CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

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CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

Post by tightrope »

:down:
'Ridiculous:' family angry over sentence for woman who drowned sons in bathtub
By Chris Purdy, The Canadian Press | The Canadian Press – 5 hours ago.


WETASKIWIN, Alta. - Jim McConnell thinks the lives of his two young grandsons are worth more than the sentence their mother has received for drowning the boys in a bathtub.

His former daughter-in-law, Allyson McConnell, was sentenced Monday to six years in prison. But she faces 15 months in custody because Justice Michelle Crighton gave McConnell double credit for the time she has already spent in a mental hospital. She'll be eligible for early release in 10 months.


McConnell, who is originally from Australia, drowned the boys in the family home in Millet, just south of Edmonton, two years ago when she was severely depressed, suicidal and possibly affected by alcohol and prescription drugs.

Jim McConnell stood outside the courtroom and angrily questioned the judge's decision.

"This is ridiculous. What's going to stop people from going to kill kids now?" he said. His wife and son, McConnell's former husband, sat in the hallway wiping away tears.

Crown prosecutor Gordon Hatch said he understands the family is stunned and upset, and said he is also disappointed. He had recommended a 12-year term.

"There's this desire always to try to explain a sentence as a basis for how much the children's lives are worth, and that's certainly not how we want to approach it," Hatch said afterwards.

"If the judge had imposed 15 years or 20 years or life in prison — that's not enough for these two children."

During the trial, court heard that Allyson and Curtis McConnell were in the middle of a bitter divorce. She wanted to take their children back to her home country.

On Feb. 1, 2010, she drove an hour north of Millet to Edmonton, parked her car at a toy store and jumped off an overpass onto a busy freeway.

When police called her husband to say she was in the hospital with broken bones, he wondered where the children were and quickly drove home from work. He was horrified to find 10-month-old Jayden and two-year-old Connor floating in the tub among their plastic toys.

Their mother testified that she remembers nothing about the days before she jumped off the overpass. She also didn't know her children were dead until her mother told her while she was in the hospital. The news drove her into hysterics.

She was originally charged with second-degree murder. The Crown argued at the trial that she planned to kill her children as revenge against her husband.

But the judge ruled there was a "black hole" in the evidence and no one could know whether the depressed and suicidal woman meant to kill her boys. Court heard McConnell has a history of depression and suicide attempts that began when her father got her pregnant when she was 15.

Since her arrest, she has been under constant suicide watch while a patient at Alberta Hospital in Edmonton. She testified during the trial that she will try to kill herself again because she does not want to get well.

Her comments "bring into sharp focus the terrible price she will continue to pay for her unspeakable actions," Crighton said in her sentencing decision.

But "no matter how severely compromised Ms. McConnell was at the time, it cannot be forgotten that she took the lives of two vulnerable children who were entitled to look to her for protection."

The judge said it would be inappropriate to allow their mother to serve no additional time in custody. Defence lawyer Peter Royal had suggested she be allowed to return to her homeland a free woman.

Royal said the Canadian government has started deportation proceedings and his client could serve her sentence in Australia to be near her family.

Hatch said the deportation is probably on hold because the Crown is appealing the manslaughter conviction and is likely to appeal the sentence as well.

Crighton said she would recommend corrections officials allow McConnell to serve her sentence at the mental hospital until doctors determine she is well enough to be transferred somewhere else.

"I am concerned that if Ms. McConnell does not remain at Alberta Hospital until her physicians consider it appropriate to be transferred, the sentence I have imposed will do no more for her than prolong her inevitable demise," said the judge.

Hatch added that the woman is still the subject of a mental health warrant, so it is unlikely that she will be released when she completes her sentence. She will have to remain under psychiatric care until she is no longer considered a danger to herself or others.

McConnell showed no emotion during the sentencing, sitting quietly as she had throughout the trial. When asked by the judge if she had anything to say, she shook her head and answered simply: "no."

Crighton acknowledged the intense emotion of the case and the victim impact statements given to the court by Curtis McConnell and his parents.

The judge said no one who heard them will soon forget the anguish of Audrey McConnell, the boys' paternal grandmother, who as she talked about how she had one day cleaned her patio doors and realized too late that she was wiping away one of the children's sticky fingerprints. She cried for days knowing there would be no new ones.

"It is said that the art of living lies in a fine mingling of letting go and holding on," said the judge. "So it will be for the McConnell and Meager families."

Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version said she had been given 15 months credit for time served.
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/woman-drowned- ... 47393.html
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Re: CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

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Disgusting :down:
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Re: CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

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IF SHE WAS SUICIDAL, SHE WOULD HAVE DROWNED IN THAT CAR ALONG WITH HER KIDS. INSTEAD SHE JUMPED OUT. THIS BITCH BELIEVED THAT IF SHE CAN'T HAVE HER KIDS FOR HERSELF, HER HUSBAND CAN'T HAVE THEM EITHER. :down:
IF THE JUDGE BELIEVED SHE WAS MENTALLY DISTURBED, HER ASS SHOULD HAVE BEEN SENT TO A MENTAL INSTITUTE FOR THE REST OF HER PATHETIC LIFE. :down:
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Re: CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

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:down: Canada punishes the victims and rewards the criminal

Too many social and extreme liberal judges on the bench :twisted:
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Re: CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

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SMFH :down:
Calgary mother gets 13 years after confessing to killing infant in her diary
By The Canadian Press | The Canadian Press – 2 hours 20 minutes ago.


CALGARY - A Calgary mother who confessed to killing her infant son in diary entries to her dead husband has been sentenced to 13 years in prison.

Justice Terry Semenuk sentenced Stacey Joy Bourdeaux to four years for manslaughter, eight years for the attempted murder of a second child and one year for failing to provide the necessities of life.

Bourdeaux stood quietly during the sentencing and showed little emotion.

She was given credit of three years and five months for time already served, meaning she has another nine years and seven months left on her sentence.

Bourdeaux, who is 34-year-old, earlier pleaded guilty to manslaughter in the death of 10-month-old Sean Ronald Fewer in 2004 and to the attempted murder of her five-year-old boy in 2010.

She also admitted to failing to provide the necessities of life.
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/calgary-mother ... 25021.html
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Re: CANADIAN JUSTICE SYSTEM IS FOCKED UP

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Mom gets 13 years for killing 1 son, choking another
CBC News
Posted: Jun 22, 2012 11:21 AM MT
Last Updated: Jun 22, 2012 11:20 AM MT


Image
Stacey Joy Bourdeaux confessed to the 2004 crime in a journal entry addressed to her late common-law husband. (CBC)

A Calgary woman has been sentenced to 13 years in prison for killing one of her children and trying to kill the other.

Stacey Joy Bourdeaux killed her infant son in 2004 and tried to smother her five-year-old son in 2010.

Bourdeaux will be imprisoned for nine years, seven months, allowing for time already served.

That son is now unable to speak, walk or eat without a tube and is not expected to live more than another year.

Last August, Bourdeaux pleaded guilty to manslaughter, attempted murder and failing to provide the necessities of life for not taking the five-year-old to hospital for three days after trying to kill him.

The Crown had been seeking a total sentence of 18 years.

When Bourdeaux's infant was found in his crib not breathing in December 2004, it was believed he had died of natural causes.

But the case was reassessed after Bourdeaux brought her five-year-old to the Alberta Children's Hospital in May 2010. He was shaking, incontinent and unable to stand, symptoms police said were consistent with some form of trauma.

Based on that incident, police began investigating the death of Bourdeaux's baby. She was charged with second-degree murder, but the charge was later reduced to manslaughter. She was also charged with choking with intent and failing to provide the necessities of life.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/s ... enced.html
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