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Column: Rallying cry of ‘soft on crime’ misses the mark

Martha Wickett, The View From Here
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(File photo)

There is little satisfaction seeing a young man handcuffed, searched and led out of a courtroom to a stark hallway that will deliver him to months and years in a jail cell.

In this case, the crime was child pornography. One of the most heinous of offences. Looking at and distributing images of the unspeakable horrors inflicted upon innocent children, horrors from which, even if rescued, those children will likely never fully recover.

Heart-wrenchingly despicable.

And yet, like most cases, victims reside on both sides of the judge’s decision.

Courtrooms, like a societal stress test, reveal the flaws and weaknesses affecting the heart of society. Flaws and weaknesses that blur the lines of good and bad.

According to the evidence provided, this man had no prior criminal record and was the repeated victim of violence and sexual abuse growing up. He was targeted as a youth for being Black. Undoubtedly that targeting was not limited to his generation. He now joins the disproportionate number of people imprisoned in Canada and the United States who are Black or Indigenous.

Inside the courtroom the story of his self-loathing, mental illnesses and inability to find affordable help for his addiction was heard. How he made his trail more and more easy to track so he would get caught and maybe get help through the prison system.

How he was stalked and beat up when his guilty plea was publicized. How he is afraid of being murdered in jail.

Read more: Salmon Arm man wanted to be caught for child pornography offences

Read more: 18 people arrested across Alberta arrested for child porn and other online offences

Should he be spared prison? Not at this point, not with this system. He was classified as medium to high risk to reoffend without treatment.

What’s really needed is systemic change and the rallying of resources where they will make a difference.

Clearly, for child porn, more resources are needed immediately to track down the people who actually create the images as well as the international organizations which traffic in human beings.

But real social change would mean support for families and recognition of people raising children. The pandemic is a good example. Who is left struggling the most? Parents, particularly those living in poverty, the working poor.

Real justice would mean no one would enter the world with the cards already stacked against them because of their heritage or skin colour. Real justice would mean economic resources would not just be held by a few.

Instead of complaints about the justice system being ‘soft on crime,’ why not focus on the systemic inequalities that create perpetrators and victims?



marthawickett@saobserver.net
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Martha Wickett

About the Author: Martha Wickett

came to Salmon Arm in May of 2004 to work at the Observer. I was looking for a change from the hustle and bustle of the Lower Mainland, where I had spent more than a decade working in community newspapers.
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