Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I want to thank the committee for inviting the Criminal Lawyers' Association to be present at the hearing on this piece of legislation.
It's a relatively narrowly focused piece of legislation. We have been familiar with reverse onus provisions in our Criminal Code for some years and have learned to live and work with them and understand their rationales. The Supreme Court of Canada, I think, has probably spoken on them about three different times. They've been constitutionally approved.
In the past, our problem, as an association representing individuals charged with offences, was not the reverse onus or anything of that nature, until the tertiary ground came along, and it was so broadly brushed that it was essentially “maintain confidence in the administration of justice”. And this was something we just couldn't get a handle on in terms of exactly what was being got at by the legislation. Was it confidence that we lock up all criminals? Was it confidence that everybody is entitled to bail unless it was reasonably withheld?
Then there was a challenge to that, and the end result was that Parliament then enacted specific examples of what was meant by that. I note that this legislation, the legislation that is being proposed here, does that as well, but in the context of firearms and the firearms being used to commit other criminal offences.
I have to say that this legislation will undoubtedly face constitutional challenges. I think, quite frankly, it will pass them, and it will pass them because the specificity with which it is drawn will direct any court deciding the constitutionality of the legislation to what it was that Parliament was getting at and why.
So I think the end result for the Criminal Lawyers' Association--you have to understand, I only was able to consult with our committee at this point, because it came up so quickly--is that we don't have any particularly strong quarrel with this legislation. If you invited us here today thinking we would be the ones to tell you it was problematic and wrong-headed, or it was way too broad, or any of those things, I'm afraid it's not. It's actually fairly specific.
What one has to understand with respect to bail in general is that it is fact driven, and that's regardless of whether there is a reverse onus or not.
Let me give you an example. If a young kid is charged with trafficking in marijuana by selling $30 or $20 worth of marijuana to a friend, whether there's a reverse onus or not, he will get bail. If he's charged with 10 kilos of heroin, the reverse onus is there, but even if it weren't, it would in all likelihood trigger a detention order because of the nature of the offence, the nature of the drug, the quantities of the drug, and that sort of thing.
So what I'm trying to say is that reverse onus does nothing more to courts than point them in the direction that Parliament is saying they want them to look. I also have to tell you that I think, quite frankly, at least in the courts in Toronto, they're already looking extremely carefully at any cases that come up where firearms are involved. While there is no legislated reverse onus, there is what could be called a de facto reverse onus when guns are involved.
Mr. Chair, those are my opening comments with respect to your legislation. I welcome any comments or questions.