Sunday, June 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

Rapper Classified Fires Back At Lawyers' Association In N.L. Rape Sentence Controversy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Oct, 2016 12:34 PM
    HALIFAX — A popular Canadian rapper says he can't understand why a prominent lawyers' group is condemning his angry response to a controversial sexual-assault sentencing.
     
    Classified — whose real name is Luke Boyd — took to Facebook earlier this month asking supporters to tell a judge they were unhappy with a five-year sentence handed to a man who sexually assaulted an 11-year-old Newfoundland girl.
     
    On Tuesday, the Newfoundland and Labrador branch of the Canadian Bar Association said the rapper's "personal attack" on the judge "is inappropriate and threatens judicial independence," although it didn't identify Classified by name.
     
    "Canadians enjoy an open and transparent judicial system. All Canadians have a right to know what is happening in the courts, how justice is administered, and to be critical of court decisions. However, personal attacks on judges threaten their independence and ability to deliver justice effectively," it said in a statement.
     
    In a response posted on Facebook Thursday, Classified said asking people to email a judge "doesn't seem like much of an attack compared to what that little girl went through."
     
    And he asked why the bar association criticized him, rather than questioning how the legal system treats rape victims.
     
    "I received over 500 emails from people. People I don't know. That told me what they have went through, whether it was rape, being molested as a child and put through some horrible things and how all of their accusers got off with next to nothing," Classified, who lives in Enfield, N.S., said in his Facebook post.
     
    "Everytime I read one of their stories it hits me again and blows my mind that the people in proper power and that understand the system a lot better than myself (and have put me down for addressing it the wrong way) do nothing to change these laws so that the judge can sentence these messed up people a lot longer."
     
    Justice William Goodridge had sentenced Christopher Butt to five years in prison followed by three years' probation following Butt's guilty plea to sexual assault and uttering threats. The sentence — the minimum for the offence — was jointly recommended by the Crown and defence.
     
     
    Classified wasn't the only critic. Jenny Wright, executive director of the St. John's Status of Women Council, said it reinforces what she calls a widespread "rape culture." She said people need to advocate for change by speaking to their justice ministers, to the prime minister and to police, and by working with women's groups.
     
    St. John's lawyer Mike King, of the Canadian Bar Association, told VOCM radio this week that judges can't make decisions based on their own feelings, but must follow the law and give deference to the sentence suggested by the lawyers.
     
    The judge had said he accepted the joint submission for the minimum punishment in part because of other factors, including doubt about the girl's ability to testify at trial, which created uncertainty about a conviction.
     
    The 41-year-old man lured the young girl, who was 11 years old at the time, to his home and repeatedly sexually assaulted her during the summer of 2014. Butt was a neighbour and a family friend.
     
    Goodridge said Butt used threats and physical force to ensure co-operation, including threatening to burn down her family's house and pulling her hair. The victim was not able to walk properly for days afterward.
     
    The decision said mitigating sentencing factors were Butt's lack of a criminal record, the fact that he pleaded guilty and apologized for the crimes, his participation in rehabilitation programs and his commitment to continued counselling.
     
    It also notes Butt was himself a victim of sexual assault during his childhood and that he suffers from bipolar disorder.
     
    "This does not justify or excuse his criminal acts, but it does help in understanding possible contributing forces that are at play," it said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nova Scotia Premier Taken Aback By Storm Damage: 'I Couldn't Believe My Eyes'

    SYDNEY, N.S. — Nova Scotia's premier says he could not believe his eyes when he saw the damage from the powerful storm that pummelled much of Atlantic Canada over the long weekend.

    Nova Scotia Premier Taken Aback By Storm Damage: 'I Couldn't Believe My Eyes'

    Teen Girl Pleads Guilty To Murder In Beating Death Of Six-Week-Old Boy In Saskatoon

    Teen Girl Pleads Guilty To Murder In Beating Death Of Six-Week-Old Boy In Saskatoon
    The teen, who cannot be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, entered the plea during a scheduled court appearance Wednesday.

    Teen Girl Pleads Guilty To Murder In Beating Death Of Six-Week-Old Boy In Saskatoon

    Ontario Offers Free Naxolone And Promises Better Monitoring Of Opioid Overdoses

    TORONTO — Ontario will expand access to Naxolone, an antidote for overdoses of opioids like fentanyl, as part of a new provincial strategy to combat an increasing number of addictions and deaths.

    Ontario Offers Free Naxolone And Promises Better Monitoring Of Opioid Overdoses

    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls

    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls
    Police say the girl's reported that they were walking on a street when they were approached by a man in a white panel van who asked them for directions.

    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls

    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015

    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015
    VANCOUVER — A new study released today by the Fraser Institute suggests 45,619 Canadians went outside the country for non-emergency medical treatment in 2015.

    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015

    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse

    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse
    A man who attacked a nurse at an Abbotsford, B.C., hospital will not serve time in jail.

    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse