Pubdate: Mon, 08 May 2006 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2006 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) MINIMUM SENTENCES ARE NOT THE ANSWER Two anti-crime bills introduced by the Conservative government last week included some good initiatives. But mandatory minimum sentencing was not one of them. Yet that is the measure likely to have the biggest impact on Canada's justice system. The Conservatives estimate that between the mandatory minimum (MM) sentencing law and a second bill designed to eliminate conditional sentences such as community service or house arrest for a number of crimes, as many as 4,000 people will be added to the country's prison population. Housing them would require new prisons, which could cost, opposition critics claim, as much as $5 billion to build, and many millions a year to operate. That is a very large investment for the Canadian taxpayer to make in MMs, that have not been shown to have any discernible effect on crime rates, either here or outside the country. Normally, a record of failure elsewhere will dissuade lawmakers from introducing a given measure here. Bringing in mandatory minimums in the face of all evidence suggests the Conservatives are acting on an ideological basis, not a factual one. MM sentencing was first introduced in a big way by the United States in its war on drugs. Drug traffickers were subject to mandatory minimums of five to 10 years, depending on the quantity and type of drug. But according to research by Thomas Gabor of the University of Ottawa and Nicole Crutcher of Carleton University, this sentencing provision left gun-related crime in the United States "generally unaffected." In part, explains Wade Riordan Raaflaub of the Parliamentary Information and Research Service, this was because mandatory minimum sentences were largely imposed on first-time, low-level drug dealers, who are "easily replaced in the illicit market." Dealers higher up the chain were able to trade information for lighter sentences. Julian Roberts, a professor at Oxford University, also found in his survey of mandatory minimum sentences in a number of common-law countries that these sentences had "no discernible effect on crime rates." It is not too late for the Conservatives to back away from mandatory minimum sentences. Going ahead with this measure means less money will be available for law enforcement and crime prevention, two areas where last week's bills and budget do make real steps forward, but could have made bigger ones. To provide funding of $161 million over two years to allow the RCMP to fill 1,000 vacancies, and to allow the Justice Department to hire more prosecutors, is smart. Both groups have been handicapped for years by inadequate staffing. And effective crime prevention, especially among young people, could use more than the extra $20 million over the two years the Conservatives have budgeted for. It's better to head off crime before it happens than to warehouse more people after they become criminals. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman