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Woman banished from Manitoba fights unusual court order
A chronic criminal who recently agreed to be banished from Manitoba for five years is fighting the unusual court order.
Alanna Phizacklea currently lives in British Columbia after being sentenced in March for a string of Winnipeg offences, including criminal harassment against two individuals.
The Crown had sought a penitentiary term but agreed to a more lenient two-year conditional sentence and three years of supervised probation as long as Phizacklea agreed to take a one-way ticket out of town and not come back for the duration of her punishment.
The reason, as explained in court, is Phizacklea has mental health issues and a history of stalking people she encounters and becomes fixated on. In the most recent case, her victim was her probation officer, who had been assigned to work with her following a previous conviction.
Provincial court Judge Ted Lismer went along with the sentence. Phizacklea has been living with her mother in B.C. for the past five months but has indicated she wants to return to Winnipeg. The Crown opposes the move, saying it would have fought to put her behind bars if not for the relocation condition.
Phizacklea, acting as her own lawyer, will appear in court by video link from B.C. today because she would risk arrest if she returned to Winnipeg for the hearing.
There have been a handful of similar banishment cases in recent years, although justice officials believe this is the longest and most expansive.
There have been cases where sex-trade workers have been forbidden from stepping foot in certain high-risk city neighbourhoods where they commonly ply their trade, and aboriginal offenders have been ordered not to return to reserve communities where their crimes occurred.
www.mikeoncrime.com
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