His Majesty the King v. Harry Arthur Cope (Day 2/2) (41431)
The Indigenous respondent pleaded guilty to the aggravated assault of his Indigenous common law partner. He had a significant criminal record and a history of serious mental illness. The sentencing judge concluded the respondent’s incarceration was required to protect the public. The respondent was sentenced to five years in prison for the aggravated assault and eight months’ incarceration for breaches of release orders. A majority of the Court of Appeal granted leave to appeal the sentence, allowed the appeal, and varied the sentence to three years’ imprisonment for aggravated assault. The dissenting justice would have granted leave to appeal and dismissed the appeal.
Argued Date
2025-12-12
Keywords
Criminal law — Sentencing — Considerations — Aboriginal offender and Aboriginal female victim — Sentencing of Aboriginal offender for aggravated assault — Offence against vulnerable person — What does the deferential standard of review mean in terms of weighing sentencing factors and making factual findings? — How should courts approach sentencing when ss. 718.04, 718.201, and 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code apply?
Notes
(Nova Scotia) (Criminal) (By Leave)
Language
English Audio
Disclaimers
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