:
Thank you very much, Madam Chair. I'd like to begin by congratulating you on being elected chair of this committee.
This is my first time here as the minister, but it's not my first time here on the committee. I'm a regular. I'd like to thank the committee for giving me the opportunity to be here to discuss Bill , which proposes a series of reforms to the national sex offender registry and to the Criminal Code provisions pertaining to publication bans.
The publication ban reforms would give victims of criminal offences more autonomy with respect to publication bans and enhance their right to ongoing information. The reforms with respect to sex offenders would give more teeth to the national sex offender registry and be consistent with the Supreme Court of Canada's 2022 decision in R. v. Ndhlovu.
[English]
I am very pleased to see the committee recognize the urgency of this issue and begin a prestudy of this legislation. I thank you sincerely for doing that and taking that initiative. As you know, we are under a court-imposed deadline. If the legislation before us does not receive royal assent by October 28, sex offenders will no longer be able to be added to the sex offender registry. That is an outcome that I believe none of us wants to see happen.
I'll begin by discussing the reforms in this legislation that have been proposed by the victims and survivors of sexual assault and also by their advocates. I'm very grateful for the lived experiences that victims and survivors shared with my office as Bill was being developed. Very much thanks to their leadership, Bill S-12 will help craft a criminal justice system that better serves the needs of victims in Canada.
[Translation]
Bill advocates a victim-oriented approach that empowers victims. It accomplishes this by requiring that courts and attorneys verify whether victims wish to be protected by a publication ban, and if so, that they be informed of the impact of a publication ban and their right to request its revocation or alteration.
[English]
Bill aims to eliminate the threat of prosecution for individuals when they share their own identifying information. Victims and survivors should not be prosecuted for telling their own stories. That is fundamental to the conception and understanding of this bill.
I want to thank committee members for showing leadership on the subject of publication bans. I know that this issue was examined by this very committee during last year’s victims of crime study, and many people in this room right now were participants in that study. I also know that many of you have met with and listened to members of a group call My Voice, My Choice, as well as other advocates. Support for these reforms, thankfully, crosses partisan lines. We now have the opportunity to get this package across the finish line in a timely manner that respects the deadlines imposed by the Supreme Court.
Upon further review of Bill , the Senate made amendments to the publication ban reforms to respond to the concerns it heard from witnesses during the bill’s study. While these Senate amendments have generally led to a more robust bill, I am concerned about some of the amendments and would like to draw your attention to two of them.
First, an amendment was made by the Senate that would require the prosecutor to inform victims and witnesses who are subjects of a publication ban about the circumstances under which they could legitimately disclose information without facing legal consequences. While I appreciate the objective of a change of that nature, it does raise serious questions about prosecutorial independence and conflicts of interest.
Some of the very Crown attorneys who would be providing that advice would be the same individuals who would ultimately be handling a prosecution. I am very conscious of the fact that in this committee we have no less than three former prosecuting Crown attorneys, and I'm sure they may share some of the concerns that I have with respect to this proposed Senate amendment. In fact, I have already received correspondence from some provincial attorneys general raising this very concern.
Second, I am also concerned with the amendment to clarify what is or is not captured by a publication ban. As amended by the Senate, Bill currently specifies that individuals who are protected by a publication ban may disclose information about themselves as long as they do not identify another person who is protected by the same publication ban. The problem here is that sometimes there are victims or witnesses who are subject to different publication bans and who still may wish to keep their identities private.
I want to move now to other components of Bill , so I'm moving away from the Senate amendments.
Another victim- and survivor-centric element of Bill relates to information that is received from the courts. Under the Victims Bill of Rights, victims can decide whether they want to stay informed about all case developments, like appeals or parole. They can also decide that they do not want to be contacted about the case. They have the right to move on and to not have to hear about it again.
Bill significantly simplifies and streamlines the process for registering for information by requiring judges to ask victims their preferences and by making receipt of ongoing information a simple box to tick on a form. I am grateful to the advocates who brought this issue to light, and would like to emphasize that this measure is a key priority of the federal ombudsperson for victims of crime.
I now want to outline the measures in Bill that relate to the national sex offender registry.
In response to the Supreme Court’s decision in Ndhlovu, Bill proposes to replace automatic registration with a presumption of registration, meaning that an order to comply with the registry must be imposed in all cases involving a sexual offence, unless the offender can show that registration would be grossly disproportionate or overbroad. However, the bill would retain automatic registration for two categories. The first is repeat sexual offenders. The second is those who commit sexual offences against children and are sentenced to two years or more of imprisonment, on indictment, even in the case of a first-time offender in that category.
