Evidence of meeting #142 for Justice and Human Rights in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was non-disclosure.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Martin Bilodeau  National Coordinator, Positive Leadership Development Institute Program, Ontario AIDS Network
Kyle Kirkup  Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa, As an Individual
Alexander McClelland  Doctoral Student, Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture, Concordia University, As an Individual
Richard Elliott  Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network
Léa Pelletier-Marcotte  Lawyer and Coordinator, Programme Droits de la personne et VIH/sida, Coalition des organismes communautaires québécois de lutte contre le sida
William Flanagan  Dean, Faculty of Law, Queen’s University, As an Individual
Kerry Porth  Sex Work Policy Researcher, Pivot Legal Society

8:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Good morning, everyone. Welcome to the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, as we begin our study, pursuant to Standing Order 108(2), on the criminalization of non-disclosure of HIV status.

This is a long-awaited study for many of us. HIV is the only sexually transmitted disease where failure to disclose your status could lead to criminal charges. This committee wants to study whether or not the prosecutorial directives that have been put in place by the federal government, Ontario and B.C. are sufficient; whether there should be changes; or whether it should be removed from the Criminal Code, etc.

We are going to be joined for the next several meetings by a list of really distinguished witnesses. They will help us gain more insight into both what the law should be and also on best practices, in terms of making sure that we're up to date on the latest medical status and on what we might want to do to make sure that people get tested, and whether or not the current law is precluding or deterring people from getting tested.

Joining us today by video conference from Paris is Martin Bilodeau, of the Ontario AIDS Network. He is the national coordinator of the positive leadership development institute program.

Can you hear me, Mr. Bilodeau?

April 9th, 2019 / 8:45 a.m.

Martin Bilodeau National Coordinator, Positive Leadership Development Institute Program, Ontario AIDS Network

Yes, I can hear you loud and clear. Thank you.

8:45 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Great. Since you are joining us by video conference and we have a good connection right now, you'll be going first, once I've introduced the other witnesses.

We're also joined by Mr. Kyle Kirkup, who is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Ottawa. We have Mr. Alexander McClelland from Concordia University. We have Mr. Richard Elliot, who is representing the HIV/AIDS Legal Network as the executive director.

Welcome.

8:45 a.m.

National Coordinator, Positive Leadership Development Institute Program, Ontario AIDS Network

Martin Bilodeau

I would first like to thank you for this opportunity to speak to the committee on such an important issue today. I'm perfectly bilingual, so if there are any questions, they can also be in English, though I'll do my speech in French.

Members of the committee, I appear before you today on behalf of my employer, the Ontario AIDS Network, or OAN for short, as a person living with HIV. I am the national coordinator of the positive leadership development institute program, known as PLDI, a leadership program for HIV-positive people with a focus on empowerment. The program is currently available in three provinces.

Since the beginning of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, people living with HIV have been on the front lines, battling against the epidemic. Consider, for instance, the Denver principles and the greater involvement of people living with HIV/AIDS, known as the GIPA principle.

The time has come for those in power to stop isolating and penalizing people living with HIV, many of whom are already marginalized. I am not a lawyer or an expert on the differences in federal and provincial jurisdiction, but I can safely say one thing. Existing law on the non-disclosure of HIV status is, as you probably know, unfair and counterproductive to the objectives of increasing testing and ending the epidemic, as set out in the UNAIDS 90-90-90 target, not to mention the objectives beyond that time frame.

I will now address the usefulness of the federal directive.

While the OAN and I recognize that the Attorney General's 2018 directive for federal prosecutors and 2017 report are steps in the right direction—for which we are grateful—the directive has yet to be fully implemented and is merely a first step.

Even if every province were to adopt a directive identical to the federal government's 2018 directive, it is our view that the Criminal Code would still need to be amended, as Ontario's then Attorney General Yasir Naqvi and then Minister of Health and Long-Term Care Eric Hoskins called for in December 2017, in a joint statement:

It is our hope that with this new report, Minister Wilson-Raybould [now the Honourable David Lametti, Minister of Justice and Attorney General] will take immediate action and consider reforms to the Criminal Code to align with new scientific evidence and reduce the stigma of HIV/AIDS in Canada.

We join the Canadian Coalition to Reform HIV Criminalization in calling on the federal government to consider reforms to the law. Given that criminal law is a federal domain, the OAN maintains that the federal government has a duty, as well as the necessary latitude, to do more than simply propose a directive that applies in just the three territories.

Yes? Is there a problem?

8:50 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Everything is fine. You may continue.

8:50 a.m.

National Coordinator, Positive Leadership Development Institute Program, Ontario AIDS Network

Martin Bilodeau

In the current landscape, Ontario is, to my knowledge, the only province that has adopted part of the federal directive addressing the U = U Consensus Statement. That is far from optimal. Clearly, the OAN's position is consistent with that of many stakeholders, who maintain that individuals travelling to different parts of the country would be subject to different directives.

If I understand correctly, under the current circumstances, someone living with HIV who uses a condom with a partner receiving preventive treatment, or pre-exