In the case of Svend Robinson, the citizens succeeded and the judge failed

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A long-time B.C. criminal prosecutor we know puts it this way. "To be effective, the criminal law must be feared." Otherwise people will ignore it.

For the law to be feared, he says, two things are necessary. When a crime can be proven, prosecutors must level the most serious charge available, and judges must not be too lenient in sentencing.

In the case of Svend Robinson, we got the first but not the second. We got Svend Robinson charged with indictable theft (i.e. serious criminal theft, maximum sentence 10 years), and not with some minor misdemeanor or not at all.

That alone is an achievement. Everything about the initial handling of the Robinson case by the media, the police and the prosecution office smacked of political favoritism.

The thousands of Citizens Centre supporters who helped highlight the importance of Robinson's case in the media and B.C. prosecution office can take some credit that he was appropriately charged and the matter wasn't just quietly forgotten.

On Friday (August 6), the flamboyant former Burnaby-Douglas Member of Parliament pleaded guilty to stealing a $64,500 ring from a Vancouver auction on April 9.

Special prosecutor Leonard Doust argued for at least a suspended sentence and a criminal record. He pointed out that Robinson's theft was a calculated act that took him half an hour to effect, and not some impulsive snap decision as he has claimed all along.

(Robinson admitted that he asked an auction attendant to let him examine three rings. He returned two to the attendant and quietly stuck the third in his jacket. Then he left, locked the jacket in his car and returned to the auction for another half hour.)

Doust also pointed out that Robinson had been shopping for a ring for some time, that he had a conscious purpose for it as an engagement ring, that it was worth more than most Canadians earn in a year, and that police were trying to find Robinson days before he decided to call them and confess.

Provincial Court Judge Ron Fratkin, however, presented Robinson's situation as though it were a Greek tragedy.

"Not many people can say they have fallen as far as Mr. Robinson," Judge Fratkin said. "He has faced public humiliation. He has been vilified... He's embarrassed himself, and he has lost [his job and] the opportunity to do what he does so well."

"In Canada, we don't kick people when they're down," declared the judge. "What he has [already] gone through is enough."

He let Robinson off with a year's probation, 100 hours of community service, and no criminal record so that he may travel internationally.

Just how far Robinson has fallen, and for how long, is a matter of conjecture. He has a job as a claims officer for the B.C. government employees union. In July, after he had ceased to be an MP, he represented Canada at a conference in Edinburgh to lecture eastern European parliamentarians on integrity in government. At age 52 he is three years away from collecting his MP pension of $86,663 a year. And his long-time local riding assistant and friend has won the Burnaby seat, and could at any time step aside to let Robinson win it again.

The only man who might have prevented Robinson from returning to Parliament was Judge Fratkin, by tarring him with the criminal record his crime warranted. And even though it is quite rare to let anyone convicted of indictable theft leave court with no criminal record at all, Judge Fratkin did it anyway.

Given such an example, why would voters view it differently?

The objective here should not be to punish Svend Robinson for his politics, whether we agree with them or not. The point is to ensure that the criminal law will be feared. Judge Fratkin has failed miserably to do so.

- Link Byfield

Link Byfield is the chairman of the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy.

"Just Between Us" is a feature service of the Citizens Centre for Freedom and Democracy. The purpose of the Citizens Centre is to improve the quality of life for all Canadians by promoting policies that foster individual initiative and personal responsibility.

Read the Globe and Mail story on Svend Robinson here


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