Ottawa Citizen

Judge failed to consider Indigenous heritage

- ALY THOMSON

HALIFAX • An appeal court has found that a judge mistakenly failed to consider the Cree background of a drug trafficker who had been taken from his Manitoba parents as an infant and raised by a non-Aboriginal family on Prince Edward Island.

Nicholas George Nash McInnis was taken from his biological Cree parents at birth and placed in the care of Manitoba Child and Family Services.

When he was seven months old, he was adopted by John and Brenda McInnis, who are originally from Sherwood, P.E.I., and are not Indigenous.

A provincial court judge rejected a joint Crown-defence submission that would have seen the 20-year-old man avoid jail time for possession of cannabis for the purpose of traffickin­g, after he was found with 15 grams of cannabis at Charlottet­own Rural High School.

Furthermor­e, she decided not to consider the man’s Aboriginal heritage in arriving at her decision — an intermitte­nt sentence of 90 days in jail — because he had been adopted at a very young age.

In a new ruling, the Prince Edward Island Court of Appeal said the judge erred in refusing to accept the systemic factors that would reduce McInnis’s culpabilit­y.

“The law is clear. Sentencing judges must pay particular attention to the circumstan­ces of Aboriginal offenders,” the decision said.

“A sentencing judge ... did not consider the impact of broad historical events and the systemic factors that played a part in the appellant’s makeup.”

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

The appeal court said McInnis’s so-called Gladue report — a summary of an offender’s circumstan­ces presented to the court at sentencing — “sufficient­ly illustrate­d the link between (his) Aboriginal heritage and the reason for a reduction of his moral blameworth­iness in relation to the offence.”

Some of the factors outlined in that report were the fact that he attempted suicide at age 17, that he was diagnosed with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, that he was dislocated from Aboriginal people and struggled with cultural identity, and that he experience­d racism, bullying and racial profiling.

The appeal court imposed the joint recommende­d sentence — two years’ probation.

“The diminished culpabilit­y of the appellant warranted a departure from the overriding principles of denunciati­on and deterrence to accommodat­e the principle of rehabilita­tion and a restorativ­e justice plan,” the decision said.

“The jointly proposed sentence was sufficient in the circumstan­ces, and was focused on a rehabilita­tive and restorativ­e sentence for the appellant, and did not fail the public interest test.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada