Criminal Code—Controlled Drugs and Substances Act
Motion in Amendment
November 3, 2022
Therefore, honourable senators, in amendment, I move:
That Bill C-5 be not now read a third time, but that it be amended in clause 14, on page 3, by replacing lines 19 to 21 with the following:
“(iii) section 318 (advocating genocide);
(2) Section 742.1 is amended by adding “and” at the end of paragraph (d) and by replacing paragraphs (e) and (f) with the following:
(e) the offence is not an offence, prosecuted by way of indictment, under any of the following provisions:
(i) section 221 (causing bodily harm by criminal negligence),
(ii) section 264 (criminal harassment),
(iii) section 267 (assault with a weapon or causing bodily harm),
(iv) section 270.01 (assaulting peace officer with weapon or causing bodily harm),
(v) section 271 (sexual assault),
(vi) section 279 (kidnapping),
(vii) section 279.02 (material benefit — trafficking),
(viii) section 281 (abduction of person under age of 14), and
(ix) section 349 (being unlawfully in a dwelling-house).”.
Would Senator Boisvenu agree to take a question? Since we’re repeating the debate a bit and we already had it in committee, Senator Boisvenu, I understand that the list of offences that you propose adding that will make a release in these conditions impossible, isn’t exactly the same list that currently exists in the Criminal Code. What led you to remove some of the offences that were in the Criminal Code and add others in their place?
The ones we were looking at are the ones that are in the bill. As I said earlier, these are the most common offences and they go hand in hand with family violence. I’m adding them because according to the data I obtained on conditional sentences, currently 80% of men who assault a woman serve a conditional sentence. On average, that sentence is six months. Removing crimes from the Criminal Code or adding even more domestic violence crimes to the Criminal Code will ensure that fewer men will be incarcerated and that more men will be released. When we see that in many cases the conditions are not respected, especially orders to stay away from the victim, I think that we’re putting women’s safety at even greater risk.
If I understand correctly, it’s the same amendment that was presented to the committee? That list is the one that is currently in the Criminal Code, except for certain elements that were deleted and others that were added?
Yes, that’s right.
In the case of the two you deleted, I understand that you agree with the government that they need to be removed?
If I’d come up with a long list, very few of my colleagues would have been inclined to make drastic changes to Bill C-5, so I’m focusing on crimes associated with domestic violence in particular. It often starts with harassment and sexual assault, and the situation always gets worse if those crimes aren’t severely punished when they’re committed in a context of domestic violence. You can be certain that in 2023, 2024 and 2025, the number of murdered women will increase.
Thank you very much.
Honourable senators, I want to begin by expressing my deep appreciation for the work that Senator Boisvenu has done over many years to support the rights of women who are living in situations of domestic violence. Just today, at the Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, we heard about his Senate public bill that is also dealing with some of these same issues. I don’t think anyone in this chamber would want to deny to Senator Boisvenu the kudos he rightly deserves for his long-standing commitment to this question of social justice.
In the last few days in this chamber, we have heard remarkable speeches from our colleagues, including Senator Boniface, Senator Hartling and Senator Manning, dealing with this same issue. The scourge of domestic violence, whether intimate partner violence or violence between parents and adult children in this country, is a tremendous burden on the soul of the nation and on our criminal justice system. As a journalist working at the Edmonton Journal, I covered countless heartbreaking stories of families destroyed by the domestic violence. I had the privilege of being able to interview Dr. Alan Benson, the very proud husband of Senator LaBoucane-Benson, who dedicated much of his career to working in this field and serving on the Family Violence Death Review Committee in the province of Alberta that dealt with some of the most horrific incidents.
I don’t want anyone in this chamber to mistake me as somebody who is soft on domestic violence. It is true that conditional sentences need to be applied extremely carefully in cases where a domestic abuser is in the same community as the victim. That should be obvious. You obviously don’t want to have a catch-and-release system where you let someone — who is a very present danger — out on the street so that he can harass, stalk, assault and kill victims in the worst incidents.
