Thursday, November 13, 2025

Above All: For the Sake of the 'Common Good' Rejected

"I have determined that systemic and background factors have affected the degree of responsibility of this offender. Mr. Garlow is the personification of intergenerational trauma. I cannot imagine more sympathetic circumstances or mitigating factors that cry out for some compassion. Punishing him with a further period of incarceration for the sake of the common good would be unjust."
"This gun is obviously not intended for hunting anything other than human beings. It is designed to maim and/or kill in a spray of bullets. Simply brandishing it would cause sheer terror." 
"The Crown's cogent submissions accentuated the potential for death and destruction posed by the weapon that was in Mr. Garlow's possession. She urged the court to find that this gun was possessed for the purpose of committing crimes and was in contravention of an order intended to protect the public."
"There is an undeniable link between his criminal record and his experiences as an Indigenous person. In addition, the conditions of his detention at Central East Correctional Centre have been horrendous. He expressed understandable upset during previous appearances about the suffering he has endured while on remand." 
Justice Brenda Green, Ontario Court of Justice 
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Justice Brenda Green cited "colonialism," "cultural genocide" in sentencing Jesse Garlow to time served.
 
"The Crown emphasized that Mr. Garlow was carrying a loaded firearm in a vehicle in public in suspicious circumstances along with a flame thrower and crow bars. This firearm was designed for one purpose, as a killing machine. Its possession is antithetical to the norms and values of Canadians."
"A strong message must be sent to deter like-minded individuals from carrying a loaded firearm by meeting out a significant punishment." 
Crown Prosecutor 
 
"Mr. Garlow's personal history is heartbreaking ... and that attenuates his moral responsibility for these crimes."
"[Garlow's] expressed remorse and his potential for rehabilitation especially with the support of resources for Indigenous people [should be considered in his sentencing]." 
Lawyer for the Defense
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Aged 39 on his arrest, now 40, Jesse Garlow, a previously-convicted drug trafficker, under a firearms prohibition was placed in custody in June of 2024. The car he was driving was weaving in traffic, causing police to pull him over. The Mohawk man was caught driving with a crack pipe in his lap, a 'killing machine' of a rifle in his vehicle's back seat and a flame thrower in the trunk. He had spent over 500 days in pretrial custody in presumably less than ideal conditions. His lawyer recommended that his punishment go no further than time already served. Whereas the crown recommended 3-1/2 years' imprisonment.
 
Found to have been in possession of a loaded prohibited, modified firearm in contravention of court orders prohibiting him from possession weapons, Garlow pleaded guilty, as charged. He was found, in a search at the time of his arrest with nearly $5,000 in cash in his possession, as well as a small scale, although he swore the money was not from trafficking but rather the winning proceeds from gambling. Garlow "denied that he was trafficking in narcotics. He also vehemently denied that he intended to use the gun to commit a crime"
 
He had been interviewed for a Gladue report that would entitle him as an Indigenous offender, to background considerations that would have the effect of lightening sentences meted out to Aboriginals in the commission of crimes. Gladue principles were set in stone by a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in a reflection that sentencing judges must take into consideration unique circumstances of Indigenous offenders; bearing in mind systemic social biases and the over-representation in Canada's prisons of Indigenous people. 
"[The] two positive role models in Jesse's life, his mother and grandmother, died when he was a boy. Both his grandfathers were murdered. His father suffered  cultural alienation in the residential school system. Jesse was separated from a supportive and welcoming community as a direct result. His father was often absent, emotionally unavailable, abusive and encouraged poor choices."
"His sister was killed by police while she was suffering a mental health crisis. His nephew died of an overdose. His father is missing."
"[I see a] clear, causal nexus between his father's brutalization in residential schools and the trail of damage and devastation that slammed like a wrecking ball through the next generation. I cannot imagine a case with a more shocking example of the detrimental impact of colonialism, intergenerational trauma and the attempted cultural genocide by seizing children from their communities only to be placed in horribly abusive environments."
"[The mitigation of Garlow's sentence] is not a 'break' for him. A sentence reduction is not a  reflection of a judge being 'soft on crime'. It is our obligation as the gatekeepers of justice to address, redress and hopefully ameliorate institutionalized abuse."
Justice Brenda Green 
And so, possession of a 'killing machine', a flame thrower, and the tools and profits of an illicit trade in recreational drugs bears reduced consequences for those whose aboriginal status entitles them to soft-peddling crime in the greater interests of society forced to do penance for historical wrongs whose consequences have been blown out of proportion by the hairshirt of a mass guilt complex. Yet another denizen of the dark art of crime commissioning is forgiven his threatening, predatory anti-social proclivities to crime in an exercise of 'social justice'. 
 
Ergo: Suspended sentence, credit for time served, three years' probation. 

