Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court To Rule On Harper Government's Sentencing Law For Gun Crimes

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 11:30 AM
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada is set to rule Tuesday on a key part of the Conservative government's tough-on-crime agenda.
     
    The high court will deliver its ruling in a pair of cases involving mandatory minimum sentences for gun crimes.
     
    The Ontario Court of Appeal struck down the law in 2013, calling it "cruel and unusual punishment," so the provincial attorney general and its federal counterpart are appealing the ruling.
     
    The Appeal Court struck down both the three-year mandatory minimum for a first offence of possessing a loaded prohibited gun, as well as the five-year sentence for a second offence.
     
    The Ontario and federal governments are urging the Supreme Court to reverse that ruling, arguing the law does not breach the charter protection against cruel and unusual punishment.
     
    The new sentencing rules were enacted in 2008 as part of a sweeping omnibus bill introduced by the federal Conservatives.
     
    The Ontario ruling is already binding in the province, and can be taken into consideration by judges in other provinces in similar cases.
     
    Tuesday's ruling will settle the matter nationally.
     
    The high court has agreed to hear two cases, one on each of the two sentencing provisions.
     
    In one case, a young Toronto man with no criminal record was sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty to possession of a loaded firearm.
     
    The judge said that had there not been a law calling for a mandatory minimum, he would have sentenced Hussein Nur to 2 1/2 years.
     
    "Parliament's increase of the mandatory minimum from one year to three years was a forceful response to the dangers posed by the proliferation of handgun possession and a determination to combat this 'serious and growing societal danger,'" Ontario and the federal government argue in their factum.
     
    "It was open to Parliament to create an aggravated form of firearm possession with enhanced punishment."
     
    In the second case, Sidney Charles pleaded guilty to firearms offences after he was found in his rooming house bedroom with a loaded and unlicensed semi-automatic handgun. He was sentenced to five years because he had two previous convictions.
     
    In defending the mandatory sentence for repeat offenders, Ottawa and Ontario argue that it is not overly punitive.
     
    "The overall effect of raising some offenders' sentences to five years is within a reasonable range of legislative choice, particularly given the importance of denouncing and deterring this dangerous conduct which puts the public at risk," they argue in their factum.
     
    After several cases in which it clashed with the Conservatives in several key policy areas, the Supreme Court recently sided with Ottawa in its recent ruling that said it had the right to legislate the destruction of Quebec's gun registry data.
     
    The high court upheld the notion that Parliament has the power to make criminal law under the Constitution, as long as it operates within the law.
     
    That win for the Conservatives came after several losses at the Supreme Court. They included rejecting its appointment of Quebec judge Marc Nadon to its ranks, rejecting Parliament's right to reform the Senate on its own and upholding the right of Vancouver's controversial Insite safe-injection facility to stay open when the government wanted it shut down.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Highlights Of Information Watchdog's Report On Access To Information Reform

    Highlights Of Information Watchdog's Report On Access To Information Reform
    OTTAWA — Highlights of information commissioner Suzanne Legault's special report to Parliament on Access to Information reform:

    Highlights Of Information Watchdog's Report On Access To Information Reform

    Lawsuit Veterans Expecting More Out Of Ottawa In Benefits Overhaul

    Lawsuit Veterans Expecting More Out Of Ottawa In Benefits Overhaul
    OTTAWA — Veterans at the centre of a class-action lawsuit against the federal government are waiting to see whether legislation introduced this week by the Harper government to improve benefits is the beginning, or the end, of reforms to the system.

    Lawsuit Veterans Expecting More Out Of Ottawa In Benefits Overhaul

    Credit Counselling In High Demand In Alberta As Oilpatch Downturn Hits Home

    Credit Counselling In High Demand In Alberta As Oilpatch Downturn Hits Home
    CALGARY — The Racette family is on a cash-only diet for the next four years. Dale Racette, a truck driver, and his wife, a school bus driver, are trying to dig themselves out of a $45,000 hole.

    Credit Counselling In High Demand In Alberta As Oilpatch Downturn Hits Home

    Racial Attack: Sikh Man Brutally Beaten Up In Birmingham. Watch!

    Racial Attack: Sikh Man Brutally Beaten Up In Birmingham. Watch!
    In a suspected racial attack, police in Britain have come across footage posted online in which a Sikh man is seen being brutally beaten up in Birmingham city Broad Street, a media report said on Tuesday.

    Racial Attack: Sikh Man Brutally Beaten Up In Birmingham. Watch!

    BC Puts 3-Month Freeze On Applications From Prospective Labour Immigrants To Speed Up PNP Processing

    BC Puts 3-Month Freeze On Applications From Prospective Labour Immigrants To Speed Up PNP Processing
    Labour Minister Shirley Bond says the pause will allow the province to speed up processing times for the Provincial Nominee Program so people can apply online when applications are accepted again starting July 2.

    BC Puts 3-Month Freeze On Applications From Prospective Labour Immigrants To Speed Up PNP Processing

    YouTube Bringing IISuperwomanII, Jenna Marbles, VSauce To Toronto For FanFest

    YouTube Bringing IISuperwomanII, Jenna Marbles, VSauce To Toronto For FanFest
    TORONTO — Google is bringing its YouTube FanFest event to North America for the first time and has chosen Toronto as the host city.

    YouTube Bringing IISuperwomanII, Jenna Marbles, VSauce To Toronto For FanFest