Behavioural Cultural Norms Incompatible with Western Society
"She wanted him to drive her home from a party she'd attended. Rather than take her home, the offender drove her to an empty parking lot.""He told her they would have fun. He parked the car and got into the back seat. He moved closer to the victim and forcibly kissed her. He put his hand under her dress and touched her vaginal area over her underwear.""After he tried again to kiss her and she did not respond, he moved away from her.""She asked if he would still drive her home and he said no. She got out of the car, and he left her in the parking lot."Justice Scott Pratt, Ontario courthouse
The Ontario Court of Justice in Windsor. |
In
an attempt to avoid being deemed 'inadmissible' to Canada for 'serious
criminality' by the Immigration and Refugee Board, Uber driver Sevan
Halabi of Windsor, Ontario, a permanent resident of Canada, hoped to
receive a lighter sentence to avoid deportation. Permanent residents of
Canada, if sentenced to over six months in prison, according to the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, can be regarded as inadmissible
to Canada. What Mr. Halabi, through his lawyer, sought to persuade the
presiding judge was to sentence him to six months less a day plus
probation.
"It would require me to cut the sentence nearly in half, solely to assist him in avoiding future penalties. I cannot do that",
responded Justice Pratt. A young woman had engaged Mr. Halabi, an Iraqi
Uber driver, to drive her home from an event she had attended on
October 9, 2022. Rather than take his passenger on the trip she
expected, the Uber driver subjected her to a terrifying ordeal of sexual
harassment, the threat of rape and violence by implication, and finally
abandonment.
The
woman's attacker was a married man with two sons, age 14 and 10.
Presenting himself as a family man, Sevan Halabi's attempt at sympathy
was linked to appealing for a sentence of six months less a day to avert
any potential immigration consequences. The Crown had argued that
Halabi merited a year in jail, and then three years of probation.
Born
in Iraq, Halabi emigrated from his home country with his family in 2018
to Canada. Halabi is a permanent resident of Canada as a result of the
criminal charge impeding an application for citizenship. His wife and
children did achieve Canadian citizenship. As for the charges brought
against him, Mr. Halabi maintained his innocence during an interview
with the producer of a pre-sentence report.
Justice Pratt was informed "he regrets what happened, has learned a lesson, and that this will not happen again", the decision in the pre-sentence report conveyed too the Judge. In response, Justice Pratt said: "The
offence has hindered her professional life as a teacher and her
personal life as well. She is fearful and angry. She didn't know if she
would be raped or killed [in Halabi's car that night], and that fear
continues to impact her life", responded the Judge.
To
further appeal for sympathy from the court, Mr. Halabi who had not been
held in custody prior to his appearance at the court before the Judge,
lived as he would normally with his family and decided to bring his
children along for emotional impact. For the sentencing submissions he
arranged for his children to be present in court. "On that point, both children were visibly upset and crying during the proceeding", observed Justice Pratt. "Respectfully,
I question why they were here in the first place. It was not a case
where their father was in custody and so this would have been a rare
opportunity to see him in person."
"[Halabi]
has been out of custody throughout this case and only appeared
virtually from Iraq. I cannot find they were brought into the courtroom
to engender sympathy from the court, but given the offender's focus on
how my sentence could affect his family, that is certainly an inference
available to be drawn", the Judge concluded.
"It is troubling that sexual offences committed by professional drivers are sufficiently common that they have created their own body of case law. But that is what has happened.""In my view ... a sentence of six months less a day for this conduct would be unfit. It would prioritize the offender's personal circumstances over the need to denounce and deter his conduct and would not be in line with relevant case law.""It would be an inappropriate and artificial sentence imposed only to avoid legitimate consequences created by Parliament."Justice Scott Pratt, Ontario Superior Court
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Mohamed Al Ballouz, who now goes by the name Levana, is serving a life sentence with no possibility of parole for 25 years for murdering a woman and two children. Photo by Court exhibit |
This
sexual assault case is but one of many where men from cultures where
the place of women is subservient to that of men, religiously inspired
and historically adapted into a culture of male privilege and female
suffering, gravitate to another culture and system of law. Correctional
Service of Canada recently completed an assessment of a convicted killer
that decided against Mohamed Al Ballouz of Brossard, Quebec being
admitted to a women's prison.
This
man, convicted of murdering his wife Synthia Bussieres and their two
sons -- five-year-old Eliam and two-year-old Zac in 2022, was sentenced
to life in prison in December, with no possibility of parole for 25
years. While in custody, the man, also convicted of setting fire to the
family condo, transitioned to a woman. With his new name of Levana, he
asked that he be preferentially incarcerated at the Joliette Institution
for Women, northeast of Montreal. Thankfully for the women at Joliette,
the decision was that Al Ballouz remain in a men's prison.
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Synthia Bussières with her sons Éliam Al Ballouz, left, and Zac Al Ballouz. (Obituary) |
Labels: Aggression, Consequences, Middle Eastern Emigrants, Responsibility, Sexual Misconduct, Violent Criminal Acts
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