Pubdate: Sat, 07 Jun 2014 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2014 Postmedia Network Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Ian Mulgrew Page: A15 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?199 (Mandatory Minimum Sentencing) THE WRONG CASE FOR A CHALLENGE Legal Appeal: Chronic Offender a Poor Choice to Test Minimum Sentence Provision B.C.'s highest bench has given part of the Conservative Government's tough-on-crime agenda a judicial nod of approval by refusing to hear a constitutional challenge to mandatory minimum drug sentences. Although Ottawa's anti-crime legislation has been badly bruised in the courts, the three-justice Court of Appeal panel cast a gimlet eye at those opposing a 12-month jail sentence for anyone with a recent drug prior found guilty of trafficking hard drugs. The court on Friday upped to 18 months the one-year sentence of the chronic offender whose case spurred the constitutional challenge. "The ultimate issue is the fitness of the sentence," Justice Harvey Groberman said reading the decision supported by his colleagues, Justices Pamela Kirkpatrick and Mary Newbury. "I am of the view the minimum sentence provision has no impact on (this case) .... (but) the sentence is unfit and I would substitute an effective sentence of 18 months." Unlike the mandatory minimum sentencing regimes for gun crimes and sex crimes, the justices said the "inflationary effect on sentences" those schemes created that offended the courts wasn't present in the changes to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. They were unwilling to listen to arguments based on a hypothetical offender in hypothetical circumstances for whom the mandatory minimum sentence would be grossly disproportionate. Before Paul Riley of the Public Prosecution Service could even begin speaking at the start of the appeal on Thursday, Kirkpatrick pulled the battery of lawyers present up short. "Mr. Riley, before we start, I don't like to throw a wrench into counsels' submissions - or maybe I do," she said. "But we are concerned," Kirkpatrick continued, "about the prospect of deciding this constitutional challenge in a case in which the result is very unlikely to make any difference whatsoever to the actual sentence that will be imposed ... the constitutionality of the statutory minimum sentence is irrelevant ..." The lawyers were taken aback. Aside from representatives for the Crown and defendant, a handful of lawyers for the Pivot Legal Society and B.C. Civil Liberties Association were hoping to persuade the court the law unfairly and disproportionately affected aboriginal people, sex trade workers and addicts. Matthew Nathanson, lawyer for the BCCLA, said society's most vulnerable were at risk under the mandatory minimum system. The judges sat stony faced. "We are concerned about judicial economy and restraint and wonder if deciding the constitutional challenge, with all that entails, on the basis of one or more hypotheticals that are essentially irrelevant to the facts here is something we should do," Justice Kirkpatrick said. The panel sent the lawyers off for a 20-minute huddle to consider two questions - was the trial judge correct in assuming the new law would lengthen the appropriate sentence, and was the sentence of 12 months fitting. When they came back, Groberman peppered them with questions and the unanimous ruling made clear the panel found the answers were wanting. This was obviously not the right case. The appeal involved a 25-year-old Vancouver addict and chronic offender who was caught with small amounts of heroin, rock cocaine and methamphetamines. Forget one recent prior, Joseph Ryan Lloyd had 21 convictions under his belt when arrested in March 2013 peddling his bike along a downtown sidewalk. He had been released three weeks earlier and, along with the drugs packaged for sale, he was carrying a knife, in violation of his probation order. While he was awaiting trial on this charge, he was charged with a handful of other offences. Provincial Court Judge Joseph Galati convicted him in February of trafficking and sentenced Lloyd to a year in jail - but not because he was imposing the mandatory minimum. In sentencing, Galati declared the law "unconstitutional." Justice Groberman said the lower court judge didn't have the jurisdiction to do that - all he could do was declare the law had no force or effect under these particular circumstances. He set aside the declaration and the BCCLA's point that the court should consider the constitutional question of behalf of those who don't have the wherewithal to bring such a challenge. Justice Groberman said in the context of a criminal prosecution that was not a good idea and the bottom line was the law didn't affect Lloyd: "I agree with the trial judge's assessment ... (regardless of the mandatory minimum) he would not have received a sentence of less than a year, anything less would have been manifestly unfit." Before the new law, Justice Groberman noted, the range of sentences was 12-18 months for low-level dealers with relevant past convictions who sold drugs to support their own addictions. "This is not a situation in which the concept of inflationary floor is applicable," he said. "There were a number of aspects of this case that demanded a sentence beyond the low-end of the range." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom