Marc Charbonneau was found to be a dangerous offender by Aitken J. He appealed. He argued that had he been given an 8 year sentence and 10 years of supervision, he would have been 67 and the risk he posed at that age would have been so reduced as to be manageable. The Court of Appeal disagreed; it upheld the dangerous offender designation: 2012 ONCA 282.
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David Mihalyko had a 1998 Chevrolet Blazer. He also had an injured foot. He was presribed Oxycontin for his foot. On September 19, 2010 he needed some gas for his Blazer but he did not have any money; he did have his Oxys. He decided to sell some Oxys for gas money. He approached a woman, he thought was a prostitute, to see if she knew anyone who wanted Oxys. She was an undercover officer. Ultimately he sold $60 worth of Oxys to an undercover officer. He was charged and convicted. Forfeiture of the Blazer was sought under the Seizure of Criminal Property Act. The Queen's Bench refused to order forfeiture. That order was appealed. The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal allowed the appeal: 2012 SKCA 44.
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Bruce MacDonald's wife cheated on him. He was angry. His anger turned into physical violence. He was charged. He pleaded guilty and was convicted. He was sentenced to five and a half years in jail. He appealed. His appeal was dismissed: 2012 BCCA 155.
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Sentencing is a difficult if not enigmatic beast. Perhaps not surprisingly given the myriad of considerations together with the uniqueness of every offence and every offender. The recent cases of Ipeelee and Ladue illustrate this point: R v Ipeelee, 2012 SCC 13. Both were aboriginal offenders; both were sentenced for breach LTSOs; both received 3 year sentences at first instance; Ipeelee appealed to the Ontario Court of Appeal unsuccessfully; Ladue successfully appealed to the British Columbia Court of Appeal (reducing his sentence to 1 year). The Supreme Court held that one year sentences were appropriate for both.
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