Post # 242
800 words; 4 minutes to read
Summary: a criminal conviction carries many consequences that can last a lifetime. The idea that a sentence is ever ‘over’ is not consistent with reality.
La version française suit par la bénévole Rachel Cauver
So many negative consequences
So what are some of these consequences beyond the sentence? The CBA documents lists quite a few of them:
– A conviction can affect your access to your minor children if you have them
– A criminal conviction can impair relationships with family, friends, colleagues and acquaintances in lasting ways. Marriages break up. Friends abandon you. Colleagues shun you.
– New relationships are also affected. You will always wonder what anyone you meet knows about you, or might find out, or might think about you if they did know. You may go out less, meet fewer people, and censor what you tell people about yourself.
– You may be required to provide a DNA sample for police records
– You may lose your job, and are likely to have considerable difficulty gaining reasonable employment since many employers screen out those with criminal records.
– A criminal record can prevent you from entering certain occupations or professions, or certain training programs. It can greatly limit even your opportunities to be a volunteer.
– Your photograph, fingerprints and other identifying information may be retained and used by police.
– In many provinces you are not able to serve on a jury
– You will likely not be able to enter the United States, and may be prevented from entering other countries depending on the data that Canada exchanges with them or whether they ask about a criminal record on a traveler’s entry form.
– For some kinds of offences you may have difficulty getting a Canadian passport.
– Someone who is not a Canadian citizen may be deported and denied re-entry to Canada after a conviction. Pending that deportation a person may be held in custody for very long periods of time, regardless of the length of the criminal sentence;
– Even if not deported, a person convicted of a crime may be denied citizenship
The internet makes it worse
The effects of a criminal record have been dramatically worsened by the internet. People can and do look up others they meet, and the way that search engines are structured, if a criminal event has been reported it is very likely to come up on such searches. While an arrest or criminal charge would come up, a subsequent dropping of charges likely would not because those are less likely to be reported. The internet also gives license to anyone who wants to ‘troll’ someone with a criminal record. So when the police issue a release about someone they have arrested they are putting a permanent online ‘guilty’ marker on that person.
A lifetime sentence
All these consequences, unlike an actual sentence, have no expiry date. They last forever. In that sense, every criminal sentence is a life sentence.
These consequences exist even though the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that “individuals who have paid their debt to society” should not face further obstacles in their lives.
Even worse, some of these negative consequences can occur as a result of being arrested and charged, even if there is never a conviction.
Several million Canadians – perhaps one in seven or one in eight adults – have had to deal with these consequences at least to some degree. If you include close family of those people, a huge number of Canadians have their lives hampered or limited – or much worse than that – because our systems never forgive people for their wrongs. But we could and we should.
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La version française
L’article examine les effets durables et souvent négligés des condamnations pénales au-delà de la peine officielle. Plus de 90 % des affaires criminelles se concluent par un plaidoyer de culpabilité plutôt que par un procès, souvent sur les conseils d’un avocat. Le manque de compréhension des avocats quant aux conséquences d’une condamnation augmente le risque de ne pas fournir les meilleurs conseils à leurs clients. Les répercussions collatérales ont un impact plus dévastateur que la peine initiale en raison de leur caractère intemporel, affectant profondément différents aspects de la vie d’un individu. Les rapports de l’Association du Barreau canadien révèlent les nombreuses conséquences, telles que la perte potentielle de la garde des enfants mineurs, des relations personnelles et professionnelles tendues, ainsi que la stigmatisation sociale liée à l’étiquette de condamné. Les condamnations peuvent engendrer des difficultés à trouver et à maintenir un emploi stable, ainsi que des restrictions concernant certaines opportunités professionnelles. Les limitations de voyage vers l’étranger et l’acquisition d’une nouvelle citoyenneté sont d’autres ramifications fréquentes, ce qui expose les immigrants au risque d’expulsion ou de longues périodes de détention.
L’article met également en évidence le rôle amplificateur de l’internet. Grâce à la technologie, les informations relatives aux arrestations et condamnations sont aisément accessibles en ligne, souvent sans tenir compte des développements ultérieurs concernant l’abandon des charges. Cette trace numérique laisse une empreinte permanente de culpabilité, indépendamment du résultat légal final, stigmatisant davantage les personnes dans les contextes sociaux et professionnels. Contrairement aux peines judiciaires, ces ramifications perdurent dans le temps, transformant chaque condamnation pénale en une peine à perpétuité. L’article critique le fait que les individus ayant payé leur dette envers la société font néanmoins face à des obstacles persistants au quotidien, touchant près d’un Canadien sur sept. Cela constitue un appel à une sensibilisation accrue du public et à une réforme juridique afin que les anciens détenus ne soient pas indéfiniment punis pour leurs condamnations passées.
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