Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thank you to the witnesses for coming.
I want to talk about the conditional sentencing. Ms. Kaiser-Derrick, I'll be asking you particularly about it.
I think there are a lot of Canadians who would be surprised that issues like sexual assault, kidnapping, trafficking in persons, abduction of a person under 14, assault causing bodily harm with a weapon, assaulting a police officer.... Causing bodily harm with a weapon—now, that was a real shock. To have some of the individuals given a CSO and go back right into the community or neighbourhood they came from...I'm not so sure that's a healthy environment.
I know you've done a lot of research on CSOs, but I'm really interested in your research on overrepresentation. It hasn't come up yet, but and I'm sure you're well aware of restorative justice.
We had a previous individual from Montreal, who brought up the fact that we need to have crime prevention, not necessarily reduction of crime by putting people in jail. Crime prevention and restorative justice go hand in hand, and I've worked a fair amount with restorative justice in the past.
It was interesting, too, that it was a 15-year project that Montreal did, on youth as young as five, to talk to them all the way through as they're growing up and to show them there's another way forward versus organized crime and gang activity.
I'm wondering if you can elaborate a bit on your success with restorative justice, especially with the overrepresentation of indigenous females, and how we could move forward without having to even talk about mandatory minimums or CSOs.