First of 202 Trans Mountain pipeline protesters await sentencing
Fines stemming from later arrests will escalate from $500 to $5,000 as trials progress this summer
Nine pipeline protesters found guilty Monday of criminal contempt by a judge in B.C. Supreme Court are facing fines of up to $3,000 or 150 hours of community service.
The protesters were among the first arrested on Burnaby mountain on March 17. They will be sentenced on June 28.
Earlier this month, more than a dozen protesters arrested on the same day pleaded guilty. They were fined $500 or 25 hours of community service, because they pleaded guilty before the case went to trial.
The expected sentences are based on recommendations put forward by the B.C. Prosecution Service in May, but it will be up to the judge to actually decide the sentences.
Those recommendation include a series of escalating fines and jail time based on when protesters were arrested and how they pleaded to the charges of criminal contempt.
Trials to run all summer
The trial, which wrapped up Monday, is the first in a series of trials scheduled to run over the summer and into the fall. A second trial of four more protesters was expected to get underway Monday afternoon.
In all, about 202 protesters were arrested at Kinder Morgan's worksite on Burnaby mountain. Those who were arrested after May 8 are facing fines of up to $5,000 or 14 days in jail.
Legal support co-ordinator Kris Hermes says no protesters have been arrested since the Crown raised the sentencing recommendation to seven days in jail for anyone arrested after May 28 even if they plead guilty before trial.
"The Crown is clearly escalating its attack on anyone protesting at the site and it has had an effect of eliminating protests outside the Kinder Morgan worksite," said Hermes.
About half a dozen protesters are also facing Criminal Code charges of assault, mischief and obstruction of a police officer, said Hermes.