By comparison, a youth sentence would mean a maximum of six years in custody, followed by a supervision order for another four years. “I just drove him there and gave him money to go in and get it,” she told the Gladue report author. His attendance — over 50 per cent — was somehow considered “good,” even though he was often either late or missed classes once he got to school. His adoptive mother wasn’t aware of any concerns and “wasn’t sure what he did there.” As he told one of the doctors, what he mostly did was pace the halls. “I practise in Regina, my kids went to school here,” Aaron Fox said Thursday after court, in a phone interview.
Source: National Post April 11, 2019 23:37 UTC