R V Aklok, 2020 NUCJ 37
R V Aklok, 2020 NUCJ 37
R V Aklok, 2020 NUCJ 37
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Contents
I. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................... 3
II. BACKGROUND TO THE TWO SETS OF CRIMINAL CHARGES .................... 4
III. THE FACTS ..................................................................................................... 5
A. August 2, 2020 ............................................................................................. 6
B. August 21, 2020 ........................................................................................... 6
IV. THE POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES .............................................................. 7
A. The Crown ................................................................................................... 7
B. The Defence ................................................................................................ 8
V. MR. AKLOK ...................................................................................................... 8
A. Mr. Aklok’s personal circumstances ............................................................. 9
B. Mr. Aklok’s criminal record ........................................................................... 9
VI. THE SHIFTING FRAMEWORK, PURPOSE, OBJECTIVES, AND
PRINCIPLES OF SENTENCING ........................................................................ 10
A. The shifting framework of sentencing ........................................................ 10
B. The purpose and objectives of sentencing ................................................. 11
C. The principles of sentencing ...................................................................... 11
VII. ANALYSIS .................................................................................................... 14
A. Joint submissions must conform to the purpose, objectives, and principles
of sentencing ................................................................................................... 14
B. Problems with the joint submission ............................................................ 14
(i) Intimate partner violence ......................................................................... 14
(ii) The perception of institutional indifference.............................................. 16
1 The prosecution .................................................................................... 16
2 Victim impact statements in Nunavut .................................................... 17
3 The Crown’s submissions ..................................................................... 18
4 The Defence.......................................................................................... 22
5 The irony of Anthony-Cook.................................................................... 23
6 The “so unhinged” test .......................................................................... 24
VIII. CONCLUSION............................................................................................. 26
3
I. INTRODUCTION
[3] This case represents a perfect storm. It is about the crisis of intimate
partner violence in Nunavut, perceptions of institutional indifference,
and my disquiet over the role of front-line sentencing judges in the
wake of the Supreme Court of Canada decision in R v Anthony-
Cook.3
1 Addressing Gendered Violence against Inuit Women: A review of police policies and practices in
Inuit Nunangat, Pauktuutit Inuit Women of Canada and Dr. Elizabeth Comack, January 31, 2020
[“Pauktuutit Report”] at 4.
2 Most recently, R v Joe Nooshoota, court files 08-20-120, 08-20-276, October 1, 2020,
unreported.
3 2016 SCC 43 [“Anthony-Cook”].
4 A joint submission refers to “when Crown and defence counsel agree to recommend a particular
sentence to the judge, in exchange for the accused entering a guilty plea” (ibid at para 2).
4
[5] In August 2020, the RCMP charged the offender, James Aklok, with
intimate partner violence against his then intimate partner. The first
incident happened in Iqaluit on August 2. Mr. Aklok was arrested
shortly afterwards and released on bail. Mr. Aklok’s bail required him,
among other things, to have no contact with his intimate partner. This
no-contact condition is routinely included in bail releases to try to
protect complainants.
[6] Nineteen days later, Mr. Aklok again assaulted his intimate partner.
This time, after Mr. Aklok’s arrest, a Justice of the Peace denied Mr.
Aklok bail and remanded him into pre-trial custody.
[7] The police charged Mr. Aklok with common assault against his
intimate partner for the August 2 incident.5 The police later charged
Mr. Aklok with breaching his no-contact bail condition6 and for
choking, strangling, or suffocating his intimate partner on August 21.7
[9] On September 22, Mr. Aklok pleaded guilty to the August 2 assault.
However, before he entered his pleas pertaining to the August 21
incident, the Crown amended the second Information. The Crown had
the Court delete the references to choking, strangling, or suffocating
and amend the charge from that more serious offence to the lesser
offence of common assault. Mr. Aklok then pleaded guilty to common
assault and the connected bail breach.
5 Pursuant to Criminal Code of Canada, RSC 1985, c C-46 [“Criminal Code”], s. 266. Court file
23-20-113.
