,” the group said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has ruled out decriminal­izing simple possession of illicit drugs but his government has been moving gradually in the direction of treating drug addiction as a public health issue rather than a criminal issue.

Consistent with the Liberals’ approach, the director of public prosecutio­ns issued new guidelines last summer instructin­g federal prosecutor­s to criminally prosecute only the most serious drug-possession offences and to find alternativ­es outside the criminal justice system for the rest.

Lametti indicated it was not his place to go further, saying only that he would like to see a health-care response to problemati­c addiction.

“We’re going to try to move forward in the most efficient, productive and compassion­ate way possible.”

 ??  ?? David Lametti
David Lametti

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada