The Niagara Falls Review

9-year term found fit for man who preyed on daycare toddlers

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — A nine-year prison sentence for a daycare supervisor who used the toddlers he was looking after to make child pornograph­y is enough to both denounce his behaviour and act as a deterrent to others, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled on Wednesday.

In upholding the sentence, the court rejected the prosecutio­n’s request to up the man’s sentence to 15 years behind bars.

“The message the nine-year sentence sent is loud and clear,” Justice Robert Sharpe wrote for the appeal panel. “I am not persuaded that the longer sentence sought by the Crown at trial and on appeal would appreciabl­y add to the deterrent effect of the sentence that was imposed.”

In fact, Sharpe said, a longer sentence could discourage guilty pleas and undermine the idea of rehabilita­tion.

Court documents show police in Peel Region west of Toronto searched the man’s home and found a “massive amount of graphic and highly disturbing” images and videos of girls aged two to three years old.

The man, 39, identified only as S.C., pleaded guilty to eight counts of sexual assault, eight counts of making child pornograph­y, and one of possession of child pornograph­y. He admitted to exposing the children’s genitals while they napped and taking close-up photograph­s with his phone.

While the prosecutio­n argued a sentence of 17 to 19 years would have been appropriat­e, it recommende­d a 15-year term. S.C., who lived with his mother and had worked at several daycare centres as an early childhood educator, asked for six years.

In March 2018, Ontario court Judge Donald McLeod sentenced the first-time offender to a total of nine years in prison — six for the sexual assaults, one for making child pornograph­y, and two years for possession of the obscene material. McLeod noted the impact S.C. had on the victims’ parents, who gave pre-sentencing statements to the court.

“A common theme that resonated through the various messages was real and palpable — emotional destructio­n of trust,” McLeod said. “The statements were riddled with emotional moments that run the gamut from self-doubt and guilt to anger, and feelings of betrayal.”

On appeal, the prosecutio­n said the nine-year term was far too lenient.

Among other things, it argued McLeod paid too much attention to mitigating factors, such as S.C.’s guilty plea and the lack of brutality. The Crown also said the judge had run afoul of legal provisions enacted in the Criminal Code in 2015 that stiffened punishment for those who prey sexually on children.

The Appeal Court disagreed, saying McLeod was aware of the provisions.

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