Pubdate: Mon, 27 Dec 1999 Pub. Date: December 27, 1999 Source: The StarPhoenix (Saskatoon) Copyright: The StarPhoenix Website: http://www.TheStarPhoenix.com Author: Dan Zakreski JUDGE REQUESTS FAS SOLUTION Young Offender Diagnosed With Fetal Alcohol Syndrome At Centre Of Debate A 12-year-old Saskatoon girl who broke into a house full of sleeping people and set a series of fires is now at the centre of a debate over how the courts deal with youth diagnosed with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). On Thursday, provincial court Judge Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond postponed sentencing of the youth until January because it's not clear what - if any - kind of treatment is available for young offenders with FAS in Saskatchewan. In delaying sentencing, Turpel-Lafond questioned Crown and defence counsel about what type of FAS programming is available in custody "for a 12-year-old girl with her first set of offences. "What is an appropriate strategy for this young person?" Turpel-Lafond instructed the court to arrange for Social Services to supply an expert to speak to the availability of programming. The girl was diagnosed with FAS when she was three years old. The condition is caused by exposure to alcohol during pregnancy and studies suggest that as many as half the youth in custody suffer from it. The effects range from profound mental impairment to deficits in judgment and reasoning. The Crown is recommending the girl serve one year in closed custody, followed by six months in open custody and a year of probation. Crown prosecutor Val Adamko said public safety is a serious concern because of the girl's admitted role as instigator in a series of fires this past fall in the city. Defence lawyer Grant Crookshanks said youth cannot get appropriate treatment for FAS in custody anywhere in the province. He said that constructing a network of supports in the community is the most effective way to change her behaviour. The negative social influences she could encounter in jail "are not as concentrated" in the community, he added. Adamko said the girl can get programming in closed custody. The issue is whether she can apply what she's learned to situations on the outside, "and that's where we differ." The youth pleaded guilty to arson, along with another 12-year-old girl and a 16-year-old girl, in connection with a wave of garbage bin and house fires on the city's west side this fall. They faced a combined total of 51 charges. The teenager has already been sentenced to one year in secure custody and six months open. The other 12-year-old has been sentenced to three months secure custody and six months open. In the most serious incident, the three broke into a house full of sleeping people and set fires. They then called 911 and assisted firefighters in evacuating eight people from the multi-unit dwelling, including a man in a wheelchair. As firefighters worked on the blaze, which caused more than $100,000 in damage, the three girls told emergency staff how they awakened and then helped evacuate residents from the suites. Investigators became suspicious because their names were familiar from an ongoing arson investigation. - --- MAP posted-by: allan wilkinson