Pubdate: Thu, 09 Nov 2000 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2000 The Toronto Star Contact: One Yonge St., Toronto ON, M5E 1E6 Fax: (416) 869-4322 Website: http://www.thestar.com/ Forum: http://www.thestar.com/editorial/disc_board/ Author: Tracey Tyler, Legal Affairs Reporter COURT SENDS AFGHAN TORTURE VICTIM TO PRISON House-Arrest Term For Heroin Dealing Overturned On Appeal In a decision that appears to have stunned and infuriated one of its own judges, Ontario's top court has ignored medical warnings and sent a victim of torture in an Afghanistan prison to a penitentiary for six years. The Ontario Court of Appeal decided 2-1 Tuesday to set aside a 17-month conditional sentence that kept Abdul Shahnawaz, 35, under house arrest and electronic monitoring for heroin trafficking. The six-year prison term substituted by the court Tuesday is three times greater than the sentence crown lawyers had sought. It also comes despite warnings by two psychiatrists that putting Shahnawaz behind bars will trigger damaging flashbacks of his three years as a political prisoner, when he was beaten, hung upside down, given electroshock and strangled until he became blind in one eye. The doctors' evidence was given serious consideration by the trial judge last year in sentencing Shahnawaz. He had sold 650 grams of heroin to Toronto police undercover agents in four transactions, once with his 5-year-old son in the car and another with the drugs tucked under his baby in a carriage. The trial judge, Madam Justice Anne Molloy, said while a nine-to 12-year prison term would normally be appropriate, Shahnawaz deserved an exceptional sentence for two reasons. Shahnawaz was likely an unpaid dupe working for higher-level dealers and imprisonment would cause him intense psychological suffering, given his history, she said. But Madam Justice Louise Charron of the appeal court, in calling the sentence "manifestly unfit," said Molloy focused too much on Shahnawaz's personal circumstances. Judge calls original sentence 'manifestly unfit' for the crime "Rehabilitation as a goal of sentencing is not the restoration of an offender's physical and mental health, but his reinstatement as a functioning and law-abiding member of the community," she said, writing for Associate Chief Justice Coulter Osborne. But in a strongly worded dissent, Mr. Justice John Laskin disagreed. "Nothing justifies this court increasing the length of the sentence asked for by the crown, let alone tripling it as my colleague proposes," he said. Laskin agreed with Molloy that the case called for compassion and leniency. He said the effect of incarcerating Shahnawaz, his moral culpability and his prospects for rehabilitation if imprisoned justify the conditional sentence, which carried an additional two years of probation. "I doubt that any of us fortunate enough to live in a civilized society can comprehend the horrific treatment Mr. Shahnawaz must have suffered," he said. "After his capture, Mr. Shahnawaz was subjected to treatment condemned by every free and democratic society in the world." Laskin noted that Shahnawaz is severely cognitively impaired. He was described by Toronto psychiatrist Donald Payne, who has treated him for post-traumatic stress disorder since 1992, as among the worst functioning of the 1,400 torture victims he's treated. Payne, along with Dr. Helen Meier, a psychiatrist at Mount Sinai Hospital, examined Shahnawaz in the Toronto (Don) Jail before sentencing and found the jail time had affected the man. Molloy noticed when Shahnawaz returned to court, he was trembling and couldn't make eye contact. Shahnawaz was trembling and couldn't make eye contact Ontario's correctional services ministry intervened on appeal, arguing trial judges shouldn't be allowed to order electronic monitoring for offenders on conditional sentences. But the appeal court declined to address the issue. - --- MAP posted-by: Kirk Bauer