Queen’s Bench Judge calls for a change in aboriginal incarceration
A manitoba judge calls for less incarceration and more community involvement when it comes to aboriginal offenders.
“Aboriginal approaches to justice probably have better solutions for the people of those communities, not necessarily for everyone in society, but at least with the people of those communities,” said Justice Murray Sinclair, judge at Manitoba’s Court of Queen’s Bench and chair of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC).
“We’re too easily led to incarcerating people without trying to fix the real problem.”
On Wednesday Sinclair spoke at a law conference in Saskatoon, where he called for changes on how First Nations and aboriginal offenders are brought to justice. While Sinclair recognizes pre-sentencing reports such as the Gladue Report, a bail-hearing report used when considering sentencing an offender of aboriginal background, Sinclair said incarceration sentences remain sky-high.


