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Overview

Women in Criminal Justice is a book where women judges and criminal lawyers tell of cases that they have found particularly challenging. Some were disquieting, perplexing or had surprising turns, many are high-profile, and many continue to have interesting social or personal effect. Unique to this book, are distinctly women’s perspectives, and many chapters deal with sexual assault, Indigenous, child protection and motherhood, mental health, LGBTQ+, immigration, terrorism, and other vitally pertinent issues of the decade.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780994735249
Publisher: Durvile Publications
Publication date: 05/31/2018
Series: True Cases , #4
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.31(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.65(d)

About the Author

The Rt. Hon. Beverley McLachlin The Right Honourable Beverley McLachlin was appointed Chief Justice of Canada on Jan. 7, 2000. She is both the first woman in Canada to hold this position and the longest serving Chief Justice of Canada. She retired on Dec. 15, 2017. William Trudell William Trudell is the Chair of the Canadian Council of Criminal Defence Lawyers, a Fellow of The American College of Trial Lawyers, and recipient of The Law Society Medal. He practices at Simcoe Chambers in Toronto.

Read an Excerpt

Honourable Susan Lang
“Flawed Forensic Evidence: The Motherisk Hair Analysis Independent Review”
Overarching problems were rooted in the lack of adequate oversight by the Hospital. As a result, the Lab continued to test hair for forensic purposes before it even received clinical accreditation in 2011. Moreover, clinical accreditation related only to the Lab’s processes and did not assess the robustness or reliability of the hair tests. Sadly, the bottom line was that the Lab’s hair tests were flawed. They should not have been relied upon to make decisions in either child protection or criminal cases.

Honourable Nancy Morrison. “The Courage of Vicki”
There was a mean shed in a nearby field. Small and old, a sometime pump house, it had a dirt floor, upright rough-hewn slats for walls, some barbed wire, broken pipes. Inside, feed for cattle. An old bathtub was outside, to be filled with water for the cattle. Its only door could not be seen from the grandmother’s farm. It was one of the places he took the child to rape her.

Honourable Lise Maisonneuve. “How to Shift a Culture”
I understand that the readers of this book will be a varied lot, but I know that many women will read it pondering their futures in the criminal law arena. In this book, you’ll read many essays from experienced criminal lawyers — all women — who, despite the many challenges they faced in continuing and succeeding in their careers, persisted and, in turn, their contributions to the law have had important and positive impacts for both individuals specifically and society as a whole. They are examples for us all. In light of those stories, I see one of my roles as Chief Justice as encouraging women to follow in their footsteps. Part of that role involves encouraging and maintaining the gender diversity of our Court today as an administrative function as Chief Justice. But another part of my role is personal — telling my own story and the lessons I have learned and can share.

Honourable Danielle Côté: “Certainty? Certainly Not”
A judge is ultimately alone when deciding a case and is always alert to the danger of a wrongful conviction. The truth is that not only is the judge alone, but if a wrongful verdict is rendered, also keenly aware that many may point out the judge as being a bad judge, incapable of rendering justice.
Perfection is not possible. It is out of reach for human beings. A good judge is always trying to reach perfection. But is there certainty? Certainly not. But reaching for perfection helps me sleep at night.

Honourable Iona Jaffe. “The Toronto 18”
Bound by his own sense of confidentiality, my colleague did not reveal any details. But he did make a gesture with one hand. He pointed down to the ground. I was clearly confused. He pointed to the ground again. It was at that moment, sitting in my office on the 35th floor of the Exchange Tower in Toronto, that it struck me. My colleague was pointing to the floor of the Exchange Tower. “This building is the target of the terrorist attack?” He just looked at me, and I knew I was right. To say I felt an instant sense of unease was an understatement. I wanted to leave the building of course, but my feelings of anxiety were mixed with feelings of guilt. I had knowledge and could leave the building if I wanted. But I could not share what I knew with anyone else in the building. Not yet. And I could not tell my family that the building to which I commuted everyday was apparently in the cross-hairs of a terrorist group.

Senator Kim Pate. “A Study in Discrimination and Inequity”
When I was in the unit manager’s office at the end of the [prison] visit, the head of security interrupted our meeting to advise that he was planning to bring in the emergency response team. I asked why. He advised that the women on the segregation tier, the first range I visited that day, were rioting — screaming, yelling threats and banging the bars of their cells. I advised that I had been down there speaking with those women a few hours before and they were upset about the lack of programming and spiritual support — they were all Indigenous — but that they were working on a group grievance to address their issues. What was striking to me was what the head of security said: “Why don’t you take the baby down? I hear they like your baby.” I wondered, How serious could the risk be that the women posed if the head of security believed a baby could calm the situation?

Table of Contents

Hon. Susan Lang on flawed forensic evidence
Hon. Nancy Morrison on a horrendous case of sexual abuse
Hon. Lise Maisonneuve on the emerging role of women in criminal law
Hon. Danielle Côté
on the pressures of Judging
Hon. Iona Jaffe on the Toronto 18 terrorism case
Senator Kim Pate on the plight of an Indigenous woman in prison
Jennifer Briscoe on the Fly-in Squad in Canada’s far North
Catherine Dunn on Indigenous victims of domestic violence
Kaysi Fagan on a woman caught in the world of drug trafficking
Deborah Hatch on the ubiquitousness of wrongful convictions
Karen Hudson on people in the gallery of criminal justice
Barbara Jackman on immigration and human rights
Lucie Joncas on interacting with a population at risk
Susan Kyle on being a Crown and a mother
Jill Presser on the fight for LGBTQ+ justice
Rosellen Sullivan on a 13-year-old’s loss of innocence
Jennifer Trehearne on interaction of courts and mental disorders
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