Pubdate: Fri, 16 Oct 2009 Source: Victoria Times-Colonist (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Times Colonist Contact: http://www2.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/letters.html Website: http://www.timescolonist.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/481 Author: Louise Dickson, Staff Writer JAIL A 'RISK' FOR HANDLESS MAN A Victoria drug courier with no hands will not be able to protect himself if he's sent to prison, where people are picked on for being different, his defence lawyer argued yesterday on the second day of his sentencing hearing in B.C. Supreme Court. "Terry Bazzani, if incarcerated, would be subject to the risk of harm," said Jordan Watt. "He would be subjected to conditions which border on cruel and unusual punishment." Bazzani, 39, was arrested at Toronto's Lester B. Pearson airport in June 2006 after ingesting $204,000 worth of heroin and smuggling it into Canada from Colombia. He pleaded guilty Sept. 2 to importing heroin. Because of Bazzani's physical limitations, Watt has asked Justice Keith Bracken to impose a conditional sentence followed by two to three years' probation with strict conditions. Federal prosecutor Dirk Ryneveld is seeking a three-to four-year sentence in a federal institution. Bracken will deliver his decision Oct. 26. Yesterday, Watt reminded the court about the trauma Bazzani endured after his arrest during his five-week incarceration at a maximum-security prison in Ontario. "He was in lockup 231/2 hours a day. He was unable to brush his teeth. He was unable to comb his hair. That would happen again if Terry Bazzani was sent to an institution." On Thursday, Crown witness Diane Thiessen, manager of clinical services for Correctional Service of Canada, Pacific region, testified that B.C.'s nine federal institutions accommodate people with all kinds of disabilities, including amputees, paraplegics and quadriplegics. However, Bazzani's personal physician, Dr. James Henry, testified Bazzani would be in danger in an institution. Henry, who also cares for inmates at the Vancouver Island Regional Correctional Centre twice a week, testified that he often looks after offenders who have been involved in violent incidents. It makes little difference if Bazzani is sent to a provincial or a federal institution, said Watt. "Jail is jail. Violence doesn't disappear when someone enters a federal institution." A conditional sentence is appropriate because Bazzani had no previous criminal record and complied with his strict bail conditions for the past 31/2 years, said Watt, adding his client has admitted responsibility and is remorseful. "He's trying to better his life. He's trying to become a personal trainer. That's an incredible feat. This is an individual who has no hands, half a foot and who has endured multiple surgeries on his face." Importing heroin into Canada is a serious offence, but Bazzani was a pawn, said Watt. "He was not an importer in the true sense of the word. He did move heroin from Colombia to Toronto but he knew nothing about the organizational structure and was left completely in the dark with respect to the criminal organization." Ryneveld cited other cases showing criminal organizations pick weak and vulnerable individuals to be drug couriers. They look for students, the elderly and people with disabilities. Bazzani was susceptible to the lure of a quick buck, said Ryneveld. "The court ought not to send the message that people of this ilk can commit serious offences with impunity." Bazzani, whose birth defects resulted from his mother taking illicit drugs, showed no regard for others when he brought 510 grams of heroin into Canada, said Ryneveld. "And he himself should know of the dangers of drugs, not only to users and addicts, but to unborn children." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr