:
Mr. Chairman, it is clear that I have already evoked the main reasons why the Bloc Québécois has tabled this motion.
Now, if ever the government were hesitant despite Ms. Jennings' amendment, which seems quite reasonable to me, would it be possible to at least consider getting a letter signed by the minister stating that studies have been carried out to ensure that the bill is constitutional?
I would rather see the research—and I cannot imagine that the government would have lacked the professionalism to have done the research—but I would like us to have written information regarding the constitutionality of this bill before we begin.
I have to tell you in all honesty that if by chance the government were not to take our request seriously, we would have no choice but to table motions for adjournment of the proceedings so long as we did not have any information allowing us to ensure the constitutionality of the bill.
I still have a baby face, but I have been here since 1993, and it is the first time that I have heard so many witnesses tell us that bill is unconstitutional. I have never sat on a committee where, out of a dozen witnesses, nine informed us that the probability of unconstitutionality was very high.
I want to have something, whether it is research or a letter from the minister. I have confidence in the minister. Before going to cabinet, he is supposed to have signed a memorandum—that is how they refer to it—in which he ensures that he has taken the necessary steps to ensure the conformity of the measure.
If we cannot have access to the research, we must have the letter tabled by the minister. In that way, we will be reassured as to the soundness of the work that was done. But if we do not have that, we will have no other choice than to table motions for adjournment on Tuesday morning when we begin our work.
Therefore, I invite the minister, the parliamentary secretary and Mr. Petit to take our request very seriously. We are parliamentary professionals and we love our work and the committee, but we cannot vote without having some minimum guarantees.
I read the motion as amended by. I think Ms. Jennings and know very well and don't need me to tell them—they've actually been here longer than I have—that advice provided to the minister, legal advice from his department, is advice, just that. There is a solicitor-client privilege that goes with that. Frankly, what's being asked would be quite unprecedented.
To address Mr. Ménard's concern on the constitutionality of what's been put forward, the has already appeared. The question, I believe, was put to him on this bill, and previous to this on the bills that make up from the last session, as to their constitutionality. The minister has to certify in each case that he believes the bills to be constitutional, based on advice he receives. And that advice is subject to solicitor-client privilege. The minister is not able to provide the type of legal advice that he receives.
Now, as is obvious, we've already received testimony from individuals who have rendered their opinion—not in writing, mind you—and provided legal input as to whether something is, in their opinion, constitutional or not constitutional. But the fact remains....
We can call as witnesses some individuals who are experts in one way or another who may want to give an opinion in that regard, but as to the advice the minister receives—and knows this, having been in government at one time—that is subject to solicitor-client privilege. It's up to the client to waive that privilege, which would not happen.
So in the interest of moving things along quickly, I would refer everybody to the testimony that the has already given, where he has stated that it's his duty as a minister to certify that legislation coming forward is, in his opinion, compliant with the Charter of Rights.
Mr. Chair, I should add—and I don't necessarily want this to have to happen, because we have a witness here—that we do have individuals here from the department who could give some testimony as to the long-standing history, going way back, that would say that this would not be a practice of the House of Commons, would not be a practice of the committee, and who could explain to honourable members, if they need an explanation, the concept of solicitor-client privilege and the reasons why the client in this case would not be waiving that privilege.
I'll take at face value why has introduced this, but the has said on this that he believes it's compliant with our Constitution. That's based on the advice he has received, and that advice is subject to solicitor-client privilege. The minister would restate that.
So I don't believe there's any need to proceed on this basis, especially when we have witnesses who are here, ready to testify. We also have witnesses from the Department of Justice who will speak to the bill, but it's not their role to give legal opinions to the committee.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, I greatly appreciate the comments of the parliamentary secretary to the Minister of Justice, . In fact, solicitor-client privilege could be set aside by the client. In this case, the minister decided not to do so. But according to his statement, Mr. Moore claims that the minister has already stated and affirmed, following a question that was put to him by a member of this committee, that he has already received legal opinions telling him that Bill C-2, more particularly the provisions of Bill C-2 that are directly related to the dangerous offender regime comply with our charter and our Constitution.
Mr. Ménard asked a question of Mr. Moore, and he avoided answering. Mr. Ménard asked if the minister was prepared to simply sign a letter addressed to the chair of the committee giving a written confirmation that, indeed, according to the legal opinions he received—and he would not be obliged to disclose or table those opinions—he certifies that Bill C-2 and more specifically the changes dealing with dangerous offenders, comply with our charter and our Constitution.
A response would satisfy Mr. Ménard as well as my Liberal colleagues. I have not had the opportunity to check the transcript of his testimony before the committee, but if the minister has already made a statement to that effect, it should not cause him any problem to do so in writing. He is not obliged to disclose the legal opinions he received under the protection of solicitor-client privilege. However, he should confirm in writing that Bill C-2 complies with the charter and the Constitution, according to the legal opinions he has received.
Therefore, I would like Mr. Moore to answer that question specifically.
:
Mr. Chairman, I think what we are seeing here this morning is rather hypocritical. I remember very well that when the Conservatives were in opposition, they invoked the fact that we were elected, that we were parliamentarians, in order to have a right to all the information before voting.
What are we asking for? First of all, the minister is not a client. He is an elected official and is responsible for a department. Before voting on a bill, we have the responsibility of ensuring that we have all the information. Nine witnesses told us that this bill was not constitutional. I feel I am doing my job as a member of Parliament when I ask for information. If the minister appeared before us and said so, he should give it to us in writing.
Why do we not have faith in the word of members of Parliament? Ms. Jennings tabled an amendment saying that we would keep this information confidential. Is this not paid for with public funds? What is the point of voting on a bill like on accountability, on access to information, on transparency if you are not even able to give parliamentarians all the information they need? Is it unreasonable, as an elected official, to vote on a bill nine witnesses said was unconstitutional? Is it unreasonable to ask if this was investigated? If the minister said so, that is not enough. We need more information.
An hon. member: [Editor's Note: Inaudible]
Mr. Réal Ménard: I was not finished. Calm down! I have the floor.
Mr. Chairman, if we do not have the information by Tuesday morning, I say to the government that we will table motions for adjournment. That is what we will do. We have the right to have that information. If you do not want to give it to us, we will table a motion to extend our deliberations so that the government can invite constitutionalists to come and meet with us. If we do not have the information we require, we will not vote on the bill.
When the Conservatives were the opposition, there was never enough information available. Today, they are trying to make us vote whereas we know that the bill is potentially unconstitutional. May I point out to you that yesterday, we were ready to extend the debate in order to move to the vote but it was the Conservatives who got up to leave.
Therefore, there is a limit to making a travesty of democracy, to being pharisees and philistines. There is no point on voting on bills like C-2 if we cannot give the information to parliamentarians. I regret, but we are not faced with a privileged relationship involving private practice, the minister, and cabinet. I expect officials who have knowledge of constitutional law, who provided opinions to the minister, who are not from the private sector, who are paid with public funds, to give us that information.
Mr. Chairman, let me conclude by stating that if we do not have something in writing guaranteeing the constitutionality of the bill by Tuesday, we will table motion for adjournment after motion for adjournment.
:
Mr. Ménard, in terms of process, I'm reminding you that your motion is on the floor. If this motion carries, a request will be made to the department.
Having said that, we've had all of our speakers and I will now put the question.
We'll first vote on Ms. Jennings' amendment, which is “To provide on a confidential, in camera basis which protects “advice to the Minister”...in its possession...by Friday, November 16th, 2007, 3 pm.” I'm reading the bold type part of the amendment here.
We've been asked for a recorded vote.
(Amendment negatived [See Minutes of Proceedings])
:
Mr. Keddy was allowed to vote. He was not allowed to vote in the first round of voting on the amendment. He had not submitted his papers with respect to substituting to the committee. But by the time we had our second motion to vote on Mr. Menard's original motion, he had substituted back into the committee. So his vote is official.
Mr. Landreville, we welcome you to, as you can see, a very energetic and focused committee. Some may say strongly opinionated. I would say otherwise.
I would like just quickly to let you know that you have 10 minutes for your opening remarks. We'll then turn to the committee, and the first round of questioning will be seven minutes. Each party will have the opportunity to question you for seven minutes. The rounds following the first round will be five minutes in length. We might go a little bit further than 10 o'clock, but we're going to try to get at least 35 to 40 minutes of questioning in.
I appreciate your coming this morning on short notice, because the committee was struck fairly quickly and witness lists put together fairly quickly. We certainly appreciate your being here this morning.
I'll turn the floor over to you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I would like to thank committee members for allowing me to express my viewpoint on Bill .
I am professor emeritus at the University of Montreal School of Criminology and a Research Associate at the International Centre for Comparative Criminology, the ICCC. I have taught penology and correctional policy since 1970 and have conducted research in those fields for more than 40 years.
My brief will focus on the section of Bill concerning Bill . I would address two points regarding the bill in succession: first, clauses 40 to 51 concerning dangerous offenders and, two, clauses 52 and 53 on the recognizance to keep the peace.
I will start with the issue of dangerous offenders. The purpose of this part of the bill is to create a measure to neutralize multiple re-offenders. This is not a new concern. In 1908, England passed the Prevention of Crime Act respecting habitual criminals.
In 1947, Canada also passed an Act respecting habitual offenders or “habitual criminals”, which is very much based on the English act which had already been repealed. An offender determined to be a “habitual criminal” could be detained for indeterminate period. The Criminal Code provided that:
[...] an accused is a habitual criminal,
a) if, since reaching the age of 18, he has previously, or on at least three separate and independent occasions, been convicted of an indictable offence for which he was liable to a term of imprisonment five years or more and continues to lead a criminal life, [...]
Clauses 40 to 51 of Bill are also similar to a more recent series of acts, passed in the United States in the early 1990s, commonly called “three strikes” laws, the best known and most used of which is that of California, which was passed in 1994. It is in fact a two—and three-strike Act. Briefly stated, it provides that, in the event of a second felony conviction, the sentence is twice the sentence that would have been imposed for that offence and that for a third felony conviction, the sentence is 25 years to life. On March 31, 2007, 41,503 offenders were imprisoned under that act. Over 90% of all convictions under the “three strikes” laws in the United States have been in California.