Restricting automatic registration to these situations reflects current social science evidence that these categories of individuals are at a higher risk to reoffend in a sexual manner. This responds directly to the Supreme Court’s judgment in Ndhlovu that automatic registration is only justified for individuals who pose an elevated risk of reoffending. The court has called for the tailoring of this provision, and that is the tailoring we have done.
It is my view that including these individuals on the registry will always be related and proportionate to the objectives of the registry. Sexual offences against children are despicable crimes that I condemn in the strongest terms, and I presume all parliamentarians would condemn in the strongest terms. I'm speaking to you not just as the Minister of Justice or a member of Parliament from Toronto, but as the father of two young boys.
In addition, we know that repeat sexual offenders—that's the second category of those who would be automatically registered—are five to eight times more likely to reoffend than individuals who have non-sexual criminal histories.
There is another piece in the Ndhlovu decision that relates to mandatory lifetime registration. What Bill proposes to do is to allow a court to order lifetime registration for certain individuals. We are talking about people convicted of more than one designated offence in the same proceeding, where the offences demonstrate a pattern of behaviour that shows an increased risk of sexual recidivism. This addresses the concerns of the Supreme Court, while allowing lifetime registration in appropriate cases.
[Translation]
In addition to the proposals resulting from R. v. Ndhlovu, there are also some amendments whose purpose is to strengthen the offender registration regime as a whole and to make it more effective. These amendments include a requirement for registered sex offenders to give prior notice of at least 14 days for any travel, as well as a specific destination address. This gives the police more time and information to assess risks, and where required, to alert their international partners responsible for enforcing the act of an individual's travel plans.
[English]
Other key amendments include the addition of more offences for which an individual could be required to register, including the non-consensual distribution of intimate images and sextortion, and a new arrest warrant to address non-compliance with an offender’s registration obligations.
What I'm saying is that we not only revisited the issue of the sex offender registry, making it compliant, in my view, with the Supreme Court's guidance, but we are actually improving the registry, including the number of offences that would be captured by the registry.
The new arrest warrant is critical from a law enforcement perspective. Again, this is not a partisan issue but an issue that all of us take seriously. What I would emphasize to you is that many stakeholders have talked to my office about this bill, including law enforcement stakeholders such as the RCMP and the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police.
What I will say to you is that they've said they would like the sex offender registry to be maintained. They see it as a very valuable tool for fighting crime, including for repeat sexual offenders. What they said to me—which was quite shocking, and I'll share it with you—is that the stats vary on a weekly basis. Between 46 and 75 times per week in Canada, names are added to the sex offender registry. That is quite staggering, but it would be more staggering to lose the ability to do that and keep Canadians safe.
[Translation]
I will conclude by saying that I'm convinced all of the reforms proposed in the bill would strengthen the national sex offender registry, comply with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and make the criminal justice system more responsive to the needs of victims of crime.
[English]
I hope that all parties in this committee and all parties in the chamber can work together to pass this legislation in the coming weeks, since time is of the essence.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Minister Virani, congratulations on your appointment. This is, no doubt, the first of many visits you'll have to the justice committee. We welcome you.
Minister, there's something I would like you to address at this committee. Since 2015, violent crime in Canada is up 39%, homicide is up 43%, gang-related homicide is up 108%, aggravated assault is up 24%, assault with a weapon is up 64%, sexual assaults—which go to the root of the issue that we have today—are up 71% and sex crimes against children are up 126%.
You're new as minister, but you are not new to the file, having served for some time as the parliamentary secretary to the minister of justice. There's a quote you gave that I'd like you to address. These are Statistics Canada numbers that I just listed. You said, “I think that empirically it's unlikely” that Canada is becoming less safe.
In the face of that non-partisan Statistics Canada information and hearing what, I'm sure, you're hearing from your constituents—the same as all members of Parliament are—which is that they feel Canada has become less safe, do you still stand by your statement that Canada is not becoming less safe in the face of those statistics?
:
Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to all the witnesses in attendance.
Let me use my brief opportunity here to publicly congratulate you, , on your new role. I'm looking forward to having you appear on many occasions.
