Good afternoon, committee members. Thank you for the invitation to speak to you today and for your flexibility in allowing me to appear remotely.
My topic today is that of prosecutorial discretion and the Shawcross doctrine, and I would begin by saying that I was lucky enough to study this topic with two world-renowned Canadian experts, Professor John Edwards and Professor Philip Stenning. I will draw on their works in these remarks about the legal principles involved, for about eight to 10 minutes.
Speaking as an academic, I thought it would be important to start with some first principles to put the Shawcross doctrine into perspective.
As members of the committee know, an Attorney General is required to fulfill multiple roles. He or she is required to be a legal adviser to parliament and to the government, but he or she also exercises the prerogative power to prosecute criminal offences, and it is this power that is the focus of attention today.
It is now established by constitutional convention that the Attorney General will make an independent decision to prosecute or not to prosecute. This requires making a two-step determination about, first, the sufficiency of the evidence and, second, whether the prosecution is in the public interest. Because of the necessity to consider the public interest, commentators often say that the prosecutorial decisions made by an Attorney General are at the intersection of law and politics.
Because of this intersection, many jurisdictions have appointed a director of public prosecutions in order to insulate prosecutorial decision-making from the perception that political considerations are uppermost in the mind of the decision-maker. If a DPP is appointed, however, as has been the case in Canada, there are the same expectations that the DPP will exercise her or his prosecutorial power in the public interest.
So how is the Attorney General or DPP supposed to discern what is in the public interest in order to exercise their discretion? As Professor Edwards argues in his book, the task of the Attorney General or DPP is a difficult exercise of weighing a number of competing considerations. It's in this context that the Shawcross doctrine becomes relevant.
As members of the committee already know, this is a guideline that was first promulgated by Lord Shawcross, the Attorney General in the U.K. in the 1950s, and has since been relied upon in Canada. The doctrine says that the Attorney General must acquaint himself or herself with all the relevant facts and with the considerations that affect public policy. In doing so, he or she may consult with colleagues, and in some circumstances, as Shawcross noted, he or she would be foolish not to.
A good example of the need to consult in order to have a full appreciation of the issues is the well-known case in the U.K. from about 10 years ago, the BAE—or British Aerospace—case. Here, the issue was whether considerations of national security required that the Attorney General discontinue a prosecution. It was considered not reasonable to expect that the Attorney General himself would have a full understanding of what national security would require, so he would have to seek that advice in order to inform the decision.
In the case, the Attorney General consulted a wide range of informants, both inside and outside cabinet. The record shows that there were repeated meetings about the issue. The position taken by several of the Attorney General's parliamentary colleagues in the U.K., including the Prime Minister, was that national security did require that the prosecution be discontinued. I would also note in passing here that the Canadian DPP act explicitly says that the DPP is allowed to engage technical experts to provide advice.
However, the Shawcross doctrine is clear that the assistance and advice of colleagues is confined to informing the Attorney General of particular considerations which might affect her or his decision, and it “must not consist in telling him” or her “what the decision ought to be”. The Attorney General should not be put “under pressure” by colleagues and, in particular, should not be put under partisan political pressure.
Professor Edwards, for example, suggests in his book that the Attorney General should refuse to listen to arguments based on “political expediency”, but rather should apply his or her “judicial mind” to the circumstances at issue. This is necessary to maintain the integrity of the office and the integrity of the administration of justice.
Meanwhile, Professor Stenning and others have suggested that, leaving aside the problem of partisan advice, the most challenging issues arise when there are a number of competing legitimate interpretations of the public interest, so that the relative importance of each has to be assessed and balanced. Again, I would note that in the BAE case, other definitions of the public interest beyond national security were identified. Those included national commercial interests and harmonious relations between the U.K. and Saudi Arabia.
While the Attorney General in the BAE case indicated that he had not based his decision on these factors, it remains the case that where several legitimate public interest considerations are available, ultimate responsibility is placed on the Attorney General to interpret the advice given by parliamentary colleagues or others and to make an independent decision about how to assess them.
As I have said, in this process, considerations of the integrity of the administration of justice and the rule of law are repeatedly [Technical difficulty—Editor] No specific remedy is laid out in Shawcross's original account of his doctrine as to the consequences [Technical difficulty—Editor] if the principles he enumerated are breached.
Here, a key distinction should be made between parliamentary and legal accountability.
With respect to parliamentary accountability, having made an independent decision, the Attorney General can be rendered accountable to Parliament after a matter has been concluded by being asked to account for actions taken or not taken. Parliamentary accountability may also require that an Attorney General resign if he or she no longer has the confidence of cabinet.
Meanwhile, with respect to legal accountability for a prosecutorial decision, if the prosecution is proceeded with, there will ultimately be a judicial determination as to the appropriateness of the Attorney General's decision to prosecute, in terms of whether the charges result in acquittal or conviction.
On the other hand, where a prosecution is discontinued, as it was in the BAE case, for example, that decision was the subject of judicial review, with the House of Lords ultimately concluding that the rationale of national security was an appropriate one for the Attorney General to use to guide his decision. Another avenue of legal accountability that is available is the abuse of process doctrine.
Let me turn for my remaining couple of minutes to deferred prosecution agreements specifically, since the possibility of the DPP entering into one of these agreements was enacted into the Criminal Code in September 2018.
It's important to recognize that the provisions dealing with DPAs identify a long list of factors that the prosecutor is required to consider in order to determine if it's in the public interest to enter into a DPA, in addition to other conditions that must be met. There is also a list of factors identified that the prosecutor may not consider if the offence is alleged to have been committed under the Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act. These factors are the national economic interest, the potential effect on relations with a state other than Canada or the identity of the organization or individual involved. It appears that these factors were drawn from the OECD's anti-bribery convention, which was also at issue in the BAE decision in the U.K., which I referred to earlier.
To conclude, then, the fact that the Criminal Code amendments about DPAs identify so many appropriate and inappropriate components of the public interest could make it more feasible for the DPP or Attorney General to ascertain what the public interest is in this context, although the ranking among the various considerations is still something that will need to be addressed on a case-by-case fact-specific basis.
Thank you for your attention. I'm happy to answer any questions.