Habitual criminal legislation has failed for five reasons: first, it does not distinguish between those offenders who present a real threat to society, since it applies to a considerable number of non-dangerous offenders; second, it is not applied uniformly, thus causing serious fairness problems; three, it applies in a discriminatory fashion against minority groups; four, it has no significant impact on crime; and, five, it can result in a considerable increase in the prison population, particularly the population of older offenders.
Let me reiterate the first point. It does not distinguish between those offenders who present a real threat to society, since it applies to a considerable number of non-dangerous offenders.
In Canada, the Ouimet Committee (1969) examined the cases of 80 “habitual criminals” sentenced to “preventive detention” in penitentiaries in February 1968.
The committee first observed that:
The average age of the 80 offenders at the time they were sentenced to preventive detention was 40 years.
They concluded on this point that:
These figures tend to support the finding that one of the weaknesses of the application of this legislation is that it appears to be most often invoked against offenders at an age where violence is no longer part of their usual behaviour.
The committee also stated that:
Nearly 40 % of those sentenced to preventive detention appear not to have presented a threat to the safety of others; 2. Perhaps one-third of persons incarcerated as habitual criminals appear to have presented a serious threat to the safety of others [...]
The Committee finds that, although the statutory provisions concerning habitual criminals were enforced to protect the public from certain dangerous offenders, they were also applied to a considerable number of multiple repeat offenders who may constitute a serious social embarrassment, but not a serious threat to people's safety.
Similar observations have been made about England's preventive detention and California's “three strikes” legislation.
Moving on to the second point, it is not applied uniformly, thus causing serious fairness problems. Once again, in Canada, the Ouimet Committee found in its study on 80 “habitual criminals” that:
45 [...] were sentenced in British Columbia and 39, that is virtually half the total number of those so sentenced, in the same city (Vancouver). The Committee feels that legislation the application of which is likely to vary to that degree should not be part of a rational correctional system.
The committee also observed the same disparity in the application of the dangerous sex offender law which existed at the time. Current dangerous offender legislation may also deserve the same criticism. In April 2006, 42% of criminals found to be dangerous offenders were in Ontario, compared to 9% in Quebec and 22% in British Columbia. California's “three strikes” legislation is not evenly applied either.
Moving on to the third point, it applies in a discriminatory fashion against minority groups. In Canada, we have no data on the application of habitual offender legislation to aboriginal persons, but we do know that they are over-represented at all stages of the correctional process, including in the application of the dangerous offender law. This state of affairs raises major issues and is of concern to all those who attach importance to the values of justice and equity. We know that aboriginal persons represent approximately 3% of the Canadian population, that they form 18% of persons admitted to penitentiaries, that they are even more over-represented in certain provinces. In 2003-2004, they represented 54% of persons admitted to Manitoba penitentiaries, and 63% of those admitted in Saskatchewan. Aboriginal persons also represented, in 2005-2006, 23% of offenders sentenced to life imprisonment or given indeterminate sentences. This over-representation of aboriginal persons in penitentiaries, combined with the fact that they enter penitentiaries at a younger age than non-aboriginals, means that they would be even more often affected by the measures under Bill concerning multiple re-offenders. It will be readily understood that the younger members of a group are when they enter a penitentiary, the greater chance they have of being convicted a third time.
Now, turning to the fourth point, this legislation has no significant impact on crime. Since they are rarely enforced in ordinary circumstances, habitual criminal laws cannot have an impact on crime. However, even where they are used on a broad scale, as in California, they have little or no measurable impact. Even though, in the 1990s, the crime rate fell more sharply in California than the U.S. national average, researchers who conducted a survey of the literature came to the conclusion that the drop cannot be attributed in any significant way to the “three strikes” law.
That takes us to the fifth point. This legislation can result in a considerable increase in the prison population, particularly the population of older offenders. If applied on a broad scale, multiple re-offender laws inevitably cause an increase in the aging of the prison population. On the one hand, longer sentences result in a rise in the prison population...
:
As for you, Mr. Chairman, you are not authoritarian.
Mr. Landreville, I was in the process of paying tribute to your learnedness. What really pleased me was the link that you very clearly identified. You compared American society, which has relied on incarceration and has crime rates that have not declined as a result, and Canada. You did not provide statistics per 100,000 inhabitants for Canada, but we have heard that it ranges from 115 to 123.
I would like you to explain yourself very clearly. If I understand correctly, you are inviting us to reject Bill . Based on my understanding, you say that it is not effective in terms of its objectives. I would like you to tell us more clearly why it is not effective and what legislative measures you would like to see adopted so that we can meet those objectives, in other words, making communities safer, while keeping in mind that the violent crime rate is not on the rise.
:
In terms of drawing comparisons between the United States and Canada, the situation is truly ideal. We live in the same environment, everyone knows that. Our socio-political and economic environments are the same. We clearly have different crime rates. In the United States, crime rates are generally higher. On our side, our incarceration practices have been quite different since 1970.
I am going to give you some more statistics. In 1970, the prison population in the United States was almost twice as high as ours. At present, it is more than seven times higher than ours. Our prison population is 105 for 100,000 inhabitants, whereas it is 750 in the United States. The Americans have a much stricter incarceration policy that cannot be considered responsible for reducing the crime rate. Other sociological factors, including demographics and economic growth, are the cause. They are important factors.
As regards special legislation, I said earlier that in the United States, about 25 or 30 states have been using “three strikes” laws since 1993 or 1994. Most states make little use of these laws. In fact, 90% of people convicted were in California, where that type of legislation is used very widely. More than 40,000 people, in other words, more than the entire prison population in Canada, are incarcerated there. Studies have not really shown that these laws have had a significant effect.
There was a second part to your question.
:
As I said, the special legislation on dangerous offenders is ineffective because it is difficult to pinpoint which offenders will end up causing serious harm to others. When I say special legislation, I am thinking of the time when Canada had both legislation on habitual offenders and legislation on dangerous sexual offenders.
Part of the problem is that we do not know exactly whom we should target. Furthermore, when very harsh legislation is introduced, such as the act providing for indeterminate sentences, there is sometimes resistance within the criminal justice system itself to using them. That explains, to a degree, the huge disparity and the way different provinces apply such legislation. The way it is applied essentially depends on the attorney general and certain prosecutors. It seems also true of California, where a single prosecutor is said to be responsible for a huge number of convictions.
To my mind, the current dangerous offenders legislation has its shortcomings. However, it is not widely applied, and I am glad of that. That being said, I believe that it is both flexible and stringent enough to pinpoint those multiple repeat offenders who are likely to commit serious crimes against persons in the future.
As a general rule, statistically speaking, these laws primarily affect people over 40. Indeed, most people who go to prison are over 30 years of age. By the time they get to their third conviction, especially if they are convicted of a violent offence, they will generally be over 40 years of age due to the length of time they will have spent serving their first two sentences. Yet the vast majority of these offenders do not commit violent crimes after the age of 40.
I therefore believe that the current legislation is both flexible enough and stringent enough to deal with those exceptional cases where prosecutors and specialists have reasonable grounds to believe that an offender will commit a serious crime.
Good morning, Professor Landreville.
I'm having a little difficulty with the fact that you're equating the legislation proposed with the California three-strike law. You've mentioned, as an example, that they have incarcerations down there of perhaps 40,000 people under this legislation in California, yet we have witnesses testifying at this committee and other justice committees that what we're talking about here is a very select few people. It's perhaps as low as one, two, three, four, or five; perhaps, it's been registered, there may be a possibility of up to 50 in this country, so we are talking about a very select few people with very heinous and serious indictable crimes, crimes against persons.
With the California three-strike law, do you have the percentage of crimes that would be crimes against property versus crimes against persons in the California law?
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
First of all, would you be able to tell us the annual number of individuals convicted for the first time of a crime found on the list in part 27 of Bill ?
Secondly, do you know the annual number of people convicted for a second time?
Thirdly, do you know the annual number of people convicted for a third time?
If you have access to these figures, could you tell us the percentage of these individuals who belong to visible minorities, or who are members of a first nation, who are women or people with an intellectual or physical handicap? In brief, I am referring to the four groups contained in our charter.
Do you have these numbers? If not, do you know how the committee could obtain them? Up until now, it appears the government has been unable to provide us with this data.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Landreville, it's been clearly established, I think, that the intention of the dangerous offender legislation is to catch the worst of the worst criminals in our society who have been convicted, and to remove them so that they cannot be a threat to our society, to our families, to our children. It's been agreed that judges and crown prosecutors still will retain a tool of discretion that they can use to work within the provisions of this new legislation.
No one at this table would disagree with the fact that there's a disproportionate number of aboriginals in our penal system today. No one would disagree that there are some tremendous social problems that aboriginals can face from the time they're born until the time they grow into their teens and perhaps start getting into some problems. Those have to be fixed, and no one disagrees with that. We want to fix that.
I guess the point I want to make is that in this piece of the legislation, the dangerous offender, I would suggest that given the discretion of the judges and crown prosecutors, given the way the legislation is written, and given the intention of the legislation, the chance of this legislation being onerous because of one's culture, race, or background is in fact a lot slimmer than what some of the members opposite would suggest.
I also would suggest, Mr. Landreville, and I'd like to get your opinion on this, that when it comes to this legislation, Canadians who are concerned about the threats to their personal selves, to their families, and to their communities are concerned about the threats. Notwithstanding their cultural background, whether people are white, red, black, pink, or otherwise, if someone fits into the parameters that would cause a crown prosecutor to seek a dangerous offender designation against a person who meets all the qualifications and fits that description, Canadians care not about anything but to remove that person from society. Do you not think it's the obligation of the justice system and the obligation of the Criminal Code to provide that in order to protect our societies?
Could you respond to that, please.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chair, and welcome to our witness.
It's been an interesting discussion here, in particular the discussion around the dangerous offender. You're basically saying the net would be cast too wide, and we're going to catch some chronic petty offenders.
