D.C. was found guilty on two counts of sexual abuse against his younger half-sister, T., involving repeated acts of intercourse over 18 months while D.C. was in a caregiving role.
The offences occurred when D.C. was 18-19 and T. was 5-6 years old.
The court considered sentencing principles, including the primacy of denunciation and deterrence for child abuse, and aggravating factors such as breach of trust, the victim's young age, the invasive nature, and the repetition of the abuse.
Mitigating factors included D.C.'s status as a youthful first offender and his difficult background.
The court applied Court of Appeal guidance for a minimum sentence of five or six years for prolonged sexual abuse by an adult in a position of trust.
D.C. was sentenced to 4 years and 5 months imprisonment, after receiving 7 months credit for pre-sentence custody.
Ancillary orders included a DNA sample, a 10-year weapons prohibition, a lifetime SOIRA order, a 20-year order under s. 161 of the Criminal Code, a $200 victim fine surcharge, and a no-contact order with the victim and her immediate family while in custody.