That being said, I believe that the list contained in Senator Boisvenu’s amendment is far too broad and casts far too wide a net for offences that we would wish to exclude from the potential of a conditional sentence.
I want to go through some of them. The first one listed in the amendment is section 221: causing bodily harm by criminal negligence.
In my years covering court cases in Alberta, I saw an extraordinary range of cases that involved criminal negligence. In some cases, that criminal negligence is so atrocious, so thoughtless, so selfish and so mean-spirited that it rises to the very highest standard of an atrocious crime.
But, in other cases, criminal negligence can be something far less morally repugnant. Before we would add something like criminal negligence to a list, we need to understand that there’s a continuum. There is a spectrum, and this kind of criminal negligence may be perfectly well-suited to a conditional sentence, while other kinds of criminal negligence call out for jail time.
Section 264 touches upon criminal harassment. Now, anyone who is a politician in public life, anyone who has lived in Ottawa through the last 10 months, knows what criminal harassment can be at its most minor, and potentially at its most dire.
We can all imagine a case where criminal harassment is an outrageous shock to the conscience, and the person involved is rightly deserving of jail time. We can all also imagine that the best thing for someone found guilty of criminal negligence might be to leave them under house arrest and take all their computers away.
Again, we don’t want to cast so broad a net that we deny judges the discretion to use a conditional sentence where warranted.
Section 267 relates to assault with a weapon or causing bodily harm. If someone is shot, or attacked with a knife, and caused that kind of bodily harm, clearly a custodial sentence might be the right solution. You can also imagine assault with a weapon being somebody who is hit — I’ve seen some things in the courts, and I would think, “That’s a weapon?” But the court considers it a weapon, and that might include Senator Gold’s favourite, pepper spray, or it might include hitting somebody with a garden implement.
Section 270.01 relates the same, specifically for assaulting a peace officer, which should outrage the conscience of the nation. We can all imagine a situation where someone who assaulted a peace officer should go away to jail for a very long time. We can also imagine police officers trying to break up some scuffle, or melee, and being hit over the head with a placard, and maybe we would not consider that something that needs custodial time.
I don’t want to bore us by going through the list, but I will go to the last one. Section 349 relates to being unlawfully in a dwelling-house. If you have trespassed into someone’s home to assault them, absolutely, but being unlawfully in a dwelling‑house can also be a Criminal Code offence if you are squatting in a home, squatting in an abandoned building to use drugs, or taking shelter in an abandoned home to protect yourself while living on the streets.
When my daughter was at law school, she had an imaginary case where someone got lost while camping on the beach and broke into somebody’s summer cabin to stay warm. I believe she was acting for the prosecution in the moot court and demanded the maximum penalty, but I suggested to her that if somebody was really in distress and lost in the woods, breaking into a cabin for the night was not the worst of offences.
I take notice of Senator Boisvenu’s completely correct point that we must not be frivolous in the use of conditional sentences, especially in cases involving domestic violence and domestic harassment. But, with the greatest of respect, I would ask us not to support this amendment, because I do not think it will accomplish what Senator Boisvenu wishes it to do. It will, instead, deny the judges autonomy, discretion and responsibility to apply conditional sentences when warranted and where necessary.
Senator Simons, you started to go through the list of some of the offences. The first one you listed was criminal negligence. You didn’t mention that it is causing bodily harm by criminal negligence.
Then you said you didn’t want to go through them all because that would take too long, potentially, but you skipped over sexual assault, kidnapping and human trafficking. Don’t you think those are the ones where there may be fewer examples of situations where it would be appropriate to have conditional sentences — where those particular offenders would be back in the same communities as the people that they victimized?
Senator Batters, you’re a lawyer, and I am not; I’ve been an observer in courtrooms for a long time.
