WhatFinger

14-year-old “temporary” court injunction

Pro-Life Heroine Linda Gibbons Sentenced to Only One Additional Day in Prison


By Guest Column ——--July 29, 2008

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Tony Gosgnach, Lifesitenews.net An Ontario provincial court judge took a subtle jab at a 14-year-old “temporary” court injunction prohibiting pro-life activity outside designated Toronto abortuaries when he sentenced veteran pro-life demonstrator Linda Gibbons on Monday. Gibbons, a post-aborted woman herself, has in previous years spent over 5 years in prison for her peaceful witnesses for life.

Gibbons was arrested again last May 15 outside the Scott “Clinic” abortion site in downtown Toronto after violating terms of the 1994 injunction, which prohibits pro-life activity within 20 metres of the site’s doors. As has been the custom, she was charged with obstructing a peace officer, rather than the more appropriate charge of violating a court order. Pro-life activists have long believed this has been a politically motivated maneuver dictated from higher up aimed at denying Gibbons the right to a jury trial and the pro-life movement’s ability to challenge the injunction on constitutional grounds. Upon the reading of the charge, Justice J. Sutherland immediately questioned how it was possible to obstruct a peace officer by disobeying a court order. Crown Attorney L. Shin offered a convoluted explanation that revolved around the view that it was Gibbons’s failure to leave the injunction zone when ordered to do so that constituted obstruction. “I’m not sure that’s correct,” replied the skeptical judge. Nonetheless, the case proceeded with Sutherland entering a not guilty plea on Gibbons’s behalf after she remained silent, as has been her consistent practice in solidarity with the voiceless unborn. Sheriff David Usher, who has commonly been on the scene when Gibbons staged her demonstrations, testified that he was summoned to the site on May 15 after a call from abortuary staff advising that pro-life protesters were outside the building in contravention of the court order. Interestingly, perhaps hinting at the cosy relationship abortuary staff have with law enforcement authorities, Usher used only her first name in saying that “Maria” (abortuary director Maria Corsillo) told him the abortuary was in operation while Gibbons was within the injunction zone. He added Gibbons was holding a sign depicting a baby with the caption, “Why, mom? When I have so much love to give,” held pamphlets and had strewn a number of plastic fetuses along the sidewalk in front of the abortuary. After being handed a written copy of the court order, Gibbons tore it up and threw it to the ground, he said. Usher then summoned two police officers to arrest Gibbons, who remained silent throughout. Gibbons said not a word through the entire court hearing as well, simply rising from her seat in the prisoner’s box when addressed by the judge and sitting down afterward. After observing that the wording in the information on the charge was “unusual” and “odd,” Sutherland found Gibbons guilty. Shin then asked the judge to levy a stiff sentence of six months in prison in addition to time already served, making for a total imprisonment of eight and a half months. She said “denunciation” and “general deterrence” were the motivating factors in requesting such a heavy penalty. “She wants to be a martyr, doesn’t she? It certainly looks that way,” Sutherland remarked in reply. About 15 of Gibbons’s supporters in the courtroom – many from the Show the Truth tour, which was in town – winced in anticipation of the coming sentence. However, the judge went on to give Gibbons a two-for-one credit on time already served, translating to five months. Noting that it was difficult to come up with an appropriate sentence in light of the fact that Gibbons would go out of her way to violate the injunction regardless, and any penalty he laid down would not make a difference, he sentenced her to five months imprisonment – including time already served. With the two-for-one credit, that meant she would serve only one more day in jail with no probation order in addition. As far back as 1998, Campaign Life Coalition has been protesting that police and Toronto Crown attorneys have been laying inappropriate charges of obstructing a peace officer on Gibbons and others who have been arrested for peacefully violating the court injunction. CLC has called this a “serious abuse of legal process” and has pointed to a 1998 case in which the late Rev. Ken Campbell (I fondly remember my friend Ken & I protesting the "same-sex marriage" bill in front of Nathan Phillips Square in Toronto years ago...this bill was introduced in Ontario legislature by the extremist socialist NDP government of Bob Rae....happily, largely due to the hue & cry raised against this accursed bill, it was shot down - RJ) introduced by the had his charge of obstructing a peace officer thrown out by Justice Milton Cadsby, who termed it baseless. Cadsby also questioned the legitimacy of the injunction, noting that, as a “temporary” measure, it was time it was re-examined. The injunction had been engineered by the virulently pro-abortion, socialist NDP government and its extreme feminist attorney-general, Marion Boyd, who went on to mishandle the Paul Bernardo-Karla Homolka murder case. Successive Progressive Conservative and Liberal governments have continued the major abuse of legal powers and failed to either drop the injunction or move to make it permanent. The Mike Harris Conservatives were an especially big disappointment since, after many appeals from pro-life Ontarians, they failed to take any decisive actions to have the oppressive restrictions completely dropped. “The Toronto police and the Ontario attorney-general appear to be directed by abortion clinic staff to bypass normal legal process to avoid any interference with clinic abortion activity,” CLC said in a 1998 statement. Remarkably, a decade later, that state of affairs still exists.

Pro-Life Veteran Linda Gibbons Arrested Again Outside Toronto Abortion Mill

TORONTO, May 15, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - Peaceful pro-life advocate, Linda Gibbons, was arrested today for silently protesting at the Scott abortuary in Toronto. Gibbons, an experienced and well-known pro-Life activist, is not unfamiliar with the prison scene and the dealings with the law that may ensue. Arriving in the morning, the veteran pro-life campaigner proceeded to dump roughly 100 headless plastic baby dolls on the steps of the center. Carrying a sign conveying the innocent love of a child, Gibbons silently paced back and forth in front of the mill, to the dismay of a female abortuary employee. The first police officers to arrive began to question Gibbons but gained no response. The agitated worker then invited the police into the mill after suggesting that an on-the-scene LifeSiteNews.com photographer should be prohibited from taking pictures. After several minutes the police returned from the inside and continued to ask Gibbons to leave, but again, as is her custom Gibbons remained silent in solidarity with the silence of the unborn. At approximately 10:00am the Sheriff arrived on the scene and had Gibbons placed in a cruiser after reading her the ‘bubble zone’ injunction, which confirms the existence of a sixty-foot area surrounding the abortion mill that prohibits pro-life activists from witnessing in close proximity to the abortuary. Since her first arrest in 1994, shortly after the ‘bubble-zone’ court order, Gibbons has been arrested numerous times and has spent over 5 years in prison in defiance of abortion. Because of her dedication, she is known as nothing less then a hero among the pro-life movement and has inspired many to join the cause. For related LifeSiteNews.com coverage: Type, “Linda Gibbons” into the LifeSiteNews.com search engine

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