Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Appeals Court Says Sentence For Two Cyberbullies Exceeded The Maximum

The Canadian Press, 06 Sep, 2015 01:19 PM
    WINNIPEG — An appeals court in Manitoba has sided with two brothers who argued that their youth sentences for cyberbullying a teenage girl were too long.
     
    The brothers, who were both 17 at the time of the offences back in 2013, admitted to threatening a 14-year-old girl in their community over the Internet into sending nude and explicit photos of herself.
     
    They then distributed the pictures through social media.
     
    They were sentenced last December to a three-year combined sentence of 16 months jail, eight months community supervision and 12 months probation, but they appealed on the grounds that the sentence exceeded the maximum allowed in the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
     
    Appeals court justice Diana Cameron said in the ruling that youth sentences for a single offence of the type committed by the brothers cannot exceed two years.
     
    The court reduced the sentences to 12 months in jail, six months community supervision and six months probation.
     
    "Unfortunately, in his determination of the ultimate sentence, the sentencing judge was under a misapprehension that the maximum concurrent sentence available per offence was three years," Cameron wrote in the ruling released earlier this month.
     
    The brothers were arrested in May 2014 and pleaded guilty to four charges including sexual touching and possession and distribution of child pornography.
     
    The trial judge in the case called the attack "relentless" and said it was designed to "exploit, demean and humiliate" the victim.
     
    Judge Donald Slough said a friend of the brothers met the girl on Facebook, and that the man told the victim to send him nude pictures or "he would do something to her."
     
    When she sent him a picture of her exposed breasts, the man demanded she send more explicit pictures or he would send her nude picture to everyone in the community, Slough said. She complied.
     
    The brothers found out about the pictures and started harassing the victim and demanding progressively more explicit images, Slough said, which they then distributed through social media.
     
    The victim's parents discovered the abuse after noticing a change in their daughter's behaviour and went to police.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Boy Writes 'I'm Sorry' To Library For Damaging Book While Falling Asleep Reading

    Boy Writes 'I'm Sorry' To Library For Damaging Book While Falling Asleep Reading
    A young reader looking to atone for tearing a borrowed comic book has won over Toronto library staff — and many others online — with a handwritten apology note.

    Boy Writes 'I'm Sorry' To Library For Damaging Book While Falling Asleep Reading

    Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate

    Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate
    Residents in southeastern British Columbia are regrouping from an immense and fast-spreading wildfire that has so far wiped out 30 homes and forced hundreds to flee with little more than the clothes on their backs.

    Wildfire In B.C.'s Southeast Destroys 30 Homes, Forces Hundreds To Evacuate

    Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism

    Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism
    QUEBEC — The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police is calling on the public for help in detecting people who are becoming radicalized.

    Canadian Association Of Chiefs Of Police In Quebec City To Discuss Extremism

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons
    OTTAWA — The federal government is delaying implementation of regulations intended to help police trace crime guns — the seventh time it has put off the measures.

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

    Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

    The Conservative leader is stressing the latter at a stop in Fredericton, N.B., where he is promising to add 6,000 people to bolster the reserve ranks of the Canadian Forces reserves.

    Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court
    Was Mike Duffy railroaded by a group of Stephen Harper's aides into telling the public he would repay his Senate expenses, or was Duffy the one shaking down the PMO?

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court