News (Media Awareness Project) - CN AB: Drug Dealer Avoids Jail |
Title: | CN AB: Drug Dealer Avoids Jail |
Published On: | 2004-06-02 |
Source: | Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 08:48:04 |
DRUG DEALER AVOIDS JAIL
Sending to jail an ecstasy dealer who used a minor to sell the drug to
undercover cops at a rave party would not benefit society, a Calgary judge
said yesterday. Justice Sal LoVecchio said time in custody would likely set
Jeremy Tymiak back on his road to becoming a productive citizen.
"If, in fact, he's turned his life around, what useful purpose is served in
disrupting all that?" LoVecchio asked Crown prosecutor Scott Couper.
"He's going to lose his job, he's going to be out of the home and no longer
contributing to expenses (if jailed)," the Queen's Bench judge said.
LoVecchio said a conditional sentence served in the community would act as
a litmus test to determine if Tymiak has decided to follow the straight and
narrow.
"If he hasn't turned his life around, in other words this is a big charade
in anticipation of the sentencing, don't the conditions address all that?"
Tymiak, 21, pleaded guilty in April to a Feb. 2, 2002 charged of
trafficking in a controlled substance.
He admitted selling two ecstasy pills to an undercover female officer at a
rave party in the city's southwest.
Couper said the officer was approached by a 17-year-old who asked her if
she wanted to make a purchase.
When she turned over $45, the teen went over to where Tymiak was waiting
and retrieved the contraband.
When Tymiak was arrested, he had 38 more pills worth about $700 on him,
said Couper.
Defence lawyer Pat Fagan said his client is now working in construction and
plans to go to SAIT.
LoVecchio ordered Tymiak to serve six months of house arrest followed by
six months under a 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and abide by other conditions.
Sending to jail an ecstasy dealer who used a minor to sell the drug to
undercover cops at a rave party would not benefit society, a Calgary judge
said yesterday. Justice Sal LoVecchio said time in custody would likely set
Jeremy Tymiak back on his road to becoming a productive citizen.
"If, in fact, he's turned his life around, what useful purpose is served in
disrupting all that?" LoVecchio asked Crown prosecutor Scott Couper.
"He's going to lose his job, he's going to be out of the home and no longer
contributing to expenses (if jailed)," the Queen's Bench judge said.
LoVecchio said a conditional sentence served in the community would act as
a litmus test to determine if Tymiak has decided to follow the straight and
narrow.
"If he hasn't turned his life around, in other words this is a big charade
in anticipation of the sentencing, don't the conditions address all that?"
Tymiak, 21, pleaded guilty in April to a Feb. 2, 2002 charged of
trafficking in a controlled substance.
He admitted selling two ecstasy pills to an undercover female officer at a
rave party in the city's southwest.
Couper said the officer was approached by a 17-year-old who asked her if
she wanted to make a purchase.
When she turned over $45, the teen went over to where Tymiak was waiting
and retrieved the contraband.
When Tymiak was arrested, he had 38 more pills worth about $700 on him,
said Couper.
Defence lawyer Pat Fagan said his client is now working in construction and
plans to go to SAIT.
LoVecchio ordered Tymiak to serve six months of house arrest followed by
six months under a 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and abide by other conditions.
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