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—