Good afternoon, honourable Chair and committee members.
My name is David Wright. I'm a recently retired assistant Crown attorney employed by the Ministry of the Attorney General for 32 years. I am currently litigating for Ecojustice, an environmental organization based in Vancouver.
On March 10, 2017, in Detroit, Michigan, Volkswagen pleaded guilty to three criminal felony counts and was fined $2.8 billion for cheating on emissions tests mandated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in regard to 590,000 diesel-engined vehicles. It was a fine of $4,745 per vehicle.
On January 22, 2020, Volkswagen pleaded guilty to violations under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act and was fined $196.5 million related to the installation of illegal emission software in 128,000 vehicles. This equals a fine of $1,535 per vehicle.
Volkswagen received special procedural treatment in court.
Let me explain briefly what normally happens when federal charges are laid. I’d like to note that the Criminal Code rules apply to environmental prosecutions.
Once a charge is laid, the accused attends court for a first appearance, normally within three to four weeks, allowing time for the Crown to prepare disclosure. On this first appearance, disclosure is then provided to the defence lawyer.
The next step is a formal meeting between the Crown and the defence, called a Crown pretrial. In serious cases, a judicial pretrial, or JPT, must be held. This is a meeting between a judge, the Crown and the defence to determine if the case can be resolved or whether the trial issues can be narrowed to save court time. Then either the case is resolved or a trial date is set. If a case is resolved, the victim will be advised before the plea proceeds. Resolution for these types of offences normally takes between three and five months.
What happened with Volkswagen?
Sixty charges under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act were laid on December 9, 2019. The first appearance was December 13, 2019. In other words, it was four days later.
The agreement between the Crown and the defence was for Volkswagen to enter a guilty plea and be sentenced on that same day, as acknowledged in the court transcript of December 13, 2019.
Differing from any usual prosecution, Volkswagen did not have to repeatedly attend court, publicly obtain disclosure, publicly set a Crown pretrial and publicly set a judicial pretrial, like every other accused in Canada has to.
There is nothing on the court record or information to show that Volkswagen ever received disclosure. There is nothing on the record to show that Volkswagen ever attended a JPT. As required, the court record or information would record these events to maintain an official accounting of all that happens once a charge is laid.
It is inconceivable that Volkswagen pleaded guilty and agreed to a $196-million fine without receiving disclosure. With just five days between the laying of the charge and the scheduling of the plea, the only explanation is that Volkswagen received disclosure before the charges were laid on December 9. This is a major breach of protocol.
The reason this is significant is that prior to December 9, the Crown still had the discretion to determine which charges, if any, should proceed. To be clear, it was in the Crown's discretion to lay Criminal Code conspiracy charges against Volkswagen, as was done in the United States, not the less serious charges found in the Canadian Environmental Protection Act.
It is also inconceivable that the plea went ahead without any pretrials. While there is no written court record of either a Crown pretrial or a judicial pretrial taking place, both had to have occurred, as it would be negligent on both parties not to hold these meetings. Given the timing, the judicial pretrial may have occurred before the charges were laid.
The 60-count plea was scheduled for December 13. However, the plea stalled when Ecojustice asked that victims be allowed to provide a community impact statement, pursuant to section 722.2 of the Criminal Code.
The case adjourned to January 22, 2020, for submission of the impact statements, the plea and the sentence.
What is a community impact statement?
Even though Environment Canada had been locked in litigation with Ecojustice for years regarding Volkswagen’s unlawful conduct, it told no interested parties of the date the charges were laid or that a plea was pending December 13, 2019. No environmental or health organization had time to prepare any type of response, including a community impact statement.
On January 22, 2020, contrary to the mandatory provisions of the Criminal Code, the Crown unilaterally disallowed community impact statements presented by Ecojustice, saying it was “untested” expert evidence—