Black history, both personal and communal, now a factor in Nova Scotia sentencing
HALIFAX — Jason Middleton says the inclusion of Black history in his sentencing — both personal tragedy and communal struggle — set a new path for his troubled life.
A cultural assessment completed in October 2016 led to a sentence of house arrest and probation rather than a lengthy jail term after he was convicted for a series of scuffles with police during arrests for probation violations and an assault at the lockup.
“I knew from that moment people weren’t just seeing through me, but rather they were trying to see me through. It humanized me,” Middleton said in a recent interview from his home in Yarmouth, N.S.
The 49-year-old African Nova Scotian — who also has Indigenous ancestry — grew up amid abuse and poverty and says he has frequently been sentenced to prison by the province’s predominantly white judiciary.