A lawyer in South Australia has argued that a pregnant drug trafficker should have her sentence reduced so she can bond with her unborn baby.
SA is the only state without specialist “mothers and babies” facilities having cancelled its program more than a decade ago.
Barrister Heather Stokes told the court that judges ‘must not wash their hands of jailed mothers and their babies’ because ‘a good mother is more important to the child’s long-term welfare than a good father’.
Soraya Louise Constant, 30, who is 22 weeks pregnant, sought leave to appeal against her 18-month prison sentence for drug charges.
Soraya Louise Constant, 30 leaves court. Via ABCNews.
Ms Stokes told the Court of Criminal Appeal that Constant would miss out on bonding with her eldest child, and give birth to her second behind bars, unless it allowed her legal challenge to go ahead.
"Unlike every other mainland state, ours is the only prison system that does not provide facilities for women to take their babies with them into custody,” Ms Stokes said.
“If one of the imprisonment options available in SA was the Black Hole of Calcutta, a court would not ignore that — it would fashion a sentence appropriately.”
“This court cannot be a Pontius Pilate toward the prison system, and children’s future should not be sacrificed.
“My client’s children will have no primary attachment except to their father, and a good father is not the same, at any stretch, as a good mother.”
Top Comments
How discriminative towards fathers! My partner is currently incarcerated for a historical offence and I am due to give birth any day now to our second child and he will not be present. This is heart breaking for us. He was our childs primary care giver too and absolutely none of that was taken into account. I now have to drive 6 hours just so our child can see him and at 8 months pregnant, its not possible.
"Won't somebody please think of my children?" Really lady?
It sure doesn't seem like you were.