Kyle Marier pleaded guilty to possession of a loaded prohibited firearm.
The Crown sought 34 months imprisonment, while the defence sought an 18-month conditional sentence.
The court considered aggravating factors, including the public possession of a loaded firearm, flight from police, discarding the weapon, and being on bail for another offence.
Mitigating factors included Marier's youth (19 at the time of offence, 23 at sentencing), lack of prior criminal record, guilty plea, strong family and community support, and significant rehabilitative efforts while on house arrest bail for over four years.
The court also considered social context evidence of systemic anti-Black racism and its impact on the offender, which mitigated his moral culpability.
The judge found the appropriate sentence to be in the range of two years and, applying the principles from R. v. Morris, determined that a conditional sentence was appropriate given Marier's rehabilitative potential and the systemic factors.
Marier was sentenced to a two-year conditional sentence (less 46 days credit for pre-trial custody), with the first 12 months under house arrest and the remainder under curfew, followed by one year of probation.
Ancillary orders included a DNA order, a 10-year/lifetime firearms prohibition, and forfeiture of seized items.