One-year sentence for Saskatchewan man convicted of hate speech against Jews
ESTEVAN, Sask. — The former leader of the Canadian Nationalist Party was handed a one-year sentence Thursday on a hate speech charge after he called for the genocide of Jewish people in a video posted on the party’s website and social media accounts.
Travis Patron, who founded the now-defunct party, was convicted of wilfully promoting hate by a jury earlier this month during a trial in Estevan, Sask.
Justice Neil Robertson of Court of King’s Bench accepted the Crown’s recommendation that the 31-year-old serve one year behind bars.
“The harm of this offence is to the entire Canadian community since the attack on one member or group is an attack on all Canadians,” Robertson said in his decision.