Weinie said:
FJAG,
I deleted the bulk of your response, but I appreciate it, as it clarified some extant jurisprudence that I was not privy to.
Your sentence above is the crux of the question. You posit not what he did as the consideration, but rather what is the consensus on scale of punishment allowed. I suggest the two are inextricably linked.
I am not apropos on how courts and punishment work, I have very little personal experience. But I will suggest this. If the approach in Canadian law and courts is that if you kill one person, 6 people, or 50 people, and that it is cruel and unusual punishment to consider these crimes separate on their own merit in terms of punishment, then we are in a bad place.
Hi Weinie.
Just to make it clear, that isn't so much my position but the approach that the Court of Appeal took.
While there is a technical issue about whether the trial judge could impose an additional 15 years parole ineligibility, the rest of the case discusses just how far the 745.51 can or should go under the provisions of the Charter.
At the heart of this was the Conservatives attempt to ensure that heinous crimes are punished commensurately and an overarching law that puts limits on that.
I read the trial judge's consideration on the principles of sentencing and IMHO he was bang on. I think that the Court of Appeal also thought 40 years parole ineligibility wasn't inappropriate but they were constrained with letting that go because the law required 25, 50, 75 year etc multiples. The Court of Appeal invited Parliament to review and revise the law (and in my view they were specifically saying do that so that the type of sentence the trial judge gave is in fact legally possible under the Charter). They wouldn't do that unless they see that there is some more room here to exceed the previous 25 year maximum.
Some may see this as a Parliament against the judiciary issue but it really isn't because Parliament passed both laws: the amended s 745.51 and sections 7 and 12 of the Charter. The judiciary's role is to interpret and balance the former in the light of the latter. If popular laws enacted by the Parliament are continuously struck down by an overenthusiastic judiciary then Parliament can always move to amend the Charter. Parliament really does have the last word, if it chooses to use it.
My personal opinion is that sometimes there is a lot to be said for capital punishment.
:cheers: