
Judge who gave reduced sentence to Black man due to his race criticized by Quebec's anti-racism minister
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In an interview with The Canadian Press, Christopher Skeete said that someone's race should not be a factor affecting sentencing for a crime.
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'I question whether or not as a society this is exactly where we want to go,' the minister said. 'Do we really want to formalize discrimination in the attribution of sentences for people who perpetrate crimes?'
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Skeete was reacting to a Quebec court ruling by Judge Magali Lepage, who sentenced Frank Paris, 52, to a two-year sentence in late July, after he pleaded guilty to charges of trafficking cannabis and hashish.
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Paris's lawyer, Andrew Galliano, said the Crown had initially pushed for a four-year sentence in a case heard in Longueuil, near Montreal.
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Because he got credit for time served, Paris has already been released, his lawyer said.
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'It was surreal to have him walk into my office the next day and to be able to shake his hand and congratulate him, because it took courage from him too,' said Galliano.
The lawyer said he argued for a reduced sentence after submitting a report that described his client's background as an intergenerational survivor of slavery.
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Though he was raised in Montreal, Paris's mother was from Nova Scotia, and he often spent his summers in a town in the central part of the Atlantic province, where 'these traumas continue to be felt and experienced in the education, housing, employment, health and justice systems,' the report noted.
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The report described how Paris faced racial discrimination multiple times, including an incident when he was wrongfully detained in a holding cell for immigrants despite being a Canadian citizen.
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Galliano said this type of report is commonly used in criminal proceedings in provinces like Nova Scotia where the courts have recognized the impacts of systemic racism.
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'Quebec is far behind,' the lawyer said. 'And that's what I pleaded to the judge.'
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Skeete, who initially described the sentence on social media as a 'sad first for Quebec,' said he wanted to initiate a public debate about the matter.
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The minister added he respects the independence of courts in Quebec.
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'What we're trying to do is to correct the historical wrong, but the problem is we're creating new injustices, and we're creating two types of citizens: one that is racialized and one that isn't,' Skeete told The Canadian Press.

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Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Kelley Henry, the federal public defender for Byron Black, said her team received an initial evaluation of the data from his implantable cardioverter defibrillator. The ICD information eliminates one possible cause for Black's comment about pain during his execution Tuesday, and other actions such as when he picked his head up off the gurney and groaned, she said. But many questions remain unanswered, she said. 'Make no mistake, we all saw with our own eyes that the pentobarbital did not work like the State's expert testified that it would,' Henry said in her statement, referencing Tennessee's lethal injection drug, pentobarbital. 'Mr. Black suffered.' 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