39-year-old Jesse Garlow of Douro-Dummer Twp, ON, was arrested and charged with:

·      Possession of a loaded prohibited or restricted firearm

·      Possession of Firearm or Ammunition contrary to Prohibition Order

·      Transport firearm, weapon, prohibited device or ammunition in a careless manner

·      Careless storage of a Firearm, Weapon, Prohibited device or ammunition

·      Possession of Break in Instruments

·      Possession of proceeds of property obtained by crime under $5,000                             OPP Chargesheet June 2024

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Courtesy Ontario Provincial Police

 

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Sunday, March 23, 2025

Seriously? Bail Given to Vicious Antisemitic Attacker

News Release
Man Charged with Advocating Genocide and 28 other charges in Hate Crime Investigation,
Willowdale Avenue and Parkview Avenue
 
The Toronto Police Service Hate Crime Unit has charged a man with 29 criminal offences, many of which are alleged to have been motivated by hatred toward the Jewish community.
With the consent of the Ministry of the Attorney General, two of these charges include Advocating Genocide and Wilful Promotion of Hatred—offences rarely laid in Canada.
All of the incidents are alleged to have occurred between April 26, 2024, and January 3, 2025.
Due to a court-imposed publication ban, we are unable to provide further details in this release.
On January 11, 2025, Amir Arvahi Azar, 32, of Toronto, was arrested. He has been charged with 29 criminal offences:
  1. Advocate Genocide
  2. Wilful Promotion of Hatred
  3. Public Incitement of Hatred
  4. Five counts of Arson
  5. Two counts of Mischief Under $5000
  6. Seven counts of Mischief to Cultural Property
  7. Utter Threats
  8. Criminal Harassment
  9. Three counts of Possess Restricted or Prohibited Firearm Knowingly not holding a licence and registration certificate
  10. Possess Firearm with Altered Serial Number
  11. Possess Prohibited Device
  12. Two counts of Possess Prohibited Weapon
  13. Possession of Proceeds of Crime Over $5000
  14. Possession of Credit Card Data
  15. Possession of Forgery Instrument
The accused has been released following a bail hearing with several conditions imposed. He appeared at the Ontario Court of Justice, 10 Armoury Street, on Monday, March 17, 2025, at 10 a.m.
Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 416-808-3500, Crime Stoppers anonymously at 416-222-TIPS (8477), or at www.222tips.com.
Toronto Police Service 
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Toronto police say Amir Arvahi Azar was charged for 29 criminal offences following a months-long investigation by the centralized hate crimes unit. (Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press)

"[The Toronto Police Service was able to lay these charges] because of the meticulous work of our centralized Hate Crime Unit."
"I would like to thank all of our members who worked tirelessly on this investigation over the span of many months."
"We know that these charges are very serious and that people are concerned. I want to assure everyone that we will continue to do everything we can to keep our communities safe."
TPS Deputy Rob Johnson
 A rare hate crime charge has been laid by Toronto Police Service against an accused synagogue attacker who had been caught with three loaded handguns and had been accused of an eight-month crime spree of vicious antisemitism. Toronto has been assailed, as has Montreal, Vancouver and other Canadian cities, with a series of vandalism against Jewish-owned businesses; synagogues have been fire-bombed, Jewish parochial schools have been shot at, and one of the criminals involved in these activities has been caught and charged. And then released on bail.
 
Charged with 29 criminal counts, 32 year old Amir Arvahi Azar has also been charged with "advocating genocide", a charge "rarely laid in Canada", Toronto police noted, under a section of the Criminal Code. Azar stands accused of five incidents of arson targeting Toronto Jewish sites, along with breaking windows, making telephoned threats, and posting a trail of online threats that met the threshold for criminal hate speech. 

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Damage to Pride of Israel synagogue in Toronto on June 30, 2024 that was allegedly part of an antisemitic hate crime spree by Amir Arvahi Azar. B'nai Brith Canada

The property crimes he was responsible for, all occurring during the last eight months of 2024 -- were among an uptick unprecedented in the city's history in vandalism, arson and shooting attacks that targeted Canadian Jewish sites following the October 7 Hamas-conducted terrorist massacres in southern Israel that slaughtered 1,200 people, and abducted 250 infants, women and men for use as pawns in a later exchange of innocent civilians for Palestinians imprisoned in Israeli jails for criminal acts against Israelis.
 
Most notably, Azar stands accused of breaking large front windows of the Pride of Israel synagogue on June 30; one of two antisemitic attacks he perpetrated over the long Canada Day weekend. The other was windows broken at Kehillat Shaarei Torah Synagogue. From both sites security footage recorded a man on a motorcycle, his identity hidden by a full-face helmet. Kehillat Shaarei Torah had been targeted by vandalism, graffiti or arson in eight separate events since October 7. 

The general vicinity of a perennial anti-Israel demonstration at Bathurst Street and Sheppard Avenue attracted many of Azar's attacks, as an intersection thought of as the heart of the Toronto Jewish community. The gatherings at the intersection were rife with chants for 'intifada', and on one occasion a demonstrator cosplayed as Yahya Sinwar, former leader of the Hamas terrorist group in Gaza.
 
Along with charges for arson, criminal harassment, threats and mischief, Azar was charged with multiple gun charges including two counts of possessing a prohibited weapon. Materials for forging illegal credit cards were also found in his possession by police. Yet, despite the seriousness of these charges, more specifics of the case could not be provided as a result of a "court imposed publication ban", the police statement revealed, concluding that Azar "has been released following a bail hearing with several conditions imposed".

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