The general public out there who are listening or watching or who will read this at some time need to know who is actually being targeted here as the dangerous offender. I don't see these individuals who have committed not one, not two, but three violent crimes, including those that involve the use of explosives, intimidation with firearms in the commission of an offence, sexual exploitation of a person with a disability, a parent or guardian procuring sexual activity, child pornography, a householder permitting the sexual exploitation of a child, luring a child, violent crime, sexual assault, living off the avails of prostitution, and unlawfully causing bodily harm.... These are not petty crimes. These are very serious, very violent, very heinous crimes.
I can't help but take note of your comment that violent crime is going down. Does that mean that we as a society and as people, we in the House of Commons who are trying to enact legislation for Canada, should do nothing or that we should be satisfied with mediocrity or that we should suddenly say that if we can do something to prevent violent crime...? We're not talking about petty criminals here, quite frankly. I disagree. We're talking about serious violent offenders.
To compare this to “three strikes and you're out” in California is a disservice to this piece of legislation, because it doesn't even resemble it. In California you can be put in prison for jaywalking, quite frankly, which is too far, and it's ridiculous. That's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about trying to protect the general public from serious violent crime.
I'm not saying the legislation is perfect, but surely we shouldn't settle for mediocrity.
If I have time here—
I think we're going to have to conclude there.
Thank you, Mr. Landreville, for your detailed statistical perspective. As I know there were a couple of questions about your stats, if you did want to forward them to the clerk, I'm sure she would be more than happy to extend those to members of the committee.
I would like to ask our ministry officials to come forward. We are running into a bit of a time constraint here, so I'm seeking a little bit of a time extension past 11 o'clock so that we can allow for questions to our ministry officials. The second part of it is that we'll probably start immediately with five-minute, rather than seven-minute, rounds.
As I indicated, it would be extremely helpful if we could keep our questions as concise as possible to allow as many of us to ask questions as we can. Certainly if the officials have any opening comments, I would ask that they be extremely brief. I'd like to leave as much time as possible for questions and an opportunity for you to respond to those over the next 45 minutes. I'll probably seek from the committee an extension of about 10 minutes, or perhaps 15 minutes, just to make up for the time we spent dealing with the motion, and that will allow us a full hour to be able to deal with the ministry.
Mr. Cohen.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Drilling down on that answer, there was some suggestion that in the dangerous offender procedure where this evidentiary burden would shift to the accused—it's more than an accused, the convicted person on sentencing—it might in some way infringe the convicted person's right to silence, that is, the right against self-incrimination. In buttressing that position, I believe Mr. Hoover suggested that there was case law to that effect. I believe the name is—I was going to say Grewal, but that's not the right name—Grayer, something like the cheese, not the member of Parliament.
In any event, it was subsequently suggested by witnesses at our last meeting that that case law was not authoritative for the proposition that when there are shifting evidentiary burdens, silence is still protected, just at one's peril. In other words, the convicted person can remain silent, but they bear the consequences of doing so if it means they don't adduce evidence that might help them.
It was quite clear in the testimony we had from the Criminal Lawyers' Association that it was a misinterpretation of that....
Well, Mr. Hoover, you were in the room when it was suggested.
So maybe rightfully to you, Mr. Cohen, what is the implication of these changes to the right to remain silent or the right against self-incrimination in the charter?
:
That question, of course, covers a lot of ground.
There is, of course, under the Constitution, a right to silence. Generally that's a right that accrues when one is faced with police interrogation. The relationship between the right to silence and the right against self-incrimination is one that has been commented upon in the case law, and self-incrimination is a somewhat larger concept.
To come back to your question about the significance of the Grayer case as it relates to the right to silence, the Grayer case basically says that an individual who finds himself in the kinds of circumstances that an individual might find himself in, in a dangerous offender application, is entitled to rest and to sit on his or her hands and not to cooperate in any way. There is nothing in this legislation that compels that individual to testify, and there is nothing in a reverse onus that directly causes the person to have to speak.
When an individual is facing this kind of situation--we can call it jeopardy--there is a natural implication or a natural impetus in the individual to want to be able to answer, and that is why, of course, these matters will end up in litigation. But individuals are capable, notwithstanding their right to sit on their hands, of making an informed and tactical decision as to whether or not they will speak up. They don't have to speak up. That does not end the matter.
The individual has—and indeed it emerges from the legislation and from practice—the right to cross-examine, the right to call witnesses, the right to rely upon any evidence that's adduced by the state, in order to answer the case that has been brought forward. So to that extent, this perhaps might not be called silence, but it certainly is silence in terms of the individual speaking or the individual cooperating. That is not a matter that I would suggest implicates the so-called notion of self-incrimination.
I would point out that self-incrimination protections generally are housed either under section 11 or section 13 of the charter, which are premised and preceded by an indication that those rights are guaranteed in relation to persons charged with an offence. When an individual is charged with an offence, then those particular protections arise.
Lyons, which remains the fundamental case and the one to which everyone should return when they look at dangerous offender legislation, written by Mr. Justice La Forest, a balanced and moderate jurist and an expert in this area—
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
With all due respect, Mr. Cohen, I have been here since 1994 and I can tell you that we have already in the past examined regulations and legislation which the department said was constitutional but which was subsequently invalidated. My colleague may have said that this happened under the Liberals, but the antiterrorism provisions were studied in committee, right? Mr. Comartin was a member of the committee. Some provisions were ruled to be unconstitutional. When Ms. Marleau was Minister of Health, the anti-smoking regulations were invalidated. So I find your assertion to be presumptuous to say the least. Just because the department refers the bill to us does not mean that it cannot be deemed unconstitutional later on.
But since you are telling us with confidence that the bill is constitutional, I would like you for once, as a parliamentarian, to clarify the verification mechanisms. Please be quite precise. When the minister signs a memorandum in cabinet stating that it is constitutional, exactly how is this done?
I also have three questions to ask you about the substance. Like you I am a lawyer and I obviously know that legislation can be challenged. You said that you have checked everything generally, but what, more specifically, have you done, and what are the reasonable guarantees?
:
I'm not sure, Mr. Cohen, if this is to you or Mr. Hoover, but I'm concerned about a number of things. The constitutionality with regard to the division of power really concerns me. If you look at some of the exchanges we've had at the meetings between the federal government and the provincial attorneys general over the last couple of decades, they've always been very careful about protecting the administration of justice as their territory, which it obviously is under the Constitution. I think we may be infringing on that, but even more so on the charter.
I've been told that the direction to the department to put these five bills into one came just 48 hours before this session of Parliament started. I don't know when the decision was made. Will you confirm that you got only 48 hours' notice to put these together? That's my first question.
Question number two is, when was the decision made to incorporate the breach of supervision order as a triggering event?
The third one—and I guess this is the one that disturbs me the most—is what kind of consultation went on? We heard from Mr. Cooper when he testified. Here you have the person who prosecutes in a region more than anybody in the country right now. He came forward and said, look, what I really need are amendments to part XXIV so I have access to better evidence to prosecute these applications. He said if he got those amendments they would be of immeasurable assistance.
The other point he made in his testimony was that he really wasn't going to change his practice if these amendments went through. So why are we doing this, and why didn't we pay attention to people like him and do amendments to part XXIV, which would have made his job easier?
:
On your first question as to whether we had more than 48 hours' notice to put a bill together, clearly we did.
On the second question regarding how the issue of including the breach of LTSO evolved, I first heard of that issue in November 2004, when it was raised by the Ontario Attorney General. It was in fact tabled officially in January 2005 for consideration. The FPT high-risk offender working group has been tackling that issue for some time.
As you'll recall, in testimony before this committee on June 5, the minister confirmed he was awaiting the deliberations of the FPT working group and consideration by FPT justice ministers, and that he was hoping to come back this fall with inclusion of such a provision. That work was for the most part completed over this past summer and a recommendation was discussed thoroughly. In fact the fruit of that labour is as you see in the bill before you. So there has been extensive consultation, which has been going on for some time, to achieve not only a viable model but one that will work in all jurisdictions.
I think the question raised by Mr. Cooper, for whom I have great respect, is his particular perspective. He was not here as an official speaking for the Ontario Attorney General; he made it clear he was speaking on his own behalf. Prior to our exploring that further and jumping in with any type of conclusion--I think he proposed a specific amendment to section 760--we would want to consult fully and broadly with the FPT partners. We haven't done that work, and it wasn't raised by the Ontario Attorney General officials during prior consultations.
:
Well, the first obvious opportunity for judicial discretion is at the time the crown applies under section 752, when the crown may have to make argument to the court that in fact the predicate offence is a serious personal injury offence. If the judge finds it does not meet the section 752 criteria, at that point he can rule under his discretion that it does not meet the threshold and it can't go any further.
The next opportunity for discretion, if it passes that initial threshold, is that the crown must apply under section 752.1 for a psychiatric assessment. The judge has discretion at that time to stop the application there if the judge is of the view that it's not likely to result in a dangerous offender designation.
Once the assessment is returned and filed with the court, the crown then has to seek and obtain and table in writing the Attorney General's consent. If that is done, along with notice to the defendant, then it goes into the hearing phase. At that point the final exercise of discretion of the court is first of all whether the offender meets the dangerous offender criteria; then, per the decision in R. v. Johnson, even if the offender does meet dangerous offender criteria, the court of course may refuse the indeterminate sentence if in fact a lesser punishment is available to manage the risk posed to the general public.
Under the new provision, all those discretions are retained. Even in the circumstances of the presumption kicked in by a third sufficiently serious predicate offence, the judge still has the discretion, if the offender is able to rebut the presumption, to refuse the designation.
In either case, if the designation is made, then again the qualification of the Johnson principle is very clear: the judge retains final discretion to not impose the indeterminate sentence if the risk to society can be successfully managed under a lesser sentence.
I do accept that the judicial discretion piece of this legislation has been successfully reconstructed, rebuilt, reinserted into the bill, and that's a good thing.
