That's fine. Thank you very much.
One of the things that Bill C-70 did in the last Parliament, when we tried to address this matter before Parliament fell, was not only to have the serious personal injury offences included, but also those areas such as terrorism offences and criminal organization offences, and then there was a special designation for those offences for which, on the basis of the nature and circumstance of the particular offence, the expression of denunciation was the uppermost consideration.
Now we know that section 718, the proportionality test that's in the code and our sentencing principle since the 1995-96 time period, sections 718 to 718.2 are still going to be here. One of the concerns this bill brings in a very real manner, Minister, is you talked about the police and the crown having discretion on how they're going to charge, and that brings up another issue of whether they'll be overcharging or undercharging to get around some of the lack of discretion that's going to be in the courtroom.
One of the people the discretion is really taken from is the sitting judge, the judge who hears the facts, the judge who knows the law and the range. My issue here is we have principles of sentencing set out in the Criminal Code that have not been altered, and you have a judge who is dictated to by our Parliament to impose a proportionate sentence when they feel--and it's a two-step process--that a conditional sentence is appropriate. Yet, in essence, if we went forward with this bill as is, there are going to be many situations where that sitting judge does not have the discretion any more.
The way that was dealt with in the prior piece of legislation was having a small out: there was a presumption against having the conditional sentence, but if a judge felt very strongly in that particular fact situation or those particular extenuating circumstances, whatever they would be--and these are circumstances that we have embedded in the Criminal Code itself, which they're supposed to listen to and are supposed to follow the case law that's been enunciated over time on these principles--it's going to be taken away.
Now, I think of things like.... And you downplayed that this is an appropriate vehicle, Minister, and said it's not that important. Treatment orders, for instance, Ms. Kane will tell you are an important part of conditional sentences for many situations in Canada right now, and it's very difficult in other sections to bring into effect.
Where do you, in your own mind, reconcile a sitting judge's discretion and the principle of proportionality and looking at the responsibility of the offender in the code?
That has nothing to do with whether it's victims or police or all of the partners in the justice system--and it is the taxpayer, too. So it is down specifically to the laws we have, because you have not altered those sections. Those sections are fundamental, and there is a way here that we are just.... I'm suggesting to you that maybe it is having the judge do those written reasons in exceptional circumstances, like a presumption against conditional sentences but in exceptional circumstances he or she would have the ability to sit there. We've all seen cases where it doesn't fit the norm.
I'd like your thoughts on that, Minister.