Young man who seriously assaulted bus driver given 18-month conditional sentence
Our justice system is an absolute joke!
Our justice system is an absolute joke!
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome is a serious condition akin to mental illness. It leaves many unable to determine consequences or right vs wrong.
Frankly I don't give a fuck if he is native or has FAS.You're quite right that FAS is a very serious condition.
However, I think we need to ask whether or not conditional release is the appropriate remedy in cases where there's been violence. Jail may not be indicated, but some kind of in-patient situation, with intensive treatment, seems called for in my opinion.
It is also a widely used excuse for anti-social behaviour.Fetal Alcohol Syndrome is a serious condition akin to mental illness. It leaves many unable to determine consequences or right vs wrong.
Reading your posts however, it does seem that you have issues of your own. That doesn't mean that you need to express them in violence as your father did, but you still have your fathers underlieing nature, it is part of you. The difference between you and your father is that you control it whereas he did not.i kind of think excuses are crap
my father was a raging alcholic, who basically terrozied the family.
and i have never done anything wrong in my entire life, excpet well maybe pay escorts.
It is highly likely that this guy will hurt someone else again. The lesson he learned is that the consequences for extreme antisocial behaviour are, in his case, minimal. That will probably not turn out to be the case next time he does it, but someone is going to have to be hurt first. IMO it is matter of time before his conditions are violated, and he will probably get more free passes until someone is seriously injured.We probably should have a lawyer here to explain all this, but I guess the judge felt constrained by a recent Supreme Court ruling. In other instances where both FAS and Aboriginal origins have been a factor, such as Darnell Pratt's killing of Grant De Patie, judges have reduced sentences because of those factors.
My personal view is that when the crime is large enough, certainly one resulting in death, and probably any offence resulting in significant injuries such as the bus driver in this case experienced, these other factors ought to be of little influence in sentencing. I would think they should be considered in other matters, such as B&Es or passing bad cheques or what have you. But when there is subsantial violence and injury I don't feel it's very relevant to take ancestry or other conditions like FAS into the mix. What may be needed for FAS cases is some kind of non-jail institutionalization, but we got rid of all that when we close down Riverview. The thinking was that the people who used to be held there would be taken care of in small group homes, but that doesn't seem to be working.
The Crown Counsel was undoubtedly as aware as the judge and defence of the Supreme Court ruling and still thought it was in play to ask for a year in jail. For whatever reason the judge didn't buy that. The offender is under restrictions, had to report back in a few months and will be on probation for a further two years, etc.
Still, I think some kind of custodial sentence is needed for violent people who are a danger, and this kind of result shows the need for more institutional types than just jail or house arrest.
It is highly likely that this guy will hurt someone else again. The lesson he learned is that the consequences for extreme antisocial behaviour are, in his case, minimal. That will probably not turn out to be the case next time he does it, but someone is going to have to be hurt first. IMO it is matter of time before his conditions are violated, and he will probably get more free passes until someone is seriously injured.






