Thank you, Chair.
My name is Tony Paisana. I am the chair of the CBA's criminal justice section. I am joined by my colleague Jody Berkes, the immediate past chair.
The CBA represents approximately 36,000 lawyers, students and jurists across Canada. The criminal justice section, in particular, comprises a mix of both Crown counsel and defence counsel, and it's from this unique, balanced perspective that we appear today and offer our commentary on Bill C-5.
I will be addressing you on the provisions in this bill relating to CSOs, or conditional sentence orders, and Mr. Berkes will deal with mandatory minimum sentences.
Put simply, the CBA supports Bill C-5. As stated in our brief, this legislation will lead to a fairer and more just sentencing regime, one that recognizes that criminal offences can be committed in various ways and that one size does not fit all, particularly when it comes to offenders from traditionally marginalized communities.
The lifting of prohibitions on CSOs is among one of the most important reforms in the criminal law over the last decade, in our view.
We make several points about CSOs, but I'll highlight three here.
First, CSOs are vital to the proper functioning of the criminal justice system and to ensuring that non-dangerous offenders are encouraged to rehabilitate rather than harden themselves within our prison system. I emphasize and reiterate that CSOs, by statute, can only be granted to non-dangerous offenders who commit an offence deserving of less than two years in custody.
Second, making CSOs available does not mean that you will receive them. Indeed, I successfully argued a constitutional challenge to some of these very provisions in a drug trafficking case called “Chen”, but the trial judge nonetheless sentenced my client to nearly four years in custody. The sky did not fall, but as a result of that decision, numerous other marginalized accused in British Columbia have access to CSOs where appropriate.
What we are talking about is affording sentencing judges more discretion, not less. Suggestions that serial rapists, human traffickers or other serious offenders will now be liberally afforded CSOs are fanciful, in my respectful view. These people will continue to go to jail, as they always have.
Third, the need for reform is urgent. As a result of a patchwork of constitutional challenges across the country, Canadians have inconsistent access to CSOs. If a drug-addicted mother of three commits a low-level trafficking offence to feed her addiction in the Downtown Eastside of Vancouver, she is eligible for a CSO in B.C. If that same offender commits that same offence in Winnipeg or Edmonton, she is not. This lack of uniformity is troubling and inconsistent with our federal system.
Each day that goes by, more non-dangerous offenders are sentenced to jail when they might otherwise be provided an opportunity to rehabilitate in the community, where access to programming, work, treatment and counselling are more accessible and cost-effective to the state.
Those are my comments on CSOs. I'll now turn it over to Mr. Berkes to touch upon mandatory minimum sentences.