Pubdate: Thu, 06 Jul 2006 Source: Smithers Interior News (CN BC) Copyright: 2006, BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.interior-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1631 Author: Todd Hamilton, Managing Editor FISHING FOR A JUSTICE SYSTEM If you are a defence lawyer in Smithers forget about trying to work out a sweetheart plea bargain deal for your drug trafficking client -- let the judge do it for you. After three years of grinding its way through what is loosely called our justice system, a 24-year-old Prince George woman was found guilty of trafficking crystal meth. Charissa Scarrow was charged in Telkwa on Oct. 9, 2003 and on June 29, 2006, Smithers judge John Milne handed down the sentence. Federal crown attorney Rick Wozny asked for a 12-month conditional sentence, also known as house arrest, as well as, 12 months probation. Defence attorney Terry Hudson pleaded with Judge Milne for half that, six months conditional and six months probation. In passing down his sentence, Judge Milne said he was taking into consideration the damage crystal meth was doing to the community and also to send a message. "There has to be a sentence that indicates to you and others that trafficking methamphetamines will be dealt with harshly by the courts," he said. Given the crown's request for 12 months house arrest and 12 months probation, and the defence's hope for six and six, Milne sent his message: Milne sentenced Scarrow to just four months conditional and no probation. Milne trumped even the defence's best hopes and did send a clear message: the revolving doors of Smithers courthouse continue to circle at a dizzying pace. The other message: Sell crystal meth in the Bulkley Valley and you will be grounded for a few months -- that's about it. Scarrow will serve her four-month sentence under house arrest with certain exceptions: She can go to work, go shopping, go to counselling and organized religious activities. At Smithers Mayor Jim Davidson's inauguration, he called for the formation of a Court Watch program to be set up similar to one currently being successfully run in Maple Ridge. The purpose of Court Watch is not to reduce crime specifically, but to document the outcomes of court cases such as this one, with the hope that a passive, objective civilian oversight may induce some accountability into our justice system. Unfortunately, while many in Smithers holler and cry about the burgeoning rate of petty crime, Davidson's Court Watch program never really got off the ground. In the meantime, overworked Smithers cops are running down criminal after criminal only to see them back on the streets a short time later. Locking 'em up and throwing away the key isn't the answer either, but if Smithers is going to get a handle on its crime problem, people need to get involved and there needs to be a better message than the one Judge Milne handed down last week: In Smithers, the justice system is like fishing the Bulkley River for our prized steelhead. It's all catch and release. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake