Copycat judicial industry serves the Patriarchy, not Canadians: Yet another judge enables breach of trust and assault of girl by RCMP officer. Judge Kelly Winchester kisses him with a few months of house arrest with freedom to work and run errands. Vulgarly unjust, as usual, while saying to the victim and her family: “I have no doubt that the impact of this case will take years to heal.”

Mountie gets community sentence for assaulting girl, breach of trust by Hina Alam, The Canadian Press, January 26, 2024, The Globe and Mail

A New Brunswick RCMP officer found guilty of assaulting a 16-year-old girl who he was hoping to marry has been given a two-year sentence to be served in the community.

Provincial court Judge Kelly Winchester on Friday sentenced Ibrahim to house arrest for the first nine months to be served at his sister’s house in Quebec, though he is allowed out of the house for work and once a week between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to perform personal errands. After the first nine months, Ibrahim is no longer subject to a curfew but he cannot contact the victim or her family.

I expect with no real punishment and zero deterrent, we can expect the victim to be assaulted again, or worse, murdered while our authorities scratch their heads, confused why there is so much femicide in Canada.

“I realize that whatever sentence I impose today will probably not satisfy the hearing,”No need to patronize us your hon0ur, we know what you’ve done. the judge said. The Crown had asked for a sentence of 12 to 15 months in jail, while the defence asked that the time be served under house arrest.

Earlier, as Winchester laid out her reasons for the sentence, Ibrahim looked down at the floor and shook his head briefly from side to side.

Reading parts of the victim impact statement, Crown prosecutor Christopher Lavigne said the girl has been dealing with depression and is unable to get back to school.

“She says her trust in people, especially the police, has been compromised, and she no longer feels safe around authority,” he said.

Ibrahim was a relatively new RCMP officer and in his first posting in Woodstock, N.B., when he met the victim and her family in June 2021. The following January, the court heard, Ibrahim asked the family for the 16-year-old’s hand in marriage.

The mother said the victim was too young to get married and asked the accused to wait until she was at least 19 or 20. The parents agreed that Ibrahim should get to know their daughter.

The court heard during the trial that Ibrahim agreed to the arrangement, and began visiting the family at their home and at their business when he was off duty, or by taking overtime shifts in a nearby detachment.

The victim had a “romantic interest” in Ibrahim at the beginning of the relationship, the court heard.

But as the relationship progressed, the victim described being grabbed by the accused, handcuffed and hit.

On one occasion, the judge said when she found him guilty in December, the victim said Ibrahim handcuffed her without her consent. “He kept going very, very tight,” the victim testified. Another time, the victim was hit with a baton “although not hard.”

The judge said videos entered as testimony showed the use of force was “blatant” and the action was not fun or playful. “This is not the behaviour of getting to know one another in these videos,” Winchester said.

Ibrahim is seen hitting the victim, and after the assaults he would say he was “only joking” but she did not take these actions as a joke, the judge said.

At the sentencing hearing, Ibrahim asked the court for “mercy.” He told the court he wanted to apologize to everyone, including the family.

“I would love for the public to have trust in the police officers,” I will never trust an RCMP or Canadian police officer again, after RCMP and Calgary police under Steve Harper Anti-Terrorist squad invaded my private home warrant-less trying to scare me away after I served the defendants (Encana/Ovintiv, AER and Alberta gov’t) their legal papers. Resigning from his job is insufficient to regain anyone’s trust in the RCMP or any Canadian police – they are notoriously violent breakers of the law they are hired to uphold. he said. “I lost my job, I had to resign. I’m completely destroyed.” His lawyer said he resigned from the RCMP last week, and the resignation takes effect Feb. 5.

Winchester asked him if he had anything else to say, and he again offered an apology to the family. Only the victim’s father was present in the courtroom.

“I would love to tell them that I’m sorry. I never meant to hurt anybody. I’m so sorry about that,” he said.

The judge had a message for the victim’s father and his family: “I wish you all well in your healing process,” she said. “I have no doubt that the impact of this case will take years to heal.”The nerve of this condescending judge. Unbelievable gall, she let’s the abuser off with a sweet kiss, while rubbing in the harm he caused the victim and her family.

Refer also to:

From coast to coast, misogynistic rape-enabling judges coddle and sweet handle men, notably those in positions of authority, abusing their power, raping and or assaulting their victims.

Beyond Caveman Canada disgusting:

2024: Canada’s judicial-pedophile industry strikes again. Judge Reginald Harris sentence contradicts his verbiage, kisses child porn collector Nicholas Kyle David Symons with tiny stay free sentence, let’s him attend school and run errands. Law societies (self regulators of lawyers) licence known convicted pedophiles to practice law; pedophile lawyers become pedophile judges.

2017: Canada’s judicial rape-enabling rots all the way to the top: Enabling sexual predators? Enabling Canadian judges revictimizing sexual assault victims? Enabling Canada’s demented abusive legal system? Threatening sexual assault victims to keep silent? Galling, throw-women-back-into-the-cave statements to Criminal Lawyers’ Association by Canada’s Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin

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