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	<title>Legalize &#187; Bill C-23Legalize</title>
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		<title>How Eligibility for a Criminal Pardon in Canada is Changing</title>
		<link>http://legalize.hol.es/how-eligibility-for-a-criminal-pardon-in-canada-is-changing/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Mar 2015 12:34:37 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Criminal Law]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bill C-23]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Canada]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The law in Canada is currently and drastically changing. Although &#013; only ten percent of the four million Canadians who held a criminal &#013; record last year applied for a criminal pardon, the Harper government &#013; has still been working to make that number smaller. In this post-9/11 &#013; climate of hyper-security and harsher political [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The law in Canada is currently and drastically changing. Although &#013;<br />
only ten percent of the four million Canadians who held a criminal &#013;<br />
record last year applied for a criminal pardon, the Harper government &#013;<br />
has still been working to make that number smaller. In this post-9/11 &#013;<br />
climate of hyper-security and harsher political stances on every issue, &#013;<br />
the public and interest groups have been calling for a reform of the &#013;<br />
criminal law, specifically in regards to punishing criminals. In the &#013;<br />
past few years, the government has slowly been obliging, with Bill C-23 &#013;<br />
being the first major change. Bill C-23 was split into two parts, part A&#013;<br />
 being passed last June and part B currently under deliberation in &#013;<br />
parliament. It changes the Canadian criminal pardons part of the law &#013;<br />
into the Canadian record suspension law. Although Bill C-23A has already&#013;<br />
 passed, let&#8217;s look at what is necessary to be eligible for the current &#013;<br />
pardon system in Canada before Bill C-23B is fully passed.</p>
<p>The Canadian criminal pardon system as it stands now is &#013;<br />
largely non-judgmental when it comes to distinguishing between offences &#013;<br />
to be pardoned. No one is ineligible based solely on the nature of their&#013;<br />
 past offence (with some noticeable restrictions being applied to &#013;<br />
pardons in the case of sexual offenders); if a person has been convicted&#013;<br />
 of an offence under the federal law, they are eligible to apply for a &#013;<br />
pardon. There is, of course, a waiting period before they can apply, and&#013;<br />
 this period differs in length depending on how serious their crime was.&#013;<br />
 The waiting period section of the law was the part affected by Bill &#013;<br />
C-23A. The most serious offences are indictable (such as manslaughter &#013;<br />
and assault) and are tried by a full court, judge and jury. The ones &#013;<br />
eligible for a pardon (very serious crimes such as murder are not &#013;<br />
eligible) used to have a waiting period of five years; this has now been&#013;<br />
 changed to ten years. The minor offences are summary (such as causing a&#013;<br />
 disturbance in a public place and mischief charges) and are tried only &#013;<br />
by a judge. They used to have a waiting period of three years and now &#013;<br />
have been split into two groups, with the less serious summary offences &#013;<br />
still waiting three years and the more serious ones waiting five. The &#013;<br />
third and last type of offence one can be charged with is a hybrid &#013;<br />
offence (such as certain sexual assaults and driving impaired) which can&#013;<br />
 be charged as either the more serious indictable offence or the minor &#013;<br />
summary offence, depending on how serious a crime the Crown decides it &#013;<br />
is. The waiting period after the sentence of a hybrid offence depends &#013;<br />
entirely on what level of severity the Crown tried it as.</p>
<p>Most &#013;<br />
Canadian criminal pardon applications are accepted, as long as the &#013;<br />
paperwork is filled out correctly. There was a 98.3 percent success rate&#013;<br />
 for Canadian pardons in the 2009-2010 year &#8211; 24,134 pardons granted and&#013;<br />
 425 denied. This is because as the system stands, the basic parameters &#013;<br />
for being eligible are the wait times and the &#8220;good conduct&#8221; rule &#8211; the &#013;<br />
person must have had good conduct for the past number of years since his&#013;<br />
 conviction and must be able to prove that the pardon will further their&#013;<br />
 rehabilitation. As far as rehabilitation goes, the fact that pardons &#013;<br />
allow the people to apply for jobs and volunteer positions without fear &#013;<br />
of stigma or rejection should speak for itself. Sex offenders are the &#013;<br />
inevitable exception to this success rate rule however, as the &#013;<br />
government looks to make most of them ineligible for any kind of pardon &#013;<br />
or record suspension with C-23B &#8211; never mind that they are already &#013;<br />
red-flagged when applying to work at jobs or volunteer positions &#013;<br />
involving vulnerable people such as children or the elderly.</p>
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