Refine by MP, party, committee, province, or result type.

Results 1-5 of 5

Justice committee  The tougher sentences will help with that. To put them in and take them out is not helping society. It's not helping the kids. They come out, and, as Mr. Wamback said, a lot of them think it's pretty cool. I was in court to see my brother's murderer. His friends, who were littl

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

Elizabeth Pousoulidis

Justice committee  It's because I have a right to that information; because I pay for that information as a taxpayer; because I want to know where he is, if he's out; because I don't want to be surprised one day when I go to a restaurant and he's sitting next to me. Psychologically it's going to

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

Elizabeth Pousoulidis

Justice committee  We support anything that touches the victims. We like the no more home sentence, no more serving your sentence at home. We like the parole information. That one we really, really support. We fought hard to have that. There is nothing more frustrating than going to get informati

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

Elizabeth Pousoulidis

Justice committee  Thank you very much for asking that question. Obviously my members will support it. My members have the experience. My members understand that worrying too much about criminals' rights, not to offend them and to make sure they're all good and fine.... At the end, they killed the

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

Elizabeth Pousoulidis

Justice committee  Excellent. Thank you very much, and thank you for inviting me. My name is Elizabeth Pousoulidis, and I am the president of AFPAD, which stands for the Association of Families of Persons Assassinated or Disappeared, and that means murdered or criminally disappeared. It is very

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

Elizabeth Pousoulidis