Defence seeks 3 years in prison for Halifax woman who trafficked girl for sex - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 07:07 AM | Calgary | -12.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Defence seeks 3 years in prison for Halifax woman who trafficked girl for sex

At a sentencing hearing Monday in Nova Scotia Supreme Court, lawyer Don Murray described his 43-year-old client, Renee Allison Webber, as a secondary figure in the crime who had initially tried to help the girl during a difficult time.

Renee Allison Webber, 43, guilty of sexual exploitation, trafficking person under age 18

Renee Allison Webber, 43, has been convicted of trafficking a person under the age of 18, receiving material benefits from trafficking a person under 18, sexual exploitation and advertising sexual services. (CBC)

The defence is seeking a three-yearprison sentence for a Halifax woman convicted of human trafficking and the sexual exploitation of a 16-year-old girl, calling the five-year minimum sentence under the Criminal Code"intolerable" and "an outrage" to his client'sliberty.

At a sentencing hearing Monday in Nova Scotia Supreme Court, lawyer Don Murray described his 43-year-old client, Renee Allison Webber, as a secondary figure in the crime who had tried to help the girl during a difficult time.

Webber was found guilty in September of trafficking a person under the age of 18, receiving material benefits from trafficking a person under 18, sexual exploitation and advertising sexual services.

Crown prosecutors are asking for a 6 prison sentence.

The offences happened within a two-month period in late 2015 and "involved [the victim] engaging in having sex with men for money here in Halifax, Moncton[New Brunswick]and Toronto as well," said Crown prosecutor Cory Roberts.

Co-accused serving 3 years

Webber's co-accused, Kyle Leslie Pellow, was also charged with the same offences and pleaded guilty this pastJune. Heis now serving a prison term of alittle more than three years.

While the Crownargued Webberwas an essential part of a joint criminal venture to traffic a teenage girl in the sex trade,Murray said his client played more of an administrative role.

He acknowledged Webber would routinely drive the victim to parking lots and hotels in order to perform sex acts for money. But it was Pellow, he argued,whoprofited from the encounters not Webber.

Murray urged Justice ChristaBrothers to ask herself:"Does the person I'm sentencing enjoy material gain from prostitution that was being engaged in, or did they merely play a role to facilitate the main criminal?"

Victim's relationship with mother strained

Murray said Webber had come to theaid of thegirl, who was in the middleof a strained relationship with her mother. He said the girl had been involved in prostitution before she met Webber.

"Webber had no more influence over the teen than her mother did," he told the court.

Brothers cautioned Murray on that point.

"We have to be careful about saying a 16-year-old chose to do this when a jury ruled she didn't," she said.

The judge also questioned whether the teen's difficult relationship with her mother would "diminish"the charge of sex trafficking or lessen the sentence imposed on Webber.

Crown prosecutor Cory Roberts said Webber played a significant role in trafficking and exploiting a 16-year-old girl. (Patrick Callaghan/CBC)

Two days have been set aside for thesentencing hearing. Roberts said he's not expecting a decision until some time in 2019.

Pellowand Webber had previouslybeen charged with sexually assaulting the same 16-year-old girl.

However, Brothersstayed that chargein September because the alleged event happened inMoncton outside the jurisdiction of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court.