Military Sentencing: Difference between revisions

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No one in any military force, domestic or foreign, can be exempted from the regular laws of Canada unless explicitly provided by legislation.<ref>
No one in any military force, domestic or foreign, can be exempted from the regular laws of Canada unless explicitly provided by legislation.<ref>
''Reference as to whether members of the Military or Naval Forces of the United States of America are exempt from Criminal Proceedings in Canadian Criminal Courts'', [1943] SCR 483, [http://canlii.ca/t/fsldn 1943 CanLII 31] (SCC){{perSCC|Duff CJ}}{{atp|497}} ("...the constitutional principle by which, that is to say, a soldier does not, in virtue of his military character, escape the jurisdiction of the civil courts of this country. Nothing short of legislative enactment, or its equivalent, can change this principle.")<br>
{{CanLIIRPC|Reference as to whether members of the Military or Naval Forces of the United States of America are exempt from Criminal Proceedings in Canadian Criminal Courts|fsldn|1943 CanLII 31 (SCC)|, [1943] SCR 483}}{{perSCC|Duff CJ}}{{atp|497}} ("...the constitutional principle by which, that is to say, a soldier does not, in virtue of his military character, escape the jurisdiction of the civil courts of this country. Nothing short of legislative enactment, or its equivalent, can change this principle.")<br>
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Revision as of 21:44, 7 March 2021