I certainly can actually speak to three of those specific examples. It's not to say, of course, that everyone who commits offences should receive a conditional sentence; we're not suggesting that conditional sentences are appropriate for everyone. What this bill does is remove that option for everyone, and there are a number of cases--there is a case at the Ontario Court of Appeal. I can get you the...it's M. and C. or M. and A. It in fact was an incest case. It went to the Court of Appeal for Ontario, and the Court of Appeal for Ontario is very strict: incest is something you go to jail for.
In this particular case, this offender had himself been molested, been sexually abused. Bob talked about residential schools. It's interesting that at the same time the government recognizes the impact of residential schools and is providing funds to people, many people are now inflicting on others the damage that they experienced in residential schools and are not getting the opportunity to heal from that. This particular individual had been sexually abused, and the court was taken by the steps that he had taken to address his issues; they felt that in this case jail was not appropriate.
We in fact were involved just recently in a manslaughter case in a town in southern Ontario. A woman whose parents had been to residential school had been drinking and got into a fight, an argument with her sister, her best friend. In the midst of that she took a knife and stabbed her, and as often tragically happens, her sister died. She killed her.
She did six months pretrial custody. When she came up for trial, she was more remorseful than you could be. There was nothing more you could do to her than had already been done, because she had killed her sister; she knew what that was like. The judge was convinced and the crown didn't appeal. There was a conditional sentence, which in her case involved house arrest and two spells of alcohol treatment, the first a short-term residential program and the second a long-term residential program. Is that the norm in all cases? No--but this was a manslaughter in which clearly the most appropriate sentence was a conditional sentence.
As for arson, I am aware of a case up in northern Ontario that occurred before conditional sentences came along. A family left their home and there was a fire and they lost their children. Again, they were so.... Remorseful can't even touch it. The pain they felt was so huge that the crown in that case said that rather than prosecuting, it was preferable to deal with it through the community justice program in the community because it would be able to help them both address why they did what they did and what led to it, and also help them heal so they wouldn't do those things again.
Those are just three examples in which conditional sentences or options like that have been used and have been effective.