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FJAG said:But then again I live in an imaginary world where reporters are actually interested in making fair and balanced reports
What a wonderful world that must be. Sun always shining, birds always singing.
FJAG said:But then again I live in an imaginary world where reporters are actually interested in making fair and balanced reports
The Canadian Press via CBC.ca, 29 May 13Former Guantanamo detainee Omar Khadr woke up in an Alberta prison Wednesday after months stuck in isolation at a penitentiary in Ontario where an inmate had threatened his life, The Canadian Press has learned.
Khadr was flown to the Edmonton Institution Tuesday, potentially ending a situation in which he had been deprived of prison programming that complicated efforts to seek parole, his lawyer Dennis Edney confirmed.
"Hopefully, this is a positive step in his long journey to freedom," the Edmonton-based Edney said.
"I hope that this is a new start for Omar, an opportunity for people to see him as he really is — as someone who poses no threat to Canada, someone who has no radical viewpoints."
The transfer allows Khadr to be closer to his lawyer and should obviate concerns about any negative influence from his family in Toronto, some of whom expressed sympathy for al-Qaida several years ago.
The maximum-security Edmonton Institution is home to about 225 inmates ....
milnews.ca said:So long Kingston, hello Edmonton!CBC.ca, 29 May 13
Sheep Dog AT said:I hear the red neck province is more tolerable of terrorists
E.R. Campbell said:I believe - maybe just sincerely hope - that the North African/Arab/Persian/West Asian Islamic region is due for a series of wars and insurrections that will put the Thirty Years War to shame in terms of both savagery and death toll and in (eventual) positive outcome. The problem, I reiterate, in not (in my opinion) Islam, itself; it is the primitive, even retarded North African/Arab/Persian/West Asian culture which still thinks that public executions like this, so called "honour killings" and female genital mutilation are cause to shout "God is great!" That culture is unacceptable in the 21st century West; either the Muslims change it or we change them ... probably into ash. In the interim we should isolate them - sell them arms, by all means, so long as they can pay cash on the barrel head, but cut off all immigration, student visas, tourism, trade and so on for a generation or two.
Toronto Star, 13 Aug 13Former Guantanamo detainee Omar Khadr is challenging the legality of his detention, his lawyer arguing that the Canadian government has illegally held him as an adult for crimes committed when he was 15 years old.
An application calling for his immediate release was filed in Alberta, where Khadr is being held in the maximum security Edmonton Institution.
“This government needs to be made accountable for its mistreatment of Omar Khadr when in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and in Canada,” his lawyer Dennis Edney said in a written statement to the Star.
“(Canada) was complicit with the U.S. in his abuse and torture and it continues to abuse him in Canada by locking him away, in a maximum security prison, as an adult, instead of being treated as a youth.”
(....)
Edney is arguing in what’s known as an application for habeas corpus, that Canada did not appropriately apply the provisions of the International Transfer of Offenders Act to Khadr’s case, which allowed the U.S. to transfer him from Guantanamo to Canada.
Offenders under the age of 18 face different sentencing guidelines and protections in Canada, according to the Youth Criminal Justice Act. An 8-year sentence could be imposed on a youth for similar offences for Khadr’s conviction had they occurred in Canada, the brief states.
However, according to the transfer act, that means Khadr would be detained in a provincial facility, Edney argues, not in federal maximum security institutions such as Millhaven and Edmonton.
An adult would not be given an 8-year sentence for those crimes ....
...An 8-year sentence could be imposed on a youth for similar offences for Khadr’s conviction had they occurred in Canada, the brief states....
Bloody well hope so.Good2Golf said:Hmmmm, trying to rack my brain when the last time in Canada that a young offender lobbed a grenade into a crowd, killing someone -- something tells me there is no jurisprudence for such a case.
George Wallace said:Does it matter what 'instrument' a Young Offender uses to kill someone? Gun, knife, baseball bat, hammer, grenade, pipe bomb?
ModlrMike said:If his rights were violated as the SCC says, then it was the US that did so.
Mr Trudeau needs to look up the word perfidy. That's the real crime that Khadr should have been charged with.
Of course; it's what they do.FJAG said:... lawyers will try their hand at getting compensation ....
Nonetheless, Canadian taxpayers certainly lose out by funding the money-grab. Let the bleeding hearts who wanted him back in Canada (but not in their neighbourhood) pay for the lawyers.I personally think they probably wouldn't win the case....
Omar Khadr is staying put in the Edmonton Max.
Court of Queen's Bench Associate Chief Justice John Rooke on Friday denied the former Guantanamo Bay detainee's application to be transferred to a provincial medium-security jail.
Defence lawyer Dennis Edney had argued the eight-year sentence given to Khadr, 27, is a global youth sentence, based on the fact that a minimum adult sentence in Canada for murder would be one of life in prison. As a result, Edney said Khadr's sentence should be served in a provincial institution.
Federal government lawyer Bruce Hughson had agreed the murder sentence is a youth one, but argued Khadr's other convictions for spying, attempted murder and terrorism were determined to result in adult sentences because the eight years given exceeds the maximum penalty a youth in Canada would receive for the same crime.
And since Canadian offenders can't serve both an adult and a youth sentence at the same time, Hughson argued a federal penitentiary sentence "prevails" because the sentence is above the minimum two-year provincial level.
Khadr's lawyer said he plans to appeal ....