Thank you very much.
I'm pleased to be joined by Karen Audcent and Don Piragoff, both from the Department of Justice. They'll be glad to answer any questions that you may still have, if you have any, after my hour here.
Mr. Chairman, I'm pleased to be here to talk about Bill C-55, the response to the Supreme Court of Canada decision in R. v. Tse. The court's decision in the Tse case found that existing authority to wiretap without prior judicial authorization in exceptional circumstances was unconstitutional due to its lack of accountability safeguards.
The bill before you responds to this finding of unconstitutionality in section 184.4 of the Criminal Code by first adding the safeguard of after-the-fact notification to persons who have been intercepted; second, adding a requirement for public reporting on the use of this power; third, restricting the use of emergency wiretaps to cases of serious offences; and fourth, limiting the use of this power to police officers and to certain listed offences.
Under section 184.4 of the Criminal Code, the police can conduct a wiretap without prior judicial authorization only when the situation is too urgent to obtain a wiretap authorization; when the “interception is immediately necessary to prevent...harm to any person or to property”; and when the originator or recipient of the communication is the perpetrator of the harm or the victim or intended victim of the harm.
This means that police can only intercept communications between the perpetrator of the anticipated harm and the actual victim or intended victim of that harm. This imposes a strict limitation on whose communications can be intercepted and closes the door on the possibility of police intercepting the communications of an unlimited number of classes of persons.
Furthermore, there must be an immediate need to wiretap to prevent harm to a person or to property from occurring. This should provide you with a sense of how and when this section can be used; for example, in situations such as kidnappings and bomb threats.
Finally, the urgency of the situation must make it impossible for police to obtain an emergency wiretap authorization. To be clear, the Criminal Code has another provision that enables a rapid response designed for an emergency. Section 188 of the Criminal Code enables an abbreviated process for court authorization allowing 36 hours of wiretap. For police to avail themselves of the authority under section 184.4 of the Criminal Code, it must not be possible for them to seek court authority under either the principal and lengthier process for wiretap under section 186 or the expedited process for short-term wiretap authorizations in emergency situations under section 188 of the Criminal Code.
That said, the Supreme Court in the Tse case found that while there exists a justifiable constitutional imperative for the existence of such a wiretap power, section 184.4 of the Criminal Code as drafted is constitutionally deficient, despite the existing built-in safeguards that I've just described.
In its reasons, the Supreme Court found that the addition of after-the-fact notification to persons whose communications have been intercepted would make the provision constitutionally compliant.
That's what they told us: if you do this, it's constitutionally compliant. This bill, Bill C-55, proposes this requirement for the use of 184.4 of the Criminal Code by requiring that notice must be given to the person within 90 days of the wiretap, unless a court authorizes an extension.
The Supreme Court of Canada also commented on other issues for which the bill proposes some appropriate responses.
While the court held that the notification was the only amendment required for constitutional compliance, it expressed the view that reporting was a good idea from a policy perspective, and on that the government agrees.
This bill proposes, therefore, to add a reporting requirement to the use of section 184.4, which would mean that the reports prepared annually by the federal Minister of Public Safety and provincial attorneys general on the use of wiretaps would now include information on the use of section 184.4. This will enhance transparency and increase public knowledge and scrutiny of the use of this exceptional power.
The Supreme Court also considered restricting the use of this section to police officers instead of peace officers, as is currently provided in the Criminal Code. This could enhance charter compliance, though the court did not rule on this issue.
Again, the government takes that representation and that suggestion to heart, and the bill therefore proposes to restrict the availability of this section, from peace officers—a term that is defined rather broadly in section 2 of the Criminal Code—to “police officers”, which is a narrower class of individuals. For example, the narrower approach would exclude such individuals as mayors and reeves.
This bill also proposes to limit the use of section 184.4 to the offences listed in section 183 of the Criminal Code. Currently the section can be used for any unlawful act. That's what it says now.
Although limiting this power to offences listed in section 183 of the Criminal Code was commented upon, it was not required by the Supreme Court of Canada; nonetheless, Bill C-55's proposal in this regard would harmonize this section 184.4 and its use with other provisions in the Criminal Code related to wiretap that are already limited to section 183 offences. We are making it consistent with the other wiretap sections; the provisions under the Criminal Code would apply to this as well.
Harmonization with other wiretap provisions will also be achieved with the notification and reporting requirements that I have already mentioned, as these requirements already exist for some of the other provisions in the Criminal Code.
Finally I would note that the Supreme Court of Canada gave us until April 13, 2103, to amend section 184.4 to address this defect, and that time is swiftly approaching. This makes it imperative that we move as quickly as possible to enact this legislation, failing which, after April 13 police will no longer have the ability to use this section, which may compromise their ability to respond to high-risk situations and to protect Canadians.
When considering the reasons for the amendments in this bill, it may also be of use to consider the situations in which the bill or the section is likely to be used. Kidnapping is one example, as in the Tse case, in which a married couple and a friend were abducted from their home and held for ransom. Police relied on this section to respond quickly with a wiretap when family members were contacted by one of the abducted persons.
In another case, R. v. Riley, the police used section 184.4 of the Criminal Code during an investigation of murder through drive-by shootings in which the goal was to respond quickly to prevent additional murders.
These cases illustrate the importance of this particular section. In short, Bill C-55 is about ensuring that police have an important tool that they need to protect Canadians, while also ensuring that it is used in a way that shows the respect for privacy that Canadians can expect from their government.
I urge all members to support this.
Thank you very much.