6 Pursuant to section 145(4)(a) of the Criminal Code, supra note 5. Court file 23-20-115.
7 Pursuant to section 267(c) of the Criminal Code, supra note 5.
5
[11] Before starting Mr. Aklok’s sentencing hearing, I initiated the following
exchange:
THE COURT: What steps have been taken to provide her [the victim]
a chance to file a Victim Impact Statement?
Mr. WOOL: I’m just reviewing the file for that now, sir. Pardon me,
the files. I don’t see that this step has been taken on either file, sir. I
think part of the difficulty may have been, Ms. Paddock and I did
discuss this matter yesterday, and I learned yesterday that the
matters would be resolving, but it doesn’t appear that the step of
contacting Ms. [edited] for a Victim Impact Statement has been
taken. There is contact information within the file. I expect the
Court will want to put this to a later date to resolve the matter.8
A. August 2, 2020
[14] The Crown told me that the victim contacted the RCMP on August 2
to report that she had been assaulted by her boyfriend. The police
went to the residence. The victim told the police that she had told Mr.
Aklok that she was going out to give some money to her mother. Mr.
Aklok got mad. She went through the front door to put her shoes on.
Mr. Aklok began holding her to stop her from leaving. He punched
her. She was then in the living room where he head-butted her. He
put her on the floor where he started banging her head. She did not
know how many times he did that to her. He pulled her hair. He kicked
her twice on her back. He banged her head some more. He slapped
her. She told him she was leaving to take money to her mother. He
then got up and left the house.9
[15] After the Crown had finished, I asked him what time this incident had
happened, and he told me around 9:42 p.m. When I asked whether
alcohol was involved, he checked the file and said there was no
indication of alcohol noted in the file. At this point, Mr. Aklok
unexpectedly said that yes, he had been drinking that night.10
[17] The Crown then read the August 21 allegations into the record. The
police received “several” calls from the same victim around 1 a.m.
reporting that she had fled her home and was hiding near a black
truck beside the house. The victim told the police dispatcher that Mr.
Aklok was intoxicated and that he had choked her. She had to “sweet
talk him”11 to get him to stop. The police arrived and found the victim.
The police learned that Mr. Aklok had choked her around her neck
and “wouldn’t let her go”.12 The police observed a red mark near her
left eye and swelling around her mouth and lip. She was crying, visibly
shaken, and scared.13
[18] The police looked for Mr. Aklok and found him passed out inside the
residence. He was intoxicated. The police arrested Mr. Aklok, who
began shouting and screaming obscenities. Mr. Aklok was “agitated,
aggressive and not making any sense in what he was saying”.14
A. The Crown
[21] The Crown was brief. I repeat the Crown’s short sentencing
submission verbatim:
14 Ibid.
15 Ibid at 8.
8
[22] The Crown could not tell me whether any of Mr. Aklok’s prior
convictions for violence involved an intimate partner, so I adjourned
the hearing’s completion again, this time to October 2, but first I heard
from Defence Counsel and Mr. Aklok.
B. The Defence
[24] Neither the Crown nor Defence Counsel referred the Court to any
case law to support their joint submission.
V. MR. AKLOK
[25] I will now say a few words about the offender. Neither party requested
a Pre-Sentence Report, so Defence Counsel was my principal source
of information.
16 Ibid at 11.
17 Ibid.
18 Ibid.
19 Ibid at 11-12.
9
[27] Mr. Aklok experienced “significant violence all through his childhood”.
His memories include watching his father beat up and choke his
mother, leaving her bruised, swollen, and helpless on the floor. Mr.
Aklok was eight or nine years old at the time. Mr. Aklok also
experienced physical abuse from his father. He feels “significant
remorse” and knows the victim “did not deserve to be treated like
that”.21 He was often “bullied and ostracised at school.22
[28] Mr. Aklok addressed the Court. He said his father’s suicide was “a
really big thing in my life”.
