Thank you.
First, regarding the offences, if you look at the primary designated offences, I don't think it's necessarily a situation of removing those that are offered there. It's a question of looking at the practical aspects of what offences are there and the effect they might have within the confines of the three predicate offences leading to a reverse onus. I think we can all agree that there are certainly assaults with a weapon or assaults causing bodily harm or robberies or kidnappings that carry with them an extreme level of dangerousness, but if you look at, practically, assault causing bodily harm as an offence or assault with a weapon, you can have offences within the confines of those sections as defined and convictions that are not dangerous and are not as serious as others. If you remove from consideration the factual underpinnings of the offence and simply go from the conviction and sentence received to a presumption of dangerousness, you're completely missing the point. That's why I think the net is cast too wide. It's not the presence of the offence; it's the fact that you are ignoring the factual underpinnings that gave rise to the conviction that I see as problematic.
You mentioned the case law that I referred to. You will recall that Mr. Douglas Hoover testified before this committee on October 31. He's a lawyer with the Department of Justice, in policy, and he was answering questions. I believe he was answering a question from Mr. Lee regarding the right to silence and the effect that it may or may not have within the sentencing milieu. Mr. Hoover answered the question in relation to a case called Grayer from the Ontario Court of Appeal. Grayer was a decision, I believe, in 2003 that dealt with the question of whether or not the dangerous offender provisions and the mandating of the individual meeting with the state psychiatrist or the state authorities to prepare the report and the need for him or her to testify at the hearing or give evidence at the hearing infringed on their right to silence. The Court of Appeal stated—and I paraphrase, of course—that it might be an infringement of the right to silence per se. An individual can give up that right or stand by that right, but they do so at their own peril. If they don't wish to provide evidence at the hearing in the face of the evidence that the state has mustered, then the chips may fall where they may. That case, of course, was decided within the framework of the state having to prove dangerousness.
What I'm suggesting to this committee is where you move to the reverse onus, you are in effect mandating that that convicted person give up their right to silence, because if they don't, the judge sentencing will be lacking any evidence other than the presumption that would exist under subsection 753(1)(1.1).