Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ban on some conditional sentences tossed out

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2020 06:13 PM
  • Ban on some conditional sentences tossed out

A law that bars a judge from imposing a conditional sentence for certain offences was struck down as unconstitutional on Friday in a decision likely to find its way to the country's top court.

In a 2-1 ruling, the Ontario Court of Appeal found the provisions of the Criminal Code run afoul of the charter because of their impact on Indigenous offenders.

"The impugned amendments deprive the court of an important means to redress systemic discrimination against Aboriginal people when considering an appropriate sanction," the court said. "The reality is that the act will result in more Indigenous offenders serving their sentences in jail rather than in their communities."

The decision comes in the case of Cheyenne Sharma, an Indigenous woman and mother of a small child who was caught in 2015 smuggling almost two kilograms of cocaine into Canada from South America. Evidence was the first-time offender was in desperate financial straits and faced eviction from her home.

Because Sharma is of Ojibwa ancestry and a member of the Saugeen First Nation, the trial court took her background of trauma into account on sentencing as required by the Criminal Code since 1999 — the so-called Gladue principles.

However, another part of the code — enacted in 2012 by the former Conservative government under ex-prime minister Stephen Harper — bars community-based sentences for offences such as drug-trafficking that carry maximum penalties of at least 10 years in prison.

Sharma challenged the provisions — along with another that called for a two-year mandatory minimum sentence — as an infringement of her constitutional rights.

In February 2018, then-Superior Court justice Casey Hill, who sentenced her to 17 months in custody, declared the mandatory minimum rule unconstitutional but dismissed Sharma's challenge to the ban on a conditional sentence.

Sharma appealed, and various activist groups intervened on her behalf. They argued that systems of discrimination based on gender, race, socioeconomic status and colonialism shape the experiences of Indigenous women.

Barring Indigenous people from conditional sentences as an alternative to prison time stops judges from fully applying the Gladue principles and denies offenders the full benefit, the groups said. The result, they argued, was that the provisions magnified the injustices the Gladue framework was intended to address.

The majority on the Appeal Court agreed.

"The impugned provisions, in their impact on Aboriginal offenders including Ms. Sharma, create a distinction on the basis of race," Justice Kathryn Feldman said for the court. "The provisions deny Ms. Sharma a benefit in a manner that has the effect of reinforcing, perpetuating and exacerbating her disadvantage as an Aboriginal person."

Friday's ruling, which the court refused to put on hold, applies to all offenders.

The Appeal Court set aside Sharma's prison sentence, saying a conditional term of 24 months less a day would have been appropriate. However, given that Sharma had already served her custodial time, the Appeal Court substituted a sentence of time served.

In a lengthy dissenting opinion, Justice Bradley Miller said he found no charter breach and would have upheld the provisions. Parliament, he said, had the right to mandate prison time for offences such as drug-trafficking, regardless of who commits them.

"Parliament's legislative decision may be harsh. It may even be mistaken or unwise. But it is not ... discriminatory," Miller said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Shooting Injures Man In West Kelowna, B.C., Watchdog Investigates

The Mounties says officers shot and wounded a man during a confrontation Friday in a park in West Kelowna, B.C.

Police Shooting Injures Man In West Kelowna, B.C., Watchdog Investigates

Students From Manitoba And U.S., Killed In Vancouver Island Bus Crash: Coroner

Two 18-year-old students, a woman from Manitoba and an American man, have been identified as the victims of a fatal bus crash on Vancouver Island.    

Students From Manitoba And U.S., Killed In Vancouver Island Bus Crash: Coroner

DARPAN Awards 2019 - The Biggest Event In Town - DETAILS INSIDE

This year is special for DARPAN Awards as not only is it the 10th Anniversary of the event but it marks 10 successful years honouring and encouraging the contributions of the South Asian community.  

DARPAN Awards 2019 - The Biggest Event In Town - DETAILS INSIDE

DARPAN Awards 2019: Meet All The Winners

Dr. Sakena Yacoobi founded AIL in 1995 to provide teacher training to Afghan women, to support education for boys and girls, and to provide health education to women and children. Under Dr. Yacoobi’s leadership, AIL has established itself as a groundbreaking, visionary organization which works at the grassroots level.   

DARPAN Awards 2019: Meet All The Winners

DARPAN Awards 2019: Celebrating 10 Years Of Excellence - SEE PICS

DARPAN Magazine hosted its 10th Annual Awards in the company of esteemed social, business and political elites.

DARPAN Awards 2019: Celebrating 10 Years Of Excellence - SEE PICS

Burnaby Is Latest Metro Vancouver City To Declare Climate Emergency

Burnaby Is Latest Metro Vancouver City To Declare Climate Emergency
BURNABY, B.C. - The City of Burnaby is the latest Metro Vancouver community to declare a climate emergency and announce plans to deliver carbon neutrality within the next 30 years.    

Burnaby Is Latest Metro Vancouver City To Declare Climate Emergency