Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I want to first address Mr. and Mrs. Best and say that I am so sorry for the loss of your daughter.
My name is Jennifer Dunn. I am the executive director of the London Abused Women's Centre here in London, Ontario.
The London Abused Women's Centre is a non-residential centre that provides women and girls over the age of 12 who have been subjected to abuse by an intimate partner, assault, harassment, exploitation, trafficking or non-state torture with immediate access to long-term, trauma-informed counselling, advocacy and support.
For more than 42 years in London, Ontario, our organization has supported women and girls who have been subjected to male violence. Every day we see how decisions made within Canada's justice system shape women's safety and their faith in the system itself.
Today, I speak on behalf of survivors, their families and frontline workers who stand beside them. Bail and sentencing decisions are not abstract legal matters. For some women, they are life-or-death moments.
My first point is that bail must be trauma- and violence-informed. When a violent offender is released, survivors are often forced to relocate, leave work or lose their job, or live in hiding. These are not just disruptions; they are losses of safety, identity and stability.
Bail decisions must reflect an understanding that violence is rarely a single act. It is usually a pattern that continues even after charges are laid. A trauma- and violence-informed approach means recognizing that history and centring the victim's safety in every decision.
This does not mean denying bail in every case. It means assessing risk with depth and compassion and asking, “What will this decision mean, not only for the survivor's safety but potentially her life tonight, tomorrow and the next month?” It could be over the next couple of years, depending on how long this particular court case takes to get to trial.
My second point is to highlight Caitlin Jennings' story. In London, we remember Caitlin Jennings, a young woman whose life was taken in an act of femicide. Her case is a painful reminder of what can happen when the system fails to protect, but also of what happens when it works.
The man charged with Caitlin's death had a bail hearing in November 2023 and was denied bail. Superior Court Justice Leach denied bail after reading a two-hour decision. Colleagues and I sat in that court room supporting Caitlin's family, and we were relieved to know that he would be held in custody until his trial.
While that did not erase the tragedy of her loss, it gave her family and other survivors a measure of reassurance that the justice system could prioritize safety when the risk was clear. Caitlin's father said, “This is Step 1 in my healing and justice for Caitlin.” The trial isn't until September 2027. I could honestly not imagine this man out of custody for the next two years, knowing what I know.
Caitlin's story reminds us that decisions around bail should not only be procedural, because behind every court file are a woman, a family and a community living with the consequences.
My third point is that systems must work together and be equally funded. Meaningful reform cannot happen in isolation. The justice system, police and community support must be aligned and funded equally.
At present, the imbalance is stark. The criminal justice system receives the bulk of investment, while frontline social services are left to fundraise for survival. However, it is those services, such as counselling, safety planning, housing and advocacy that help survivors stay alive long enough to see justice happen. Without stable funding for social support, bail reform will remain a theory on paper. Safety depends on collaboration, not competition, between systems.
My fourth point is accountability and the role of sureties. Accountability is essential when bail is granted. Too often, high-risk offenders are released into the care of sureties who do not understand or cannot enforce their responsibilities.
At the London Abused Women's Centre, we worked with a woman whose perpetrator was released on bail with his mother as the surety. She had no control over his actions. She knew he breached conditions, but she did not report it. There were no consequences, and the victim's fear returned immediately. She could not leave her home without a safety plan. She couldn't even access our services without a safety plan. Sureties must receive clear information, training and oversight. There must be consequences for knowingly ignoring breaches.
My fifth point is around balancing safety and fairness. The London Abused Women's Centre is not necessarily advocating for mass incarceration. Overly punitive systems harm those who are already the most vulnerable, particularly indigenous and racialized individuals. We would like to call for targeted accountability.
High-risk, repeat, violent offenders must face detention, but justice reform must also include investment in prevention, education, trauma support, addiction support and the list goes on, through a trauma- and violence-informed lens that stops violence before it starts.
Safety and fairness are not competing values. They must coexist for justice to have legitimacy.
In closing, every woman deserves to live free from violence. Every child deserves to sleep safely at night, and every system, from the courtroom to the counselling office, shares that responsibility.
Reforming bail and sentencing is an opportunity to build a justice system that is trauma-informed, violence-informed and survivor-centred. It is an opportunity to ensure that when we ask, “Will this decision keep victims and communities safe?”, the answer is yes.
Thank you.