Sure. Well, we have a number of situations, particularly since the policy of mandatory charging and countercharging started to happen in violence-against-women situations, where usually it's the woman calling in to a 911 operator, for instance, reporting the situation, sometimes even reporting that she herself has hit him or thrown something at him to try to ward him off. When the police arrive and the statements are taken, she's already provided a statement by that. And when she's confronted with, “So you've already assaulted”, she often would say yes—and I can't give you exact numbers, but I can tell you that it's too often, it's a common occurrence. And then they plead guilty to them, even when sometimes the primary perpetrator doesn't plead guilty.
So we see this accumulation of what looked like more serious offences—I'm not saying assault isn't serious, any assault is, but it looked like more serious offences—and they start racking up charges. And they become very aware, the women I've spoken to, that from their perspective there's no point in fighting it because they're told they've already given the evidence. They believe that.
And you know, it's not that a lawyer is misstating the situation; they have provided that evidence before they even know.... In a 911 call they've already said sometimes they're doing it. Or at the first opportunity, when the police arrive and the fellow is saying “She threw the wine bottle at me”, or the plate or whatever, they say “Did you do that?” “Yes, I did”, and she takes responsibility.
So those are some of the common assault charges—not “common assault” but common assault charges—that we see with women too.
And then we see a number of other instances, even where they have defences, and they may be told they're going to be in custody for a period of time if they go for trial. I just dealt with a woman who just got out of prison the week before last. She had won her conviction—and obviously the sentence appeal too—for second-degree murder. Immediately, she was offered time served for a manslaughter plea. Everybody knew. The lawyer asked me to go in and speak to her, because she immediately said “I'll take the deal”, and the lawyer said “She has a strong self-defence case, we know that”. She knew that, but the option was no bail. Because she lived on a reserve, there's nothing to put up. If you're on a reserve you don't own your house. Even if you own your house, you don't, the band council owns it. So she had nothing to put up. I even offered my house up, and she refused that.
So she pled guilty to manslaughter in a context where everybody around that case saw she had a self-defence claim. And it wasn't that it was a bad lawyer. A very good lawyer tried to convince her, asked me to go in and try to convince her, and she still pled guilty to manslaughter.
Now she's out with her child. That was the motivation: she didn't want to risk being another two years awaiting trial. Even if she was acquitted she'd be another two years away from her child. So she took a conviction for manslaughter in a context where, yes, I do believe she shouldn't have any conviction for that case.