20 Ibid at 13.
21 Ibid at 13-15.
22 Ibid at 15.
23 Ibid at 17-18.
10
[31] On October 2nd, the Crown reported that the two 2012 assault
convictions had, in fact, involved at least one intimate partner.
[32] Parliament has codified our national sentencing laws in Part XXIII of
the Criminal Code. In the process, Parliament—after study in
committee and Parliamentary debate—legislated that the ultimate
responsibility for sentencing an offender lies with the trial judge:
606 (1) A court may accept a plea of guilty only if it is satisfied that
…
(b) the accused understands
…
(iii) that the court is not bound by any agreement made
between the accused and the prosecutor…24
[36] I now turn to the principles of sentencing which Parliament has told
judges it is their responsibility to apply. I will refer to the principles in
the same order as they appear in the Criminal Code.
25 Ibid, s. 718.
26 Ibid, s. 718.04.
12
[37] First and foremost, punishment must fit the offender and the crime.
This is called proportionality, which is enshrined as sentencing’s
“fundamental principle”:
[38] The sentence must also account for the presence of relevant
aggravating or mitigating circumstances.28 Aggravating factors work to
increase the sentence. Mitigating factors work to lessen the sentence.
In this case of intimate partner violence, Parliament has decreed the
following factors to be aggravating ones:
718.2 …
(a) …
(ii) evidence that the offender, in committing the offence,
abused the offender’s intimate partner or a member of
the victim or the offender’s family,
…
(iii.1) evidence that the offence had a significant impact on
the victim, considering their age and other personal
circumstances, including their health and financial
situation…29
[39] The sentence must apply the parity principle, which holds that similar
offenders ought to receive similar sentences for similar crimes
committed in similar circumstances;30 the principle of judicial restraint,
which directs that the sentence must not be unduly harsh or long;31
and the totality principle, which says the sentence must impose the
least restrictive sanction which is appropriate in all the
circumstances.32
27 Ibid, s. 718.1.
28 Ibid, s. 718.2(a).
29 Ibid, s. 718.2(a)(ii) and (iii.1)
30 Ibid, s. 718.2(b).
31 Ibid, s. 718.2(c).
32 Ibid, s. 718.2(d).
13
[40] The sentence must also apply the following principle, which pertains
to Mr. Aklok and all Inuit offenders. Sentencing judges are obliged to
consider
718.2 …
…
(e) all available sanctions, other than imprisonment, that are
reasonable in the circumstances and consistent with the harm
done to victims or to the community should be considered for
all offenders, with particular attention to the circumstances
of Aboriginal offenders.33
[41] In this context, the sentence must account for the effects of historic
and systemic colonialism and inter-generational trauma experienced
by Inuit. These are the Gladue factors articulated by the Supreme
Court of Canada in R v Gladue and later reinforced in R v Ipeelee.34
33 Ibid, s. 718.2(e).
34 R v Gladue, [1999] 1 SCR 688, 133 CCC (3d) 385; R v Ipeelee, [2012] 1 SCR 433, 280 CCC
(3d) 265.
35 Sentencing ranges for criminal offences may be discerned in those cases which have been
reported. Nunavut is a recent jurisdiction, and the vast majority of its decisions are oral and not
readily available for future reference.
14
VII. ANALYSIS
[43] Parliament has not exempted joint submissions from the need to
conform to the purpose, objectives, and principles of sentencing. The
Supreme Court of Canada in Anthony-Cook placed a clear legal
responsibility on counsel, when presenting a joint submission to the
court, to justify their recommendation:
[44] In my view, the joint submission I imposed was unduly lenient, and
counsel failed to justify their leniency. For the reasons which follow, I
viewed the joint submission as bringing “the administration of justice
into disrepute” in Nunavut.37
[45] First, the joint submission in this case failed adequately to account for
or acknowledge the reality of intimate partner violence in Nunavut.
Late last year, Parliament turned its attention to the unique position of
some Indigenous victims. Effective 19 September 2019 sentencing
judges are required – in the case of intimate partner violence – to
“consider the increased vulnerability of female persons who are
victims, giving particular attention to the circumstances of Aboriginal
female victims…” The intergenerational effects of colonialism have
not only contributed to the staggeringly high rates of Indigenous
offending … The impact of colonialism also gave rise to the very same
intergenerational effects which have left all Inuit women – and not just
intimate partners – in a particularly vulnerable position in society. In
my view, this reality ought to inform the deliberations of a Nunavut
sentencing judge when sentencing an offender who has victimised an
Inuk woman.40
[49] This approach has been recently affirmed by the Quebec Court of
Appeal in R v L.P.41 In L.P., the Quebec Court of Appeal increased
the sentence imposed by the trial judge in a case of intimate partner
violence from a provincial jail term to a federal penitentiary term.
[51] In Mr. Aklok’s case, neither the Crown nor Defence Counsel
demonstrated how the reality of intimate partner violence was
adequately addressed by their lenient joint submission.
1 The prosecution
[54] In 2015, Parliament enacted Bill C-32, the Canadian Victims Bill of
Rights. The purpose of the legislation can be found in the law’s
preamble which states, in part:
[55] Among other things, this legislation established the right of victims of
crime to participate in the sentencing process by filing, or reading
aloud in court, a victim impact statement.43 Section 722(1) of the
Criminal Code reads:
722 (1) … the court shall consider any statement of a victim prepared
in accordance with this section and filed with the court describing
the physical or emotional harm, property damage or economic loss
suffered by the victim as a result of the commission of the offence
and the impact of the offence on the victim.44
722 (2) As soon as feasible after a finding of guilt and in any event
before imposing sentence, the court shall inquire of the prosecutor
if reasonable steps have been taken to provide the victim with an
opportunity to prepare a statement referred to in subsection 1.45
(emphasis added)
[57] However, more than five years after the Victims Bill of Rights came
into effect, the Crown continues regularly to ask this Court to
sentence offenders without victims having been informed of their right
to be heard.
42 SC 2015, c 13, s 2.
43 Criminal Code, supra note 5, s. 722(1).
44 Ibid.
45 Ibid.
18
[59] The Crown in Mr. Aklok’s case endorsed a joint submission with no
attempt to justify why the parties had decided that Mr. Aklok merited
an extremely lenient sentence or why the presiding judge ought
automatically to impose it.
[60] The final report of the National Inquiry into Murdered and Missing
Indigenous Women and Girls underscores the importance of this
requirement to justify joint submissions:
46 Ibid, s. 722(3). The section provides “On application of the prosecutor or a victim or on its own
motion, the court may adjourn the proceedings to permit the victim to prepare a statement
referred to in subsection (1) or to present evidence in accordance with subsection (9), if the court
is satisfied that the adjournment would not interfere with the proper administration of justice”. It
would be a rare case where such an adjournment would not be granted.
47 These are the three most common reasons given by prosecutors in Nunavut for not having
Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, 2019, at 719 [“The MMIWG Final Report”].
19
[62] The Supreme Court of Canada has told the legal profession and the
judiciary in clear and unambiguous terms that “sentencing cannot be
done in the dark”.49 Lawyers have a legal duty “to amply justify” joint
submissions with reference to all the relevant circumstances.50
Judges should not have to seek out key material facts. Crown
prosecutors (and Defence Counsel) must be prepared to present
them and to justify joint submissions.
[63] In this case, I found several omissions from the Crown’s submissions
to be troubling. For example, the Crown did not mention that
Parliament has mandated the primacy of the objectives of
denunciation and deterrence, both general and specific, to
perpetrators of intimate partner violence such as Mr. Aklok; the Crown
did not refer to the fundamental principle of sentencing,
proportionality; the Crown did not mention Parliament’s direction in
section 718.04 that the victim’s vulnerability must be considered; the
Crown did not know whether any of Mr. Aklok’s prior convictions
involved an intimate partner; and the Crown did not demonstrate how
the joint submission addressed the prevalence of intimate partner
violence, as well as the harm done to the victim and community.
[64] The joint submission endorsed by the Crown also failed adequately to
address rehabilitation. Clearly, there was and continues to be a need
to seek this 39-year-old male Inuk’s rehabilitation. However, the joint
submission only called for me to impose a short nine months of
probation, little time for Mr. Aklok to wrestle with – under Court
supervision – his lifelong issues of dysfunction and alcoholism.
[66] Mr. Aklok thinks he will probably move back to Calgary where he
struggled in the past to find full-time employment and shelter.
Whether Mr. Aklok stays in Kugluktuk or moves to Calgary, he will
require the long-term supervision and support of a lengthy probation
order.
[67] The joint submission also did not address many of the aggravating
factors present in this case. As I noted earlier, Parliament has
mandated that courts and lawyers consider aggravating and
mitigating factors. Aggravating factors work to increase sentences.
Mitigating factors work to lessen sentences.52 There are many
aggravating factors in this case, only two of which were referred to by
the Crown:
[68] The eighth aggravating factor above underscores the concerns I had
with the Crown’s position. The plea negotiations here resulted in the
Crown permitting Mr. Aklok to plead guilty to the lesser offence of
common assault when the admitted facts clearly supported the
original and more serious choking charge laid by the police. I would at
least have expected the Crown to allege the choking to be an
aggravating factor to the common assault. This failure by the Crown
to allege the admitted choking as an aggravating factor minimised the
extent of the violence, its impact on the victim, and Mr. Aklok’s
responsibility for his criminal actions.
[69] The joint submission did nothing to help dispel the perception that our
justice system devalues the lives of Inuit victims of crime. I am certain
this omission would alarm and dismay all informed and reasonable
Nunavummiut.56
[70] The Crown properly noted the early guilty plea and the gap in Mr.
Aklok’s criminal record in its submission. These are indeed two
mitigating factors to be weighed in the sentencing balance. However,
the joint submission placed too much weight on these two mitigating
factors. The integrity of the joint submission suffered due to the
Crown’s incomplete grasp of the facts and its reliance on a file which
did not contain all the material and necessary details.
[72] As I noted earlier, in L.P., the Quebec Court of Appeal increased the
sentence imposed by the trial judge from a provincial jail term to a
federal penitentiary term. In so doing, the court expressly gave
meaning to Parliament’s direction that sentencing judges “shall give
primary consideration to the objectives of denunciation and
deterrence” in these cases.59
56 To give one recent example, social media was set aflame in the aftermath of R v Amaaq, 2020
NUCA 11.
57 The MMIWG Final Report, supra note 48 at 717.
58 R v Jaypoody, 2018 NUCJ 36 provides another example of this minimisation of intimate partner
[73] L.P. is a clear signal that the thinking of sentencing judges – and the
lawyers who make sentencing recommendations – must evolve to
conform to Parliament’s directions. In many cases of intimate partner
violence, this will mean higher sentence recommendations and higher
sentences in Nunavut than were imposed in the past.
[74] The Supreme Court of Canada discussed how courts may depart
from previous precedent in a principled manner in R v Friesen, an
April 2020 decision involving child sexual abuse:
Courts can and sometimes need to depart from prior precedents and
sentencing ranges in order to impose a proportionate sentence.
Sentencing ranges are not “straitjackets” but are instead “historical
portraits” (Lacasse, at para. 57). Accordingly, as this court recognized
in Lacasse, sentences can and should depart from prior sentencing
ranges when Parliament raises the maximum sentence for an offence
and society’s understanding of the severity of the harm arising from
that offence increases (paras. 62-64 and 74).60
[75] Parliament did not increase sentencing maximums for intimate partner
violence. However, in s. 718.04 Parliament did give expression to our
growing understanding of the severe impact violent crime has on
Indigenous victims. In doing so, Parliament gave a clear direction to
all justice system participants. Going forward, we have a duty to
reconsider the proportionality principle and how it should be applied in
a way that is “consistent with the harm done to victims or to the
community”.61 This, too, is one of the lessons from L.P.
