Pubdate: Wed, 16 Aug 2006 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2006 Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Colby Cosh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) KIDS GONE WRONG On Monday, speaking at the annual Canadian Bar Association conference in St. John's, federal Justice Minister Vic Toews proposed lowering the minimum age of criminal responsibility in Canadian law from 12 to 10. Almost instantly, the suggestion was used to impute a certain kind of caricatured conservative viciousness to the Minister. You could practically hear the muttering at all this weekend's best parties: "Typical wild-West Tory -- he wants to imprison 11-year-olds. How long before we're executing retarded teenagers?" In fact, as Toews made clear in a follow-up letter to newspapers yesterday, he was motivated by the liberal tendency to regard the state as a substitute parent, not by the conservative instinct to punish. "Young people who engage in criminal behaviour before the age of 12 ... do not need incarceration, nor have I suggested they do," said the Minister. "In some cases, young people have had extensive police and social service interaction before age 12 ... To prevent them from falling through the cracks, we need to discuss whether the courts should have some legal recourse to intervene in a positive fashion." Under English common law, a child was deemed doli incapax -- incapable of forming the intent to perpetrate a crime -- below the age of seven. (Arbitrary limits of this kind can be found in legal codes dating from before the Norman Conquest.) Anyone older was fair game: The Old Bailey ordered the hanging of an eight-year-old child as late as 1814. The progressive spirit of Victorianism -- personified in Canada by the great Liberal editor George Brown -- sought improved conditions for delinquent children, first separating them from the adult prison population and then gradually accepting the need for a parallel system of youth justice. In 1984, the Young Offenders Act moved the line of absolute criminal incapacity from seven upward to 12 -- an uncontroversial move, at the time, embedded in an otherwise unpopular new law. Toews might be accused of seeking a quarrel on the furthest margins of plausibility. But when the criminal culpability of young people suddenly does become an issue, it's hard to discuss the issue with a cool head. On February 12, 1993, at a shopping mall in a Liverpool suburb, two ten-year-old boys enticed James Bulger, aged two, away from his mother. They took him on a four-kilometre ramble through Merseyside; reaching a railyard, they battered him to death with iron and stones and left him on the tracks. Both came from violent, broken homes well known to the police, and had done things an older child might have been arrested for. Would Vic Toews be willing to second-guess British justice now and state that these under-12 youngsters did not "need incarceration"? How about Liberal justice critic Sue Barnes, who (in a Tuesday press release that stung the mind with its dishonesty) vilified Toews for wanting to "lock up 10-year-olds"? England has never quite recovered its equilibrium; it remains prone to outlandish child-safety panics and vigilantism, and the killers -- freed in 2002 and now grown -- must still be protected by a ban on the publication of their whereabouts. At the time, English prosecutors seeking to convict a child between 10 and 14 had to overcome a strong legal presumption of incapability. The mass rage incited by the Bulger slaying helped bring Tony Blair to power (thanks to an elegant speech about Britain's "sleeping conscience"), and among his first acts was a Toews-like move to bring children 10 and up within the insuperable grasp of criminal justice. "The Government believes," read a White Paper issued at the time, that "presuming that children of this age generally do not know the difference between naughtiness and serious wrongdoing ... is contrary to common sense." There is only paltry evidence that Blair's legislative changes have done anything to cut youth crime. A Home Office study published in June shows that reoffending among U.K. youths is down slightly (1.4%) since 2000, but most of the improvement is attributable to improved socio-economic conditions, not the law. Nonetheless, the White Paper's argument for hauling 10-year-olds in front of a judge has been echoed in other Commonwealth countries. But we meet here with an insoluble conundrum. Modern children are undoubtedly better informed than those of the past, but it's not clear that they are better educated. Does our overpoweringly rich media environment reinforce public norms of morality, or erode them? Should today's 10-year-old be held more responsible because of his sophistication, or less so because ubiquitous electronic depictions of violence have softened his brain? Answering such questions -- which hopefully we will never have to do under English circumstances - -- is no mere matter of applying good intentions. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman