Chapter 9 Sentencing and Parole in Canada
Learning Objectives
- Describe the structure of the Canadian court system.
- List the primary purposes and principles of sentencing.
- Describe various sentencing options available in Canada.
- Define sentencing disparity and explain how it can be studied.
- List the principles for effective correctional interventions.
- Describe how parole decisions are made.
Sentencing Case Study: Philip Jefferson
- Found guilty of robbery with a firearm and sentenced to 7 years by Judge Cane.
- Judges consider remorse and community messaging in sentencing.
- Goals of the sentence included deterrence and rehabilitation through treatment programs.
Structure of the Canadian Court System
- Courts separated by jurisdiction (provincial, federal, military) and level (four-tier hierarchy).
- Provincial courts handle most criminal/civil matters, while federal courts address specific federal laws.
- The Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) is the top appellate court, providing guidance on law-related issues.
Indigenous Courts
- Focus on addressing Indigenous overrepresentation in the criminal justice system (approximately 18% of federal inmates).
- Bill C-41 emphasizes considering alternatives to imprisonment, especially for Indigenous offenders.
- Judges are instructed to consider Indigenous circumstances in sentencing (Gladue principles).
- Current challenges include underutilization and possible ineffectiveness of Indigenous courts in reducing overrepresentation.
Purposes and Principles of Sentencing
- General Goals:
- Change behavior (specific/general deterrence), denounce unlawful conduct, isolate offenders, rehabilitate, provide victim reparations, and promote accountability.
- Key Principles:
- Proportionality to the offense, consider aggravating/mitigating circumstances, maintain consistency for similar cases, and consider alternatives to imprisonment.
Sentencing Options in Canada
- Discharges (absolute/conditional), restitution, fines, community service, conditional sentences, imprisonment, etc.
- Probation is the most common form of sentencing. Serious prison sentences are less frequent.
Sentencing Disparity
- Definition: Variations in sentencing severity by different judges for similar cases, leading to potential injustices.
- Unwarranted Disparity: Due to reliance on extralegal factors (e.g., personality, discretion) instead of legal ones.
- Sources: systematic disparity (consistent disagreements among judges) and unsystematic disparity (individual inconsistencies).
Factors Affecting Sentencing
- Influenced by aggravating/mitigating factors, offender's background, judge's discretion, etc.
Effectiveness of Sentencing
- Unresolved debate on whether current practices achieve deterrence and rehabilitation goals.
- Research indicates punishment strategies often do not effectively reduce reoffending.
Principles of Effective Correctional Interventions (Risk-Need-Responsivity Model)
- Risk Principle: Focus on high-risk offenders.
- Need Principle: Address criminogenic needs (substance abuse, antisocial peers).
- Responsivity Principle: Tailor interventions to individual learning styles and characteristics.
Parole in Canada
- Conditional release with supervision; history dating back to the Ticket of Leave Act (1899).
- Types of parole: temporary absence, day parole, full parole, and statutory release (mandatory after 2/3 of the sentence).
- Consideration factors for parole decisions include criminal history, relationships, institutional behavior, and treatment progress.
- Misconceptions about parole include automatic granting based on eligibility, and that remorse influences decisions significantly.
- Statistics: High success rates among parolees; most parole failures due to condition breaches rather than new offenses.