A U.S. citizen who illegally entered Canada 20 minutes after being deported has lost an appeal of the nine-month jail sentence he received from a Surrey provincial court judge in 2020.
Gabriale Rene St. Constantine, 59, pleaded guilty to one count of returning to Canada without authorization, after being deported under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, and was sentenced to nine months in jail less 47 days for time served.
The sentencing judge in Surrey didn鈥檛 accept his explanation he entered Canada because of political unrest and violence in Oregon and as a 鈥淐aucasian citizen of the United States of Jewish faith鈥 had experienced intimidation, harrassment, and threats 鈥渙r violence鈥 there.
St. Constantine also felt, given his age and medical conditions, he would be much safer from COVID-19 in Canada than in the United States but the judge concluded he 鈥渨ould have been well aware that COVID is a global pandemic.鈥
She characterized his actions as 鈥渟elfish,鈥 and found he flagrantly disregarded Canadian law by re鈥慹ntering Canada only 20 minutes after being deported, and ignoring COVID鈥19-related health restrictions and protocols.
St. Constantine appealed the sentence as demonstrably unfit, arguing the judge overemphasized deterrence and failed to consider 鈥渃ollateral consequences associated with COVID-19.鈥
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Subject to two previous deportation orders, he was arrested by Canada Border Services Agency officers and taken to the Pacific Highway Processing Centre where he pursued but later abandoned a claim for refugee status.
鈥淣ine hours after his arrest, a third deportation order was issued to Mr. St. Constantine,鈥 Justice Leonard Marchand, of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia, noted in his Jan. 11 .
鈥淗e was escorted to the border and returned to the United States. Twenty minutes after his deportation and removal, Mr. St. Constantine again entered Canada unlawfully. He was promptly arrested. He candidly admitted that, despite his arrest, he intended to enter Canada again. He indicated that he preferred being in jail in Canada to being in the United States.鈥
St. Constantine was held in custody until his sentencing hearing and was returned to the U.S. after his sentence was served. Marchand noted in his reasons that St. Constantine has a diploma in computer science and most recently resided at a shelter for the homeless in Eugene, Oregon. The appeal court judge dismissed St. Constantine鈥檚 appeal, with Justices Barbara Fisher and Patrice Abrioux concurring.
鈥淭he judge imposed a sentence that was toward the top end of the range. In doing so, she took a defensible view of the circumstances,鈥 Marchand decided. 鈥淪he appropriately emphasized deterrence and did not err in her application of the principles of proportionality, parity and collateral consequences. Mr. St. Constantine has failed to establish that the sentence he received was demonstrably unfit.鈥
tom.zytaruk@surreynowleader.com
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