Thank you.
Good afternoon, Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee. The RCMP is grateful for the opportunity to speak with you today about this important matter. We hope that our comments will inform your study into the RCMP's use of on-device investigative tools, commonly known as ODITs.
Encryption is essential in our modern world. It protects financial and other sensitive information and helps ensure that Canadians' online activities remain safe and private. Unfortunately, encryption and the devices that help protect Canadians' privacy also help criminals conduct illegal activities and avoid police detection. Although police are sometimes able to collect data stored on those devices, encryption often renders the data unintelligible.
Before I go into detail on what ODITs are, I would like to be clear that the RCMP has never procured or used the Pegasus software, or any other NSO product.
ODITs are used extremely rarely and in limited cases. Their use is always targeted. It's always time-limited, and it's never to conduct unwarranted and/or mass surveillance. These tools are not used in secret. ODITs require judicial authorization prior to deployment, and the evidence collected, including how it was collected, is subject to disclosure and court scrutiny.
Given the RCMP's mandate, we are not able in this setting to discuss specific operational requirements, and the RCMP is not able to disclose sensitive details related to the tools and techniques used in the course of its investigations. Any public disclosure beyond the technical documentation that we provided to the committee that describes the general capabilities of an ODIT has the potential to adversely impact our investigations.
Our use of ODITs is in full compliance with Canadian legislation, including the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Criminal Code of Canada and established jurisprudence.
ODIT technology may be used to assist in high-priority investigations relating to national security, serious and organized crime, and other Criminal Code offences that impact the safety and security of all Canadians. It will only be deployed after judicial authorization has been obtained.
As for what an ODIT is, an ODIT is a computer program that's installed covertly on the cellphone and/or computer of a suspect.
ODITs assist investigations by maintaining law enforcement's ability to covertly collect private communications and other data that can no longer be acquired using traditional wiretaps and/or less intrusive investigative techniques. The amount and type of data collected is determined on a case-by-case basis in accordance with strict terms and conditions imposed by the judge who authorized the use of the ODIT.
The RCMP's cautious and measured approach is evidenced by the fact that since 2017, ODITs have only been used in support of 32 investigations, in which a combined total of 49 devices were targeted. Again, I emphasize that in the past five and a half years, we've targeted 49 devices for ODIT deployment.
The RCMP carefully considers the advantages and disadvantages, including the impact on privacy and third parties, before seeking judicial authority to use ODITs in support of a criminal investigation. That assessment is conducted in close collaboration with investigators, technical specialists and federal and provincial Crown prosecutors. It is overseen by our technical case management program within RCMP headquarters. Again, we stress that ODITs are only used for serious criminal offences, and only as approved by a judge who explicitly authorizes the use of ODIT on a specific suspect's device. Judges receive and continue to receive supporting material explaining what the ODIT is and its capabilities.
Although we are not able today to disclose the name of organizations with whom we work in a public setting, we would like to again confirm that the RCMP has never procured or used Pegasus or any other NSO product. Sharing details publicly exposes sensitive information that could negatively impact the RCMP and our public safety partners' ability to effectively use ODITs in the future. Criminal elements also use this sensitive information in order to render the tools ineffective. Further, in addition to negatively impacting the RCMP's investigations, the exposure may jeopardize the investigations of foreign partners and our relations with those countries.
In April of this year, we provided a detailed briefing on the RCMP's use of ODITs to Canada's National Security and Intelligence Review Agency. On August 23, representatives of the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada will also receive a similar briefing.
I would like to bring to the committee's attention that on July 4, 2022, the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians—NSICOP—notified the Minister of Public Safety of its decision to conduct a review of the lawful interception of communications by security and intelligence organizations, which we will fully participate in. The objectives of the review include examining the current state of lawful access, concerns raised by civil society and privacy experts, technological challenges, as well as the gaps. On the basis of its review findings, NSICOP may make recommendations pertaining to various aspects of lawful intercept activities and frameworks.