In terms of sexual assault, it’s my understanding — and please correct me if I am wrong, because I don’t have your legal background — that a sexual assault can be anything from a violent, heinous rape to someone exposing themselves in the park. I think we need to understand that sexual assault covers a whole spectrum of the human condition and of human sin. It’s really important that we not impose a cookie-cutter solution, because the sexual assault committed by a rapist who jumps out at you in the parking lot and assaults you viciously is quite different, I think, from the kind of sexual assault when a guy who feels you up in the bar. I don’t care to be felt up in the bar. Actually, it has been a long time since it happened. Sorry — I went for low-hanging fruit. That was not a tasteful joke, and I apologize.
My point is there is a wide variety of offences that can be deemed sexual assault.
For kidnapping, there is a difference between a kidnapping for ransom and for custodial interference, which is often charged as kidnapping. Again, I’m not excusing a parent who abducts a child in violation of a custody order, but, again, that is a different thing from an armed ransom attempt.
These are all very difficult questions, and I, in no way, want to minimize the dangers that criminals pose in our society. I, in no way, want to minimize the dangers in domestic situations where people are often trapped by economic and social circumstances. And when justice finally steps in, they need the courts to be there to protect them. I just feel that this particular amendment casts too wide a net.
Senator Simons, what you referred to would probably be indecent exposure. For many of these offences, if it’s not appropriate to charge with the more serious offence, as some of these are listed here, the police, the prosecutors and the courts would deal with them on the appropriate sort of charging basis.
In regard to the other offence that you referred to earlier — being unlawfully in a dwelling-house — maybe you would recall that sort of offence can often be used when an ex-spouse is stalking and potentially going to harm their spouse. There have been very significant cases that deal with that.
I think Senator Boisvenu has actually tried to make sure that the type of charges that he’s dealt with here are the ones that are the most serious — potentially dealing with domestic violence. Wouldn’t you agree that is the sort of thing that we should be worried about, especially when dealing with conditional sentencing, where we could have those offenders back in the community to hurt those people?
As I have said, I would trust that the responsible members of the judiciary would not give out conditional sentences like Halloween candy. Those would be reserved for the very specific fact-based cases where they were appropriate. In no way would I suggest that somebody who breaks into a house and is in the house unlawfully to menace the residents of the house should be treated in the same way as somebody who gets lost in the woods in the winter and breaks into a cabin to not freeze to death.
Would the honourable senator accept a question?
Do I still have time?
We have three minutes.
Yes, if you like.
Senator, you used a word that made what little hair I have left stand on end a bit. You said that you trust that judges aren’t handing out conditional sentences like candy, but that’s what they’re doing. Eighty per cent of men charged with spousal abuse receive a conditional sentence. This bill will ensure that 90% of men will receive a conditional sentence. What message does it send to society to say, “Men, if you beat your wife for 10 years, you’ll get to serve two years at home,” knowing that 40% of offenders don’t comply with their conditions? Then they can get closer to their wives.
Don’t you think that’s what’s already happening when you say “candy”?
I don’t know the source of that figure. If it’s true, it curls my hair, and I’ve got curly hair.
I agree with you. I don’t think that men who have been a violent menace to their spouses should just be — as I said, I used the phrase “catch and release” before. It’s very important, especially when a man is showing the signals that his behaviour could escalate, that we deal with that properly. I just don’t think this particular amendment gets to the heart of what you are trying to do, and I absolutely agree with what you’re trying to do.
I have another question. The last three or four rulings of the Supreme Court in matters of domestic violence, and those of the Quebec Court of Appeal in particular, found that judges need to impose harsher sentences. We need to send Canadian society a clear message. Does Bill C-5 send a tough message regarding domestic violence?
I think a clear message does need to be sent to society that we will not tolerate domestic violence and we will not tolerate the minimizing of domestic violence. I think Senator Manning’s speech the other day was profoundly moving. The stories he told from his own community — I don’t want to say they should inspire us — should move us to stand with you, with Senator Boniface, with Senator Hartling, with Senator Audette and with all the senators who have dedicated their lives to fighting domestic violence. I think that this is a time on this topic when we can wisely put aside any kind of ideological or party/partisan politics and speak with one voice in this Senate that this is something we will not condone and will not tolerate.