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Manitoba promises more Crown attorneys to focus on violent crime and guns

WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government has announced an additional 10 positions for its prosecutions service, with a special focus on violent and gun-related crime.
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Manitoba Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen speaks to the media at the Legislative Building in Winnipeg on Wednesday, Sept. 1, 2021.The provincial government is adding 10 positions to its prosecutions service, with a special focus on violent and gun-related crime. THE CANADIAN PRESS/David Lipnowski

WINNIPEG — The Manitoba government has announced an additional 10 positions for its prosecutions service, with a special focus on violent and gun-related crime.

The new positions are to include Crown attorneys who will specialize in areas such as organized crime and firearms trafficking, Justice Minister Kelvin Goertzen said Tuesday. The new positions are expected to cost the province $1.4 million a year.

It is the latest in a series of crime-related promises made by the Progressive Conservative government amid rising crime rates in both urban and rural areas. In November, the province announced $3 million for a new specialized police unit to track down violent criminals, including those wanted on arrest warrants.

Goertzen said there's a growing need to address gun-related crime.

"With 3D or ghost guns becoming more prolific, both in Manitoba and across Canada, this has highlighted the need to have individuals … who can provide timely information," Goertzen said.

Crown attorneys in the province have long complained about high workloads. The new personnel could be in place within a few months to ease the burden, Goertzen said.

Winnipeg police Chief Danny Smyth welcomed the announcement and said he hopes the prosecutors can also focus on dealing with new bail guidelines and help prevent violent offenders from being released as often.

A recent federal law codified a "principle of restraint" that was affirmed in a Supreme Court of Canada case, which emphasized the release of detainees at the earliest reasonable opportunity and on the least onerous conditions, based on the circumstances of each case.

"We're certainly experiencing some of that, where we encounter someone in the community as part of a criminal investigation, only to discover that they're already on bail for a violent or a gun-related offence," Smyth said.

Some provinces have called on the federal government to establish a "reverse onus" system for specific firearm offences that would require the person seeking bail to demonstrate why they should not remain behind bars.

Federal Justice Minister David Lametti said he would give the idea serious consideration. It is on the agenda of a meeting of federal, provincial and territorial justice ministers scheduled for March 10 in Ottawa.

Manitoba's Opposition New Democrats said the new prosecutions staff are a last-minute attempt by the government to fix past mistakes before an election scheduled for October.

"This government forced (Crown attorneys) to go three years without a contract, and in the last two years, 26 attorneys have left their positions, many recruited to other provinces," NDP justice critic Nahanni Fontaine said in a written statement.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 21, 2023.

Steve Lambert, The Canadian Press

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