The part that has concerned me is charter compliance, with specific reference to section 7 of the charter and the principles of fundamental justice, the right to remain silent. That continues to bother me. I accept that we're in a grey area, and I appreciate the previous remarks of Mr. Hoover as well as Mr. Cohen's remarks today. They've done their very best to grapple with that, but I just want to lay out my core concern, and perhaps you can address it.
Principles of fundamental justice include the right to silence. I'm assuming the right to silence would prevail throughout the entire criminal procedure, including the point at which the person is sentenced. I include a DO—dangerous offender—procedure as well. If I'm wrong, I'll stand corrected, but at this point I have no reason to believe that a person's right to remain silent in a criminal procedure wouldn't exist at any point during a criminal procedure, particularly the part where the person's liberty is potentially taken away.
In the normal course, where there is the right to remain silent, we would look to the crown to paint a picture of dangerousness such as would entitle the state to further constrain the liberty of the subject. In this particular case, the way the statute is drafted, the crown does not have to paint a picture. Yes, there is an assessment report that predates the hearing, but the crown doesn't have to paint the picture because the statute creates a presumption that the person is dangerous. So the crown doesn't have to paint the picture any more. There is simply a mathematical formula that says the person is presumed to be dangerous.
I am suggesting that is a practical removal of the right to remain silent, because not only does the subject have to face a presumption based on a mathematical formula that foists upon him or her the status of dangerousness, but they're forced to prove a negative. The subject has to come out and say “I'm not that. Whatever you think I am, I'm not that.” Forcing someone to prove a negative in the face of a mathematical presumption to me says we have practically removed the right to remain silent in a criminal procedure, and that is my concern.
I'll just leave that with you now and see if you can address my concern that the subject has practically lost the right to remain silent and is “DOed”, if I can use that as a verb, by a mathematical formula in which the crown doesn't have to paint the picture and doesn't have to face the burden of doing it.
I would just say that the Singh case deals with the right to silence and it also makes some observations on the relationship between self-incrimination and the right to silence. It's worth looking at.
It also refers to the case of White in the Supreme Court of Canada, which deals extensively with the ambit of self-incrimination protection.
I would suggest that this one quote taken from Singh, which actually draws on White, is germane. This is Mr. Justice Iacobucci:
I begin this inquiry by asserting that any rule demanded by the principle against self-incrimination which places a limit on compellability is in dynamic tension with an opposing principle of fundamental justice. That is the principle which suggests that, in a search for truth, relevant evidence should be available to the trier of fact. Obviously, the Charter sanctions deviations from this positive general rule. Sections 11(c) and 13 stand as obvious examples. The question is whether we need another exemption and if so, why?
I think that has to be examined and shaken down in terms of the Grayer case, which you've been referred to, which indicates that an individual is able to lawfully resist any mechanisms that might seek to enlist his cooperation. No separate proceedings are contemplated here, and the right to silence, in effect, can be successfully asserted, albeit at the peril of the individual.
:
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Good morning, Mr. Hoover and Mr. Cohen.
I would like to go back to the questions raised regarding the right to remain silent. You were very clear about the point that the right to remain silent is not necessarily something that is guaranteed by the charter, but which has resulted from various Supreme Court decisions made over the past 20 years.
My question will be a little bit more focused. In the Criminal Code, since you work with the Criminal Code, there are some presumptions. There are already some presumptions. Presumption counters what we refer to as the right to be presumed innocent and the right to remain silent, because we are presuming that you are guilty, for example and it's up to you to prove the opposite.
With respect to receiving stolen goods, when we talk about theft and receiving stolen goods, we have used the presumption for more than 50 years, ever since the code has existed. Has an attorney ever attacked this issue? Since the charter came into existence, has there ever been an attack that demonstrated that presumptions in general—and I am not only referring to this presumption—would violate inalienable charter rights? That is my first question.
I also have a related question, which is also a comment. We often see, when we go to court, the crown attorney present a notice of prior conviction in order to obtain an additional conviction. A presumption is made. We are already indicating that we will be seeking more severe fines, a longer prison term. We are already presuming something. This has never been questioned, at least, personally, I have never seen this being overturned or quashed by the Supreme Court of Canada.
I would therefore like to know whether or not the question put by Mr. Lee, of the Liberal Party, was relevant. I would also like to know whether or not Criminal Code presumptions have ever been questioned or overturned by a ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada.
:
I'll try to break your question down into parts. You began with some statements to the effect that in a way we were creating a presumption of guilt. Guilt, of course, is not part of this particular exercise. We are already past the point of guilt. We've established three convictions here. Any presumption that presumes guilt would, in my view, be manifestly unconstitutional, and those kinds of presumptions are not presumptions that have been advanced in the Criminal Code or elsewhere.
We're talking about reverse onus provisions. As to the question about how one addresses the justifiability of reverse onus provisions, the determining question is whether the presumption itself, the reverse onus, is justifiable. Basically this stems from the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Oakes, which is the leading decision on section 1 of the charter, and basically that court case says that facts that are not rationally open to an individual to prove or disprove cannot be justified. A rational connection has to exist between the proved fact--in this case we're dealing with three convictions--and the presumed fact. The presumed fact has to do with the linkage between those convictions, those designated offences, and dangerousness.
