Why Ronald Thistle's sentence isn't based on retribution - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 10:30 PM | Calgary | -3.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
NL

Why Ronald Thistle's sentence isn't based on retribution

A jail sentence no matter how lengthy can't bring back someone who was killed because of a crime, writes Ariana Kelland.
Ronald Thistle, 67, sat stone-faced as Justice Carl Thompson rendered his decision on Wednesday. (CBC)

A jail sentence no matter how lengthy can't bring back someone who was killed because of a crime.

Likewise,a sentence isn't a measurement of a person's worth.

But that's difficult to reconcilewhen a familyfaces a person who's responsible for changing their lives forever.

This came to mind on Wednesday, whenRonald Thistle,67,was sentenced to two yearsless a dayfor killing Nick Coates.

Thistle was driving impairedwhen he drove his truck in Coates' path on a busy St. John's street on Aug. 16,2013.

Coates' familysaid Thursday they're pleased with Thistle's sentence, given Justice Carl Thompson sided with the Crown, and gave Thistle six months more than what the defence was asking.

They seemed to understand Thompson is bound by laws that he needs to follow.

However, the public seems to find it difficult to rationalizea two-year sentence for a crime that ended in death.

"He should have got life imprisonment with no chance of parolefor purposely ending another person's life for no reason," one commenton CBC's website said about Thistle's sentence.

"This is a joke! This innocent man's family'slife has been destroyed and nearly torn apart, and this drunk gets to walk the streets (thankfully he can't drive any more) a free man," wrote another.

"Is that all a person's life is worth these days?"

What's a sentence supposed to do?

A sentence is supposed to do many things too many to list in one web article.

What it isn't supposed to be is an eye-for-an-eye punishment, although some wouldsay it should be.

And a judge can't hand a person a life sentence just because a crime, in someone'seyes, is abhorred.

St. John's defence lawyer Bob Buckingham put it like this:"We don't go for retribution, we don't deal with the penalties on a visceral response and an emotional response to offences."

"We look at all of the factors. If we are to do sentencing on the basis of the visceral response of the victim, we'd have our prisons full and that's a different type of justice."

Judges in Canada are bound by principles of sentencing.

In Thistle's case,hissentence was meant to deter the public from drinking and driving,punishing the offender, whilegiving them a chance to rehabilitate into society.

As you've heard on television crime shows,the punishment must fit the crime.

"We have a problem in this country with drinking and driving and an individual judge's decision is not going to change that," Buckingham said.

"There is an upset, and sometimes an outrage, when individuals do cause death of serious injury and people don't think the sentence is strong enough but that's the range of the case law that we've developed."

Longer sentences would deter impaired drivers:Terry Coates

ForCoates' father and stepmother, they want to take their upset and lobby for changes to Canadian laws.

"I think if they see a bigger sentence it was deter them from drinking and driving," said Coates' father Terry Coates.

Coates and his wife Patricia said they are going to take criminology courses to help in their lobbying for stiffer penalties.

"What's the difference between walking out with a loaded gun or getting behind the wheel of a car and killing someone?" Patricia Coates said.

"There isno difference in my book."