The Supreme Court of Canada would not have heard a sentence of a person who set fire to the Eaton Center Mall in Toronto in 2012, killing two people and injured several others.
Christopher husband was found guilty in two cases in the death of Ahmed Hasan and Nixon Nirmalendran in 2019.
He was also found guilty of aggressive attack in five cases, one of the criminal negligence suffered physical damage, and one of the intentional discharge of a gun while being negligent in relation to life or safety of another person.
Husbands were sentenced to life imprisonment in both the cases of manglotter, with a panel intelligence with a minimum of seven years, as well as jail conditions at the same time for other offenses.
Husbands appealed for punishment on several grounds, arguing that they were protesting and trial judges failed to properly implement the legal structure to consider social context.
Last year, the Ontario Court of Appeal found that there was no “basis for intervention” in sentences handed over to husbands.