You asked the question about whether these provisions have been upheld in the jurisprudence. Reverse onuses and mandatory presumptions are treated the same and they can constitute a reasonable limitation that is justifiable under section 1 of the charter, and the courts have dealt with this in many cases: the Whyte case in 1988 dealing with care and control of a motor vehicle; the Holmes case, also in 1988, dealing with possession of housebreaking instruments; the Keegstra case dealing with the wilful promotion of hatred; the Chaulk case dealing with the presumption of sanity; the Downey case dealing with association with prostitutes; and the Pearson case dealing with reasonable bail.
These are cases, but this is not to suggest that there are not also cases where the courts have found constitutional infringement. These kinds of cases do throw up litigation, and no one is denying that a statutory provision that creates a reversal of onus will not throw off litigation.
One of the complicating factors, for those who choose to challenge this legislation, will be overcoming the idea that this is not an issue going to guilt and innocence and therefore does not fall within section 11 of the charter dealing with the presumption of innocence; but rather they will have to find shelter, if you want to call it that, under section 7 of the charter, and that may lead to a different kind of consideration.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I have two quick questions. I want to go back to some of my comments yesterday regarding the similarity that I see—not as a lawyer, as I'm not one—between a parole hearing, an application for parole, and the reverse onus that is in that process and the reverse onus we're talking about now.
Mr. Cohen, you just made a statement in which you stated that two things, proved fact and dangerousness, are present within the reverse onus system in the dangerous offender designation process. I would suggest that in a parole hearing, those two principles exist as well: proved fact, the person is in jail, it's been proven, the person has been judged guilty; and second, dangerousness is something that's considered in the parole application. Is it safe? Is it dangerous or not to society to let this person out at this time? So while the circumstances may admittedly be different, we are dealing with a very similar process.
It is my understanding that in the reverse onus, as it applies to a parole application, someone who's incarcerated must prove to a parole board that they are worthy to be let out. That's a reverse onus.
Has that ever been challenged? Has that successfully passed the Constitution or charter test, so to speak? I would assume it has, since it's still in existence. Am I correct in assuming that?
Secondly, it's my understanding that in regard to concern, the right to remain silent, if someone is appearing before the parole board they also have the right to remain silent if they so choose. Considering that this process, this privilege, still exists, and has for many years now, somewhere along the line someone must have thought about whether this had passed a charter or constitutional test. It must have, because it's still being used.
If either of these things, the reverse onus or the right to remain silent in the case of a parole application, were at some time proven to not pass the constitutional or charter test, I would doubt very much that they would still be used today. I would suggest that because of the similarity between the reverse onus and the right to remain silent, certainly it's similar enough to assume that we're on safe ground on this.
:
Arbitrary detention, of course, is something that will have to shake out in any litigation challenge.
Manifest unconstitutionality is something that basically says it is on its face manifestly unconstitutional.
I would challenge any of the experts you've had before you to suggest that this legislation is manifestly unconstitutional. I would assume that the experts who have been here have testified that in their view, in a properly constructed challenge to the legislation, they are capable of coming up with credible arguments that would convince the court—and I'm sure they can feel certain about this—that the legislation is unconstitutional, or at least that some aspects of the legislation are unconstitutional.
I understand where they're coming from, and I don't think they would be dismissing it off the top of their heads as manifestly unconstitutional.
I'm sorry, I didn't mark down the second part of your—
Mr. Cohen, you have consistently used the term that the minister has certified that Bill C-2 is not manifestly unconstitutional. In response to questions of my colleague, you again used the term “manifestly unconstitutional”.
For the word “manifestly”, one the definitions is this: in a manifest manner, evidently, unmistakably. That's quite a low bar. I think most people would say it's a very low bar, because it would have to slap everyone in the face. Even people who don't necessarily have legal training would look at the law and say there's something wrong with it.
My question to you then is, in your experience as the senior general counsel in the human rights law section of the Department of Justice, are you aware of previous situations where draft legislation has come forward and has been discussed, where the legal opinion was that it is not manifestly unconstitutional, but that there are solid arguments that it might be unconstitutional—and solid arguments that it is constitutional—and where the minister has refused to certify it because the minister has decided to go for a higher bar than simply “manifestly unconstitutional”?
I want to thank both of you, gentlemen. I'm sorry about the time constraints. I'm sure we could have spent another hour or so at this, but I want to thank both of you for presenting this morning and for being at committee.
Just to close this up as the witnesses are moving from the table, we've concluded our witness schedule, so we are going to move into clause-by-clause consideration next week.
Concerning amendments, the motion the committee adopted was that amendments to be submitted to the clerk 24 hours before the beginning of clause-by-clause consideration, without precluding the tabling of additional amendments from the floor. In order for the office of the clerk to receive a copy of the amendments package submitted by the members for three o'clock on Monday afternoon—in both languages, I would add—the amendments need to be submitted to the clerk by no later than noon. So I'm asking for agreement that we can assume that all members agree to send their amendments to the clerk by noon on Monday to facilitate the clause-by-clause process.
Very good. Thank you.
We are adjourned.