Criminal Justice in the U.S. vs Canada
"This court is going to make sure that you never have the opportunity to do that again.""You preyed on these women's trusts and their spirituality, and you manipulated them for your own personal gratification."Judge Jessica Peterson, Nevada courtroom"He took away my sense of safety, even within my own mind. I believe I didn't have privacy in my own thoughts. Living with that kind of psychological control has had lasting effects on my ability to trust others and to fully express myself.""The trauma delayed important parts of my life.""He also took something deeply sacred from me: my spirituality. From a young age, I was taught to obey him and to follow rules without question.""That conditioning put me in harm's way and has left me having to constantly remind myself that it is OK to say no."Siera Begaye, child victim impact statement
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| Actor Nathan Chasing Horse, best known for his role in Dances with Wolves, was handed a life sentence in Nevada for sexually assaulting Indigenous women and girls. Chasing Horse still has charges pending in other states and Canada. CBC |
Actor
Nathan Chasing Horse, remembered for his role in Dances With Wolves,
now 50 years old, this week was sentenced to life in prison with no
possibility of parole for 37 years. The Nevada courtroom heard the
victim testimony of two young girls, 14 at the time that Mr. Chasing
Horse whom they knew for his guidance in spirituality, convinced them
that they were obliged to accept that he had the right to abuse them
sexually.
The presiding judge at the man's sentencing accused Chasing Horse of exploiting girls as young as 13 for his own "personal gratification",
while he had the trust of a spiritual authority figure as a traditional
healer. Some of Chasing Horse's victims were Canadian. He has been
accused of maintaining a harem of wives including an Alberta minor, as
well as of having sex with an underage B.C. girl who had been sent to
live with him because she was ill, and his reputation as a healing
figure was thought to be of benefit to her.
There
were active warrants in both British Columbia and Alberta against
Chasing Horse at the time of his 2023 arrest in Las Vegas. Had he been
sent to trial in Canada, the Canadian justice system would have dealt
with this man's crimes far differently than did Judge Peterson in the
Nevada courtroom. In Saskatchewan last year, a court sat to mete out
justice to a 63 year-old spiritual healer who had used his position for a
long reign of sexual assaults.
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| Nathan Chasing Horse is led out of the courtroom after being arraigned at North Las Vegas Justice Court, Feb. 2, 2023. Photo by Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal via AP, File |
Cecil
Wolfe had violated a dozen women over a period of nine yeas. The abuse
of these women was explained as a necessary treatment to remove "bad medicine".
For his crimes against those 12 women, eight years in prison was
considered more than adequate punishment, with parole likely in five
years. His victims were warned by presiding Justice John Morrall that
the sentence would seen unjust to them. "The sentence I will impose will seem wholly inadequate for the women.
The violations they have experienced will remain with them for the rest
of their lives."
Because
Wolfe, like Nathan Chasing Horse, is Indigenous, the court in Canada
was forced to consider his 'marginalized' background and how it would
have victimized him through racial prejudice, lack of opportunities, and
the inherited deleterious effect of the Residential School system for
First Nations children, impacting a sense of societal betrayal through
following generations. Called the Gladue impact sentencing of Indigenous
people, courts must take that 'marginalization' into effect, reducing
sentencing times.
In
a Canadian courtroom, Chasing Horse would have had his sentence wholly
minimized, as a First Nations miscreant. A man convicted of sexually
assaulting a 12-year-old in an Alberta court was given a 10-year
sentence rather than the 12-year sentence thought to be more
appropriate, by the Crown. "But for his Gladue factors, I would have imposed the sentence sought by the Crown", wrote Alberta Justice Jayme Williams.
A
man in Texas was given a 50-year jail sentence for sexually abusing a
child; while for sexually exploiting four girls between 13 and 15 years
of age, a Connecticut man was given 35 years in prison. Manitoban Thomas
Martin Butler, responsible for a series of child sex assaults in the
mid 1990s that included two elementary school-aged children in his care
being subjected to regular sexual abuse by himself or other men,
received a 25-year sentence, a rarity in Canada.
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| Siblings Raven-Dominique and Jeffery Gobeil say they were shocked to hear the man convicted of sexually abusing them as children was sentenced to 25 years in prison on Tuesday. (Justin Fraser/CBC) |
"I hadn't even imagined the possibility of it being 25 years [sentence for 'horrendous' series of child sex assaults in 1990s].""If you had told me five years ago that we would be here today I would not have believed you.""I wouldn't have even thought it was possible."Lawyer Raven-Dominique 33, child victim of Butler's sex assaults
While working as a doctor with USA Gymnastics, U.S. sports physician Larry Nasser sexually abused over 150 women and girls. "I've just signed your death warrant",
Judge Rosemarie Aquilina said in 2018, as she read out his sentence --
175 years in prison. The chasm in justice meted out between the American
and Canadian judiciary in response to heinous crimes could not be more
pronounced.
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| The provincial courthouse in Saskatoon, Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2016. A Saskatchewan man has been sentenced to eight years in prison for the sexual assaults of 12 women while under the guise of being an Indigenous medicine man. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Matthew Smith |
Labels: American Justice, Canadian Injustice, Criminal Offences, Indigenous Gladue Report





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