I want to start off by discussing the narrative of your government, sir, and some talking points that you have used and that your predecessor, , used to justify and sell, in my view, Bill as an important piece of legislation not only to restore public confidence in the administration of justice but also to make our communities safer.
I've heard repeatedly in the House that one of the hallmarks of Bill is that you've listened. You listened to stakeholders, you listened to premiers, and you listened to chiefs of police and presidents of police associations in forming the specific language to tighten up the reverse onus provisions in the Criminal Code and to add to the reverse onus provisions in the Criminal Code. However, you'll agree with me, sir, that it wasn't just additional reverse onus provisions as they relate to additional firearms offences that these stakeholders were asking for. There was actually a laundry list of other items they asked for that did not find itself in Bill C-48. Not knowing what the agenda is from your department, I don't think you're bringing forward any legislation to even contemplate encompassing the other asks.
With that being said, the provincial governments and the police associations have asked for a thorough review and reform of Canada's bail system. They asked for a definition of “serious prolific offender” or “repeat violent offender” within the confines of Bill . They specifically asked that bail hearings for serious firearms offences be heard by a judge of a provincial court or a superior court as opposed to a justice of the peace, that obligations be strengthened with sureties and that there be consequences for failing obligations.
My ask of you, with the limited amount of time that I have, sir, is why this government, why your department and why you personally have ignored those significant additional measures that the stakeholders are asking for to improve community safety and to restore confidence in our justice system.
:
Thank you, Mr. Brock, for the question.
I'd put it to you simply that no one is being ignored by me or by my department with respect to the conversation about community safety.
What I would underscore for you is that the conversation on bail reform started with a letter that came from the premiers to the after an FPT that occurred in October 2022. That letter had a very specific ask, and we added to that ask in terms of developing the legislation. To the one firearms offence listed there, we added another three.
You and I share the same province, the province of Ontario. Doug Ford's government and Doug Downey, as the AG, have been very complimentary in terms of what we've been doing and very supportive in terms of what we've been doing.
What I found unique about the situation is that we had the support behind that bill of all 13 leaders of the provinces and territories in this country, as well as all of the law enforcement community. That continued even as we saw it make its way through to the Senate. It's now in the Senate. David Eby's government continued to lobby for its quick passage even while it was being studied in the Senate.
I think it's important, in terms of the list you're mentioning, to also underscore—and you as a former prosecutor will know this—that when it comes to setting in place the structure and the architecture, that's the Criminal Code and that's for federal parliamentarians. When it comes to the administration of justice and things like bail enforcement, that's the responsibility of the provinces, pursuant to the administration of justice under the constitutional division of powers.
What we've seen is that we've put money in place, including $330 million for guns and gangs enforcement, that is helping provinces do exactly that. There's some complementarity there, but in terms of my willingness to explore other options for keeping communities safe, as a guy who represents a riding in Toronto that has seen violence, particularly on the TTC, I am committed to that. It is my fundamental duty to keep Canadians safe.
Bill goes in a direction that will do just that. It's an important piece of legislation that got all-party support, which is a good thing. I think there are more areas of collaboration, and I'm willing to collaborate in those areas.
:
Congratulations on your appointment, Minister.
And congratulations to you too, Madam Chair, on your new role.
It is indeed a pleasure to be back once again on the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, because it's one of my favourite House of Commons committees.
[English]
Mr. Minister, I want to ask you about an amendment that was made by the Senate. You voiced some discomfort with a couple of the Senate amendments or mentioned some issues with respect to them.
I have a concern about one that was made with respect to the variation or revocation of applications in proposed subsection 486.51(3). I don't expect you to remember the bill perfectly by heart, so I'll read it to you, mention what I'm concerned about and ask if you might react to it, so that we will be governed in our deliberations accordingly.
It now states:
If the court is of the opinion that varying or revoking the order that is the subject of an application referred to in subsection (2) may affect the privacy interests of any person other than the accused who is the subject of any order prohibiting the publication in any document or the broadcasting or transmission in any way of information that could identify that person, the court shall hold a hearing to determine whether the order should be varied or revoked.
My concern is in reference to “the privacy interests of any person other than the accused”, which was added by the Senate. It seems to me to imply that the accused actually has some privacy interests that are being ignored by this section, but then some accused and their lawyer may argue they have privacy interests in other sections throughout the act. I don't think we want to recognize that the accused has a privacy interest in these matters.
Could you guide us on that and let me know if you or the officials share that concern about this language being introduced?