► 11 Years in Jail Doesn’t Seem Enough for Sex Tourist
Posted By admin on July 29, 2010

Kenneth Klassen hides behind a newspaper as he waits in the lobby of the courthouse before his sentencing on Wednesday. He was sentenced to 11 years in prison on a series of sex-tourism charges involving young children.
Canada – The stiffest sentence ever under Canada’s sex tourism law was given to Burnaby art dealer Kenneth Klassen Wednesday in B.C. Supreme Court.
He was sentenced to 11 years in federal prison. One year is for possession of child pornography purchased in the Philippines. The 10 years are for 14 counts of sexual touching involving pre-pubescent girls in Colombia and Cambodia: six years for each of the eight counts involving the most aggravated sexual touching (to be served concurrently) and four years for each of the other six counts (to be served concurrently).
Klassen, who has been out on bail, was immediately arrested.
Additionally, Klassen must provide a DNA sample for the sex offender registry, where he will be listed for 20 years. He is prohibited from possessing a firearm for 10 years and banned for life from playgrounds, school yards and parks.
“Your honour, I am sorry for what I have done with all my heart,” the 59-year-old told Justice Austin Cullen before sentencing.
The judge seemed unmoved by his apology and by the defence lawyer’s suggestion that Klassen’s guilty plea was an indication of his remorse. Cullen noted that Klassen’s guilty plea in May came after his attempt to have the law declared unconstitutional had failed and on the eve of a trial for which the prosecutors had built “a strong case.”
It took nearly an hour for Cullen to read his decision, which included graphic descriptions of the videos Klassen purchased in the Philippines and his homemade “souvenirs” of the abuse.
The judge watched nearly two hours’ worth of video clips during last week’s sentencing hearing. Describing child sex tourism as a problem of “epidemic” proportion, Cullen accepted prosecutor Brendan McCabe’s argument that preying on children in poverty-stricken countries such as Colombia, Cambodia and the Philippines makes the crime worse.
By agreeing, Cullen has more broadly defined the concept of being in a position of trust or authority as going beyond relatives, teachers, doctors and priests to include wealthy foreigners.
This is a helpful change, says Brian McConaghy, founding director of The Ratanak Foundation, which rescues exploited children in Cambodia — a country teeming with children. There, the median age is 22.5 compared with Canada’s 40.7.
An estimated 30,000 minors are in the sex trade. But Mc-Conaghy says that’s not a reliable number because it doesn’t include the really little kids — such as the young girl McConaghy was called about Tuesday night.
She’s under 14 and in one of Ratanak’s community programs. This week, she was sold and was due to be picked up by two American pedophiles.
“This [sex tourism] is ongoing daily with devastating consequences for little lives,” said McConaghy.
Klassen is a textbook example. In just over 48 hours in Cambodia, he procured, assaulted and videotaped eight little girls.
It was an “opportunistic, organized and ongoing procurement of children,” according to Cullen. “A gross violation of the natural imperative to protect children” and it showed Klassen’s “callous preoccupation with his own pleasure.”
The judge said the 15 charges that spanned six years were all the more serious because they were ongoing.
Not only is Klassen’s sentence the highest under the sex tourism legislation, it’s at the high end for all child sex offenders in Canada including judges, teachers, priests and relatives.
(A 36-year-old Surrey man, for example, got 13½ years Wednesday after pleading guilty to 11 charges including incest, sexual assault, sexual interference, sexual exploitation, making, possessing and distributing child pornography. His victims were all under 10 and included his own daughters and four other little girls.)
Rosalind Prober of the child rights’ group Beyond Borders was pleased with the length of both sentences, noting that “Judges in Canada are notoriously lenient when it comes to child sex crimes.”
Without prosecutors such as McCabe, “who never gave up,” Prober said Klassen’s sentence would not have been so high.
It’s heartening that Cullen has raised the bar in sentencing and broadened the definition of being in a position of trust to include sex tourists.
Still, Klassen’s sentence falls short of the 12 years that Mc-Cabe wanted and even shorter of the 10-year maximum that the legislation allows for each count.
Eleven years in prison seems so little compared to the hell Klassen has visited on others in the 25 years since he began having sex with children.
Over the past six years alone, police and prosecutors have had to view and review disturbing images of unimaginable acts and seek out statements from tortured children.
As for Klassen’s victims? They’ll never be the same. They’ll be haunted the rest of their lives.
Eleven years. Yes, it’s the best ever. Still, it just doesn’t seem anywhere near enough.
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Source: The Vancouver Sun
Date: July 29, 2010
Author: Daphne Bramham, dbramham@vancouversun.com
Photograph by: Ward Perrin
Posted by: Gensan Relief and Community Exchange, Inc. General Santos City, Philippines
Post date: July 29, 2010




