Quag said:
It is in my opinion that mandatory sentencing should never happen.
The discretion of judges is a very important aspect of the justice system.
Take this case for example.
Adult A decides to steal a chocolate bar from the corner store. He/She has no previous record. He/She is charged with theft under $5000.
Adult B decides to steal 10 cartons of cigarettes from the same store. He/She has a previous record of assault and DUI. He/She is charged the same with theft under $5000.
Mandatory sentencing is at 1 year (just for the point I'm making) for theft under $5000.
Maybe this is just my opinion, but do you not think that it is good that the judge has the discretion to give a more lenient sentence to the child, versus the adult whom should have known better/ committed a more serious crime (ok lets not get into the "stealing is stealing" and they are equally bad argument).
This is where I think that mandatory sentencing wouldn't work. Just my thoughts though. And I will state that I have no viable alternative at this time to put forth.
See Quag, that is where the problem lays. People like you trot out hypotheticals. We live in an unfortunately practical and real world. Criminals don't worry about niceties so much.
And the whole point so far is the woefully inadequate addressing of
violent crime. Screw the hypotheticals. The charge that applies for stealing a box of screws at Rona is the same charge that applies for stealing a 1995 Dodge Caravan, or a Spirit, or Acclaim. The m/v's are not worth more than $5000, so that is what the charge is. Car theft=shoplifting=not against the law (where sentencing is concerned).
How does mandatory sentencing not work when a creep gets convicted of child pornography for having 10,000 plus images of child sex torture, then getting a year of house arrest and STILL BEING ABLE TO KEEP HIS COMPUTER?!?! (Because he "wants to take courses on line")
IF we could trust the judges, then we could probably do away with mandatory sentences. The fact that they exist speaks to the fact that the judges are not serving the people. It is a statutory way to get around the judges weak treatment of crime. And they still ignore the guidelines as they see fit. Hell, the last three times I went to court for someone who didn't have auto insurance they came up with some lame ass excuse about "I'm poor, I need a car, blah blah blah" and got sentences reduced to $1500 (minimum sentence in Ontario is $5000 and it goes up from there). JFC!! I pay more than that for my cars. Maybe I should cancel my insurance, since not only do I know I will get a freebie, I can almost guarantee I won't get a ticket. But I won't.
Gunnar, I mentioned before that the higher courts would not be elected. I agree that there needs to be some senior direction so that there isn't a massive back and forth with the legal system. But the way it is now, the bunch that makes poor decisions drags down the few good ones that are left, because all of a sudden precedence kicks in and they are compelled to do what some socialist college did out in BC. But the high courts don't deal with the everyday administration of the legal system.
Another interesting nuance is now that Canada Customs (CBSA) is now an enforcement agency, they are picking off more and more criminality coming through the border. There will come a time in the near future where they will likely be laying their own charges (currently, they have to have an RCMP officer do it, and they pretty much only lay charges for huge cases here in Ontario). So, as the curve comes around, and more out of country criminals see how weak our system is, how do you think that will bode for you big city types? Me? I live in a border town that is loosely been designated as a "no mans land" by the various organize crime factions that commute through. Toronto and GTA? Not so much. Vancouver? Hah. Good luck. Montreal? Half way there now.
I only stick with this because I care about
you people. I get to bring my firepower home, I get to hunt down and pursue anyone who displeases me, and I get heaps of court overtime from this useless system. For the police, the legal system is job security. If the bad guys actually were kept in jail, or actually stopped being bad guys because they knew all hell would rain on them, my job would get boring pretty quick. Or maybe then we could start freeing up some resources to go after organized crime and making all of Canada a better place.
warspite said:
Perhaps a jury could be held to allow a more serious sentence should the situation warrant it?
Warsprite, that is a good idea, but only charges that are proceded with by way of indictment get jury trials. By and large, unless forced to, the Crown elects to proceed by way of summary charges, due to the massive case load that they are force to reckon with. When you go by way of indictment, you give the bad guy the opportunity to have a preliminary trial, and create even more delay. Which gives them a better shot at beating the charge for no better reason than that it has been too long since they got caught.
Plus, most criminals don't have jury trials anymore. When you introduce a jury, you have real, normal people watching what is going on, and normal people frequently have the disease that terrifies the legal system called "common sense". Most criminals elect to be tried "Judge alone" and skip the jury all together, since their lawyers know that gets things back into the comfortable "all lawyers involved" scenario.
Over and above all that, jury selection unto itself is a gong show.
But you have the right idea. If average citizens were more involved with the process, things might get better. Hmmmm, how else could we get people involved in a decision making process...ummmm....everyone would have to have a say.....errrrr....there would have to be some way to count the various opinions that people had....oooo, it is right on the tip of my tongue.....kind of like some sort of tally.....jeez, what do they call that.....oh yeah,
A VOTE!!