Pubdate: Thu, 26 Oct 2006 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2006, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: John Ibbitson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) TORIES ARE PLAYING POLITICS OF JUSTICE Word is, the Conservatives are growing increasingly impatient with the lawyers in the Justice Department. Every time the government orders up a bill that makes it easier to declare someone a dangerous offender or that exempts public officials who object to gay marriage from having to perform the ceremony, the mouthpieces in Justice warn that such a law would violate the Constitution and be struck down by the courts. But Justice Minister Vic Toews has pushed forward with the bills nonetheless, ostensibly because he believes the courts will defer to Parliament, but more likely because the government doesn't expect the bills to become law. Such is the politics of the justice system. Consider Bill C-27, known as the "three strikes you're out" legislation. The act, in essence, would require individuals convicted for the third time of a major crime involving violence or sexual interference to explain why they should not be designated a dangerous offender, and jailed indefinitely. Both defenders and critics of the bill wrongly argue that it will or won't deter crime. Deterrence is not the point. The proper purpose of the bill is to make it easier to remove a small number of hardened criminals from the community, to protect the public. (Unlike the U.S. three-strikes laws, only a few, very serious crimes are included in the Canadian version.) Seems sensible enough, but all three opposition parties are expected to vote against the bill when it comes forward for second reading. Why? Because the bill uses reverse onus: The accused criminal is required to convince a judge that he shouldn't be labelled a dangerous offender, whereas today the Crown must convince the judge that he should be. Reverse onus contradicts centuries of common law precedent, is probably unconstitutional, and the opposition will have none of it. The Conservatives must have known, when they overrode internal legal objections and brought forward the proposed new rules, that opposition parties would vote it down, just as they must have known that the House of Commons justice committee would gut legislation increasing mandatory minimum sentences and raising the age of consent. The committee excised the meat of the legislation in votes this week, saying the worst parts of the bill were unfairly punitive. The same fate awaits the proposed Defence of Religions Act, which the government is expected to introduce if, as expected, the motion to reconsider the same-sex-marriage legislation is defeated. The bill would, among other things, protect the rights of marriage officials to refuse to marry gay couples, if the officials' religion prohibited such marriages. Many legal experts consider this bill unconstitutional, since it deals with an area of provincial jurisdiction. (The feds are responsible for the definition of marriage, the provinces for supervising services.) It has next to no chance of being passed by the House. But then the Conservatives probably don't expect the Defence of Religions Act to become law. They might not have expected any of their aborted justice package to become law. Then why do it? So Prime Minister Stephen Harper can turn the defeated bills into a wedge issue in the next election. "You see?" he will say. "This is the price we pay for a minority government. The Conservatives want criminals doing real time, rather than lounging around under house arrest. We want to keep dangerous offenders behind bars, and we want to protect people of faith from being compelled to act against their principles. "But the opposition parties are more worried about the rights of criminals and pleadings of lawyers than they are about your protection. That is why we need a majority government." Will it work? The Conservatives need the support of about 35 per cent of the voters to remain in office, and about 40 per cent to form a majority government. What percentage of the population do you think would like to see tougher sentences for all criminals, dangerous offenders locked away indefinitely, and religious rights protected for devout public officials? Exactly. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek