Pubdate: Wed, 11 Feb 2009 Source: Omineca Express (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/B2aimboe Website: http://www.ominecaexpress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2141 Author: Tom Fletcher ATTORNEY GENERAL TALKS ABOUT FIGHTING GANGS VICTORIA - Three out of four B.C. residents believe the province's high crime rate is because judges are too soft on criminals, but a new study says sentencing statistics don't support that. The study by University of Toronto and University of Ottawa criminologists is billed as the first comparative examination of sentencing in Canadian provinces. It notes that both crime rates and public perception of weak sentencing are higher in Western Canada, and in B.C. in particular. The study was completed in November, but B.C. Attorney General Wally Oppal released it Monday in the wake of the latest rash of gang-related shootings in Metro Vancouver. Oppal dismissed the idea that harsher sentences would deter violent gang members. The heaviest jail sentencing of any western democracy is a proven failure in the United States, producing the democratic world's highest urban crime rates, he said. And the theory implies that drug dealers would flip through Martin's Criminal Code to assess their risk before shooting up the streets, when criminals typically assume they won't be caught, the former judge added. "These guys are not rocket scientists, but at the same time, they are dangerous," Oppal said. Asked why gang associates with multiple charges pending can still get out on bail, Public Safety Minister John van Dongen said the government is trying to overcome opposition to building a new remand facility in Burnaby that would ease overcrowding in a system that has seen an increase of 600 inmates in custody. A proposed jail for sentenced inmates north of Kelowna is also on hold after the local aboriginal community objected. Premier Gordon Campbell said the integrated police task force on organized crime is focused on homicides and gang-related activities in the Lower Mainland. "To suggest that we'll have a new label called regional policing, actually doesn't recognize what's already been done," Campbell said. "Unfortunately, we've got to do more." The sentencing study's authors, U of T's Anthony Doob and U of O's Cheryl Webster, concluded that sentencing statistics don't show a consistent pattern from province to province, crime to crime and judge to judge. The average and median sentence length for all offences in 2003 is about the same for B.C. and Canada as a whole, the professors found. "However, approximately 40 per cent of cases in British Columbia resulted in a prison sentence, as compared to about 35 per cent of cases in all of Canada," the report says. A similar split showed up when examining sentences for the crime of uttering threats. More people convicted in B.C. were sentenced to jail time than the national average, but the average length of sentence was shorter, 61 days compared to 83 days nationally. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart