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Just a point of clarification on your citation of R. v. Askov case, [1990]2 S.C.R. 1199 not Ascott. Since its ruling there has been subsequent decisions in all courts that will allow the 8 months to tick away *IF* it is the fault of the Crown causing the delays, *IF* the defence are the ones causing the delays it's too bad, so sad, see you in court. It's been that way since 1992. The 8 months has been deemed to be a reasonable time frame for Courts in which the day to day operation can be expected to set a matter down for trial in an 8 month time period It does not include courts in jurisdictions that have such a heavy volume that it cannot be reasonable to expect scheduling to come in under the 8 months.
It's easy to blame judges for the ills of our society, and they make for an easy target as they are legislatively restricted to be able to defend themselves or their decisions in public (same rules apply for jurors that they are restricted at being able to discuss their findings in public- which make the study of Canadian juries difficult since no one can answer the questions as to how they arrived at their finding). Ever wondered why you have never heard from either a judge or juror as to their reasons when they have been subject to public criticism? They can't. And we will never know if they agreed with the decision, or all the whys so any discussion about a judicial decision is and always be a purely academic venture. Because of the absence of information, it is far too easy to blame the judge instead. I never ceased to be amazed at the shear lack of public understanding of our laws and the function of the courts. Without trying to understand the reasoning in the more infamous cases, the first knee-jerk reaction of the public is to a) blame the judge; b) blame the lawyers. Very seldom are the police blamed and heavens, we won't hold the accused responsible and we never look further to our elected representative who make the laws and provide the sentencing structures and hold them accountable in our votes for messing up our society. We simply use threads like this that has provided an easy way to make us all feel good at the ranting and blame those who can not respond to the criticism.
Then we forget that those same judges who we want to bring the hammer down on our citizens are the same ones that are the *ssholes when they rule that your child support payment is to be X instead of the paltry A you thought you'd get away with or the same Crown lawyer that you asked at a party how to get off on a speeding ticket, but you want that same lawyer to nail the next speeder in court or the same defence that one hires because one left the bar a little too drunk and needs to get the fine/penalty reduced - you expect them to do their job in defending you. It's the same Crowns that cringe that the chain of evidence is messed up and half the evidence is going to excluded because some young, eager rookie cop blew it but the Crown takes it on the chin because they lost. Or the same accused that walks because the officer forgot to read him his Charter rights. Or the 46 page statement that has to get thrown out of court because the officer kept talking after the accused said, "I have nothing to say before I speak to my lawyer". But you expect the judiciary to fix those errors by skipping over the basic tenets of our laws. If they don't because the law does afford them the opportunity then you blame them and sling the ills of our society at their feet.
We have an adversarial legal system, that means someone is going to win, someone is going to lose and until such a time that our politicians take us into a different type of system, no amount of whinging about and criticizing those who can not respond to your charges will change it. You want change? Use your vote and vote in politicians that will drop the hammer by making amendments to the necessary laws. If you want a society where criminals don't have rights then be prepared to have those same denied rights applied to you and acquaintances if that is ever the case and then one should not expect a means to reduce the penalties.
Personally, I'd rather hold the actual criminal accountable than blaming anyone else. But then, that isn't a very exciting or interesting thread is it?
It's easy to blame judges for the ills of our society, and they make for an easy target as they are legislatively restricted to be able to defend themselves or their decisions in public (same rules apply for jurors that they are restricted at being able to discuss their findings in public- which make the study of Canadian juries difficult since no one can answer the questions as to how they arrived at their finding). Ever wondered why you have never heard from either a judge or juror as to their reasons when they have been subject to public criticism? They can't. And we will never know if they agreed with the decision, or all the whys so any discussion about a judicial decision is and always be a purely academic venture. Because of the absence of information, it is far too easy to blame the judge instead. I never ceased to be amazed at the shear lack of public understanding of our laws and the function of the courts. Without trying to understand the reasoning in the more infamous cases, the first knee-jerk reaction of the public is to a) blame the judge; b) blame the lawyers. Very seldom are the police blamed and heavens, we won't hold the accused responsible and we never look further to our elected representative who make the laws and provide the sentencing structures and hold them accountable in our votes for messing up our society. We simply use threads like this that has provided an easy way to make us all feel good at the ranting and blame those who can not respond to the criticism.
Then we forget that those same judges who we want to bring the hammer down on our citizens are the same ones that are the *ssholes when they rule that your child support payment is to be X instead of the paltry A you thought you'd get away with or the same Crown lawyer that you asked at a party how to get off on a speeding ticket, but you want that same lawyer to nail the next speeder in court or the same defence that one hires because one left the bar a little too drunk and needs to get the fine/penalty reduced - you expect them to do their job in defending you. It's the same Crowns that cringe that the chain of evidence is messed up and half the evidence is going to excluded because some young, eager rookie cop blew it but the Crown takes it on the chin because they lost. Or the same accused that walks because the officer forgot to read him his Charter rights. Or the 46 page statement that has to get thrown out of court because the officer kept talking after the accused said, "I have nothing to say before I speak to my lawyer". But you expect the judiciary to fix those errors by skipping over the basic tenets of our laws. If they don't because the law does afford them the opportunity then you blame them and sling the ills of our society at their feet.
We have an adversarial legal system, that means someone is going to win, someone is going to lose and until such a time that our politicians take us into a different type of system, no amount of whinging about and criticizing those who can not respond to your charges will change it. You want change? Use your vote and vote in politicians that will drop the hammer by making amendments to the necessary laws. If you want a society where criminals don't have rights then be prepared to have those same denied rights applied to you and acquaintances if that is ever the case and then one should not expect a means to reduce the penalties.
Personally, I'd rather hold the actual criminal accountable than blaming anyone else. But then, that isn't a very exciting or interesting thread is it?