Thank you for your question.
You're absolutely right. To my mind, the error was made at the outset by the Supreme Court, which should have established guidelines for framing the most serious crimes, particularly sexual assault and murder. In Quebec, three individuals were sent home, without being tried, after killing two women and a man.
It's absolutely intolerable in Canadian society to send murderers home without being punished. What's insidious in all this is that those individuals don't show up in the crime statistics. To be included in the statistics, an individual must have been charged and found guilty. However, in Canada, approximately 60,000 criminal cases have been dismissed as a result of the Jordan decision. That's a huge number. Parliament must review this matter because there's nothing worse for the victims of criminal acts than to see criminals returned to their homes without suffering any consequences.
As I said earlier, the number of femicides increased 60% from 2019 to 2022. Sixty per cent of those murders were committed in a domestic violence setting, and nearly 75% of the perpetrators had criminal records. Any failure on our part to take a harder line and solve the problem that has been caused by the Jordan decision, as a result of which perpetrators are sent home, will clearly be a way to trivialize violence against women.