Supreme Court of Canada strikes down life without parole ruling
OTTAWA, ON – The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled against the punishment of life without parole for mass murderers. The decision was announced today, Friday, May 27, 2022, and made retroactive to the time it was enacted in 2011.
In the ruling, Chief Justice Richard Wagner wrote that the court determined unanimously that life in prison without parole was cruel and unusual, and therefore illegal under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The decision from Canada’s highest court came from the case of Alexandre Bissonette, who in 2017, killed six people at a Quebec City mosque. Bissonette will now be eligible for full parole after his first life sentence, which equates to 25 year in prison.
Sentencing law for multiple killers immediately reverts to what it was in 2011, before the Conservative government led by Stephen Harper authorized judges to be able to apply multiple life sentences together, one for each person who was killed.