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Public Safety committee  No, sir, it's not my opinion.

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  As I say, if the national registry had the investigative capabilities and the access for officers, and many of the things that we have mentioned in the document--in which I believe you were provided the key differences between the two--that's when I think consideration would seri

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  Sir, as you'll recall, on April 21 I used an example of where offender information was provided to an employer because the employer might not have been otherwise aware. There were, I think, the elderly in one example and children in another, and those are the only cases. Under th

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  I think I particularly recall that we do occasionally get media and private citizen requests. But I don't believe we've had a freedom of information.... Say, for example, it's for the release of postal codes, perhaps not where actual people live but the release of postal codes fo

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  I think probably, to use a psychological term, correlation does not equal causation. Therefore, I know that this study saw correlation between these behaviours and serial offenders in their younger years, but it was not stating that it caused them. It was simply an observation ma

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  I'm sorry, it's probably been 15 or 18 years since I looked at the study. However, if you would like a copy of it, I'd be happy to provide it. It would be with the FBI in Quantico, Virginia, but I can facilitate that.

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  The one thing I know--and again, I'm speaking on behalf of the CACP--is that we should have a national registry so that we would know sex offender information from right across the country. Obviously, in Ontario we're only capturing those offenders who, through the judicial proce

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  As with other checks that are done by police, say, when they're stopping someone on the side of the road or conducting an investigation, there is a consideration of the immediacy of the situation. Some officers could have access through their cars. In other cases, detectives don'

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  Yes, sir, the nexus you mention is why our Ontario sex offender registry is located within the behavioural sciences area of the Ontario Provincial Police. As a criminal profiler in past years, I would have loved to have had this additional information. A profiler tends to become

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  Yes, sir, and initially there wasn't funding per se to the Ontario Provincial Police to implement this program. There was some initial funding to provide cameras, etc. Our officers still go around to all of the locations in the province, municipal and provincial agencies, to prov

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  Our annual budget is $4.1 million to operate the Ontario sex offender registry headquarters, the unit in Orillia, as the sergeant has indicated. That's for the support, training, all of the technology upgrades and changes. Any time there's a legislative change, obviously that imp

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  I don't recall specifically if this came up, but Ontario has kept its registry because of its investigative usefulness and the absence of the investigative usefulness, in our opinion, of the national sex offender registry. This is the CACP's position. There are a number of area

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  I believe one study--I apologize, I'm very rusty on its source--was done by the FBI in the mid-seventies showing a triangular relationship in serial homicide that included arson, bed-wetting, and animal cruelty. That is why research, such as the murder research I gave at the open

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  We don't have any statistical studies, and they are absent as far as quality assurance measures. We are working toward that. It's still relatively new over the long term to see the reduction. As you can well imagine, many of the offenders would be incarcerated and re-incarcerat

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines

Public Safety committee  Well, I was going to give you an example of a case many people are familiar with, and that's the Paul Bernardo investigation. I can tell you from my familiarity with it, having been involved in that investigation, and from information that would be available through court transcr

May 12th, 2009Committee meeting

C/Supt Kate Lines