Pubdate: Thu, 24 Nov 2011 Source: Chilliwack Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Chilliwack Times Contact: http://www.chilliwacktimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1357 Author: Tyler Olsen NOT A BLACK AND WHITE WORLD On television or in the movies, the climax usually comes when a judge or jury pronounces an accused criminal guilty or innocent. As a reporter, though, one quickly learns that most of the drama comes during the sentencing hearing, after that supposed climax. There's a couple reasons for this. First, of course, is the fact that in the vast majority of cases, the accused pleads guilty to a selection of charges. When cases do go to trial, there is usually little dispute of the core facts, e.g. whether A stabbed B. Instead, cases usually revolve around matters of intent, constitutional rights, and what can be proven and what is just inferred. Sentencing hearings are often more dramatic because that is when one hears the story behind the crime. One hears why something happened and why someone eventually became a criminal. You also hear what has happened since the crime took place. They are often gut-wrenching, with both victims and the victimizers addressing the court. I challenge anyone who has a strong opinion on the justice system, who advocates for stronger or lighter punishments for criminals, to observe a few hearings. The world is not black and white and it's impossible to sit in on a half-dozen sentencings and think otherwise. Take drugs and alcohol. I can count on one hand, the number of criminal cases I have covered that did not include intoxicants at its root. The consumption of alcohol, for instance, has been cited in pedophilia cases, in domestic abuse cases, and in murder cases. Marijuana? Its production and movement has frequently led to violence, although its consumption is rarely cited as a direct cause for crime. (But some hard drug users do cite pot as their first experience with narcotics). If it does lead some to try harder drugs, then it's a significant black mark against pot because the effect of crystal meth, cocaine and heroin so frequently destroys lives. The effect of the drugs is responsible for some violence, but the desire to obtain more drugs is behind the bulk of the crime in Chilliwack. In these sentencing hearings, as drug and alcohol use is cited over and over again, it's also impossible to ignore the childhood conditions that leads to such use. It's not excusing crime to come to the realization that criminals aren't born, they're made. First, typically, comes childhood trauma; then early childhood alcohol and pot use (often by or before the age of 13); then juvenile delinquency and hard drug use; and finally, they show up in adult court. Go to court often enough and it's impossible not to come to the conclusion that our tax money would be better spent rooting out those childhood problems-whether by providing support to the parents of at-risk children or giving kids ways to escape parent-caused trauma-than building new prisons to house society's failures. Alas, it's easier (and more popular) to spend millions on leaky band-aids than it is to treat the underlying conditions. Particularly when that condition is often a friend, a father, or a neighbour. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt