Canada Proposes Changes to Youth Sentencing
The Conservative government hopes changes proposed Tuesday will make “protection of society a primary goal” of the Youth Criminal Justice Act. Reported by The CBC.
Justice Minister Rob Nicholson said he wants to give judges the power to consider non-criminal behaviour when sentencing Canadians under age 18.
Such behaviour would include a “casual attitude to the law [and] complete lack of empathy for the victim,” said Nicholson, flanked by the mothers of two youths who were killed by young offenders.
The changes would also permit sentencing judges to take into account evidence of previous brushes with the law that did not result in charges or convictions.
The amendments are dubbed “Sebastien’s Law” in memory of Sebastien Lacasse, a 19-year-old Quebecer stabbed to death by a group of youths after making racially charged comments about his ex-girlfriend’s new boyfriend at a house party in 2004.
The 17-year-old ringleader pleaded guilty and was sentenced as an adult.
The proposed changes come as youth crime is on the decline in Canada. In 2006-2007, the most recent year for which statistics are available, 56,463 young offenders were convicted across Canada, according to Statistics Canada.
That represented a slight rise — 0.34 per cent — over 2005-2006 but was a 26 per cent drop from 2002-2003, when 76,153 young offenders were convicted.
The Conservatives vowed in 2008 to reduce protections under the Youth Criminal Justice Act for young people convicted of serious crimes.
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Justice Minister Rob Nicholson said he wants to give judges the power to consider non-criminal behaviour when sentencing Canadians under age 18.