News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Ottawa Sticks To Minimum Sentences |
Title: | Canada: Ottawa Sticks To Minimum Sentences |
Published On: | 2007-11-28 |
Source: | Windsor Star (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-16 11:50:53 |
OTTAWA STICKS TO MINIMUM SENTENCES
Federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson is pressing ahead with plans to
create mandatory minimum prison terms for drug crimes in spite of two
studies prepared for his own department that say such laws don't work,
and are increasingly unpopular as crime-fighting measures in other
countries.
"Minimum sentences are not an effective sentencing tool: that is, they
constrain judicial discretion without offering any increased crime
prevention benefits. Nevertheless, mandatory sentences remain popular
with some Canadian politicians."
That's one conclusion of a 2005 report prepared for the Justice
Department -- Mandatory Sentences of Imprisonment in Common Law
Jurisdictions.
An earlier, 2002 report -- Mandatory Minimum Penalties: Their Effects
on Crime -- also
compiled for the department while the Liberals were in power offers a
similar view:
"Harsh mandatory minimum sentences do not appear to influence drug
consumption or drug-related crime in any measurable way."
Despite such conclusions, the Conservatives unveiled legislation last
week to create mandatory minimum prison terms for drug possession,
production and trafficking.
The automatic minimum jail terms range from six months for growing and
selling a single marijuana plant to three years for producing any
quantity of coke or crystal meth in a home lab.
A clause in the bill would allow judges to exempt certain offenders
from prison if they pass a court-monitored drug treatment program.
The proposal has been widely criticized as counter-productive by
criminal lawyers, criminologists and at least one former Canadian judge.
Federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson is pressing ahead with plans to
create mandatory minimum prison terms for drug crimes in spite of two
studies prepared for his own department that say such laws don't work,
and are increasingly unpopular as crime-fighting measures in other
countries.
"Minimum sentences are not an effective sentencing tool: that is, they
constrain judicial discretion without offering any increased crime
prevention benefits. Nevertheless, mandatory sentences remain popular
with some Canadian politicians."
That's one conclusion of a 2005 report prepared for the Justice
Department -- Mandatory Sentences of Imprisonment in Common Law
Jurisdictions.
An earlier, 2002 report -- Mandatory Minimum Penalties: Their Effects
on Crime -- also
compiled for the department while the Liberals were in power offers a
similar view:
"Harsh mandatory minimum sentences do not appear to influence drug
consumption or drug-related crime in any measurable way."
Despite such conclusions, the Conservatives unveiled legislation last
week to create mandatory minimum prison terms for drug possession,
production and trafficking.
The automatic minimum jail terms range from six months for growing and
selling a single marijuana plant to three years for producing any
quantity of coke or crystal meth in a home lab.
A clause in the bill would allow judges to exempt certain offenders
from prison if they pass a court-monitored drug treatment program.
The proposal has been widely criticized as counter-productive by
criminal lawyers, criminologists and at least one former Canadian judge.
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