4 The Defence
[76] I turn now to the Defence. Defence Counsel, in her brief submissions,
referred in passing to denunciation, deterrence, and the aggravating
effect of intimate partner violence on the sentence. Defence Counsel
submitted that a criminal record and the social stigma of a conviction
would act as deterrents. However, Defence Counsel also submitted
that “the victim was an intimate partner of [Mr. Aklok’s] at the time, not
a long term partner”.62 The length of a relationship in which intimate
partner violence occurred is not a relevant factor.
[77] This is clearly a case where Mr. Aklok ought to have been separated
from society for a jail term proportionate to the seriousness of his two
violent crimes against his intimate Indigenous partner and his high
degree of responsibility.63 That I was, as the judge responsible for the
sentence, unable lawfully to resist this joint submission is the subject
of the next section of my decision.
[78] The irony of Anthony-Cook is that it has been courts that have denied
front-line judges the judicial discretion granted them by Parliament.
[79] Thirty-five years ago, plea negotiations between Crown and Defence
Counsel were not universally well regarded.64 We now openly
acknowledge that plea negotiations play an important and necessary
role in our criminal justice system.
across the country, as well as a fourth possible test which was raised before the court.
66 Ibid at para 13.
67 Ibid at para 3.
24
[82] Two paragraphs later, the court expressed the new standardised rule
going forward:
[83] This indeed is a stringent test. In fact, the court went on later to raise
the bar further.
[85] Appellate courts have not embraced the Supreme Court’s guidance
for trial judges in Anthony-Cook. In accordance with appellate
interpretation of Anthony-Cook, front-line judges—to reject a joint
submission—must now find find that the joint submission is so
unhinged that the reasonable and informed person would conclude
that the justice system has broken down.70 The “so unhinged” test is
all that remains of Anthony-Cook’s guidelines to trial judges.
68 Ibid at para 5.
69 Ibid at para 34.
70 See R v J.B., 2018 NLPC 1318A0036, a decision of Judge Wayne Gorman.
25
[87] Mr. Aklok’s case highlights the essential problems with the “so
unhinged” test. First, the very term “so unhinged” implies a standard
of negligence by counsel so extreme that I have never seen despite
spending more than thirty years working in the criminal justice system.
Second, how can it be said that the justice system is not functioning
“properly” and has “broken down” when Crown and Defence are
represented by counsel in a routine court sitting presided over by an
impartial judge? Despite the participation of counsel and the judge,
the joint submission in this case failed to deliver justice.
[89] This case is an example of the real-world effect that the “so unhinged”
test can bring about. Reasonable and informed Nunavummiut would
conclude, as I have, that the justice system broke down in Mr. Aklok’s
case. That breakdown ought to have permitted me to decline to
implement the joint submission. However, I felt constrained from
rejecting the joint submission because two recent appellate decisions
in Nunavut have expressly endorsed the “so unhinged” test.72 It is
indeed unfortunate that the Court of Appeal has not provided
constructive guidance to front-line judges on how to square this circle.
[91] An independent judiciary is the last line of defence for everyone in our
free and democratic society. As Parliament has entrusted judges with
the ultimate responsibility for the sentences they impose, judges must
be vigilant to ensure that justice is done. In Nunavut, at least, that
vigilance may require judges to engage with counsel to ensure that all
relevant circumstances and principles have been considered and
appropriately applied in joint submissions.
VIII. CONCLUSION
[92] Inuit women, and all Nunavummiut, deserve a justice system that
meaningfully addresses gendered violence. It is troubling that our
courts have not been given the tools, including fuller judicial
sentencing discretion, to do so.
[93] There is a need and a role for Parliament to reopen debate on this
vitally important aspect of our criminal justice system.
[94] Although I was troubled, I was bound to follow appellate direction, and
I imposed the joint submission.
___________________
Justice P. Bychok
Nunavut Court of Justice