Appeal Court axes mandatory one-year minimum for internet child luring
TORONTO — The mandatory minimum sentence of one year in prison for luring a child into sexual activity via the internet is unconstitutional, Ontario’s top court has ruled.
In upholding an earlier decision, the Court of Appeal said that forcing the courts to impose at least a 12-month jail term could, in some cases, be out of line with the various acts captured by the law.
Canadians, the court said, would find the one-year minimum to be abhorrent and intolerable to their sense of decency in cases where a person’s comparative blameworthiness is less serious.
“Application of the mandatory minimum to such a wide range of behaviour would result in sentences that are grossly disproportionate for some individuals,” the Appeal Court said.


