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Justice committee Yes, thank you. I am the mother of a teenaged son, and when I was preparing for this I had some discussions with my son's friends and my daughter—who is pre-pubescent—and some of her friends, and in a very interesting way, the least informed were the most supportive. Let me put
March 29th, 2007Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee I would certainly support the last point made. I would invite Professor Gilbert to talk a bit about the implications again in terms of the constitutional issues of marriage, because, as many of you well know, especially in generations preceding ours, a gap of more than five yea
March 29th, 2007Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee I was referring not necessarily to needing more police. I think you're right, that it's targeted. Sometimes it's very difficult to investigate and uphold sexual assault charges, and in our experience, and certainly in my experience now—I'm at the law school with Ms. Gilbert right
March 29th, 2007Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you for inviting us to appear. I bring regrets from members of my board of directors who were unable to appear with me. I come representing 25 member societies that work with victimized and criminalized women and girls across the country. My comment
March 29th, 2007Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee No, we're on record taking a position against mandatory minimum sentences generally, because of some of the issues we've already raised. To pull back to some of the discussion around the table a little while ago and to some of the examples we talked about in our brief, at this
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee No, we did not when they were brought in.
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee Certainly. We support the use of community-based sanctions. We support the use of added supervision in the community. We support the use of more appropriate supervised and structured interventions.
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee It's not one that we've seen work very effectively for most people.
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee For most people, no. And certainly our position is very much for women, in thinking there should be an incarceration strategy.
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee Well, our position is that the least restrictive measures would mean those who are a risk should be removed from being made a risk—but in fact the ways we've used imprisonment have not been effective.
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee Thank you for asking the question. It's been a while since I worked in the community with the police, but I did volunteer with the police, and I at one time worked at the RCMP as well. One of the initiatives that I think you may have been alluding to is focusing on those indivi
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee If there was equality before the 0.08, then I think that argument might hold more water. When we look at mandatory minimum sentences for drunk driving, for instance, the research shows that it has predominantly been the public education activities that have been effective. It sho
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee If we were talking about only people who are involved in organized crime and senior members involved in organized crime, we might be having a different discussion. But what we know is that these laws won't only apply to those individuals. These laws will apply across the board. F
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee I'm actually very surprised to hear that was the representation put forth, because the Correctional Service of Canada--not the Department of Justice--has projected that by 2017 the number of aboriginal young people in this country will exceed most other groups of--
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate
Justice committee Okay. Pardon. Je m'excuse. There are two major factors. I apologize if it's not clear enough in the brief from us. There is the Gladue decision that provided extra mechanisms that the Supreme Court of Canada said should be looked at and followed for aboriginal prisoners. Mandato
November 20th, 2006Committee meeting
Kim Pate