How've You Been, Canada?
A Toronto police officer walks alongside a TTC streetcar after a woman, 23, was stabbed several times on the vehicle late last month. Another woman, 43, was arrested and charged with attempted murder, among other offences, in connection with the attack. (Evan Mitsui/CBC) |
"That Canadians have a right to feel safe in their own cities should go without saying.""Yet it needs to be said, because too many judges, politicians and left-wing voters have leaned so far into the soft-on-crime, defund-the-police rhetoric,they fail to see that the lack of deterrence in our justice system is contributing to a culture of lawlessness on our streets.""Declining public safety and heightened dissatisfaction in a justice system that is seen as being too soft on crime, led to a major swing during last fall's municipal elections in British Columbia, which were dominated by law-and-order candidates, including Mayor Sim, who ran on a platform of hiring 100 additional police officers.""Given the heightened fear and growing awareness of the inadequacies of our police forces and criminal justice system, there is now a significant opportunity for a political party to pull a similar feat at the federal level."Editorial, National Post
When
the Liberal government of Justin Trudeau resumed power after an
unusually long period of Conservative rule under former Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, much changed in Canada. For one thing, many of the
initiatives taken by the Harper administration to amend some of Canada's
lax criminal justice laws on minimum sentences, on bail, and other
issues were tightened. It took no time for the new administration under
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to reverse all these changes and the
results have not been impressive.
A
22-year-old homeless man with a long rap sheet in Newfoundland and
Ontario was involved a week ago in a spontaneous, unprovoked attack on a
teen, Gabriel Magalhaes, who was siting quietly on a bench at a Toronto
subway station. He was stabbed in the chest three times, killing the
16-year-old. The attacker, Jordan O'Brien-Tobin, had an outstanding
arrest warrant for the past two years in Newfoundland.
Despite
which, during those two years when he moved to Ontario, he committed a
series of crimes for which he was convicted -- of sexual assault,
attacking someone with scissors, assaulting a man with a boxcutter, and
breaching release conditions. A 150-day sentence was the most he
received. Time after time the justice system deemed O'Brien-Tobin's
mental health and addiction took priority over removing him as a danger
to the community.
An ambulance is pictured here parked near a TTC sign late last month. (Evan Mitsui/CBC) |
This
death was not in the realm of isolated incidents. A Toronto Transit
Commission report recently released highlighted 1,058 violent incidents
on the city's public transit system in 2022 representing a 60 percent
rise over the 2018's 666 recorded incidents, at a time when ridership
has been reduced to 60 percent of pre-pandemic levels. Incidents of
random violence include physical and sexual assaults, robbery,
harassment and indecent exposure. And then there are the more fearsome
attacks where TTC passengers and employees were stabbed and assaulted.
The
report measuring last year's violent assaults on Toronto's public
transportation system included a student who was shot, a woman pushed
onto the tracks, another set on fire, and a homeless man killed in a
swarming attack; this one by a group of teen-age girls. A recent poll
verified that fully 40 percent of TTC users consider the system to be
unsafe.
"Nobody should ever feel unsafe walking around [our] city",
Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim tweeted following a stabbing a week ago when a
man was stabbed to death in the company of his fiancee and
three-year-old daughter outside a Starbucks in the downtown. The stabbed
man had requested of another man that he not vape in close proximity to
his three-year-old child. The general consensus in Vancouver is in
agreement that particular areas of the city are seeing a steep decline
in public safety.
The casket of South Simcoe Police Service Const. Morgan Russell is carried into a joint funeral service in Barrie, Ont., Thursday, Oct. 20, 2022. Russell and fellow SSPS constable Devon Northrup were killed in a shooting in Innisfil, Ont. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press) |
Close
to nine of ten people surveyed walking along Granville Street, a major
downtown thoroughfare, responded to a survey that they felt unsafe in
the area. A 2022 poll found province-wide that over half of respondents
feel British Columbia's cities' downtown cores are in decline; 98
percent cited increased crime. The Vancouver Police Department show
statistics of violent crime increasing 4.1 percent year-over-year to
2022's rise of 12.1 percent in comparison to the pre-pandemic average
from 2017-19.
Toronto
police data point to major crimes increasing 18 percent between 2021
and 2022. The number of major crimes reported to police for 2023 rose by
21 percent over 2022. Police too have been the recipients of violent
crime, with nine police officers dying in the line of service since
September. A week ago, Sgt. Maureen Breau, mother of two, was stabbed to
death while making an arrest in Louiseville, Quebec.
The
man who murdered her has a long line of violent crimes, dating back ten
years, while for various reasons he was not kept behind bars in the
country's catch-and-release justice system. Between 1991 and 2014 there
was a distinct downward trend in per capita crime rates. The last seven
years have been spent by the federal Liberal government and the courts
dismantling the criminal justice reforms instituted by the Harper
government. Many mandatory minimum sentences were trashed.
People light candles during a vigil in honour of the victims of the nearby community of James Smith Cree Nation’s series of stabbings, in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, |
Labels: Canada, Criminal Justice, Liberal Government, Police Killings, Rising Violence, Robberies, Sexual Attacks, Stabbings, Toronto Transit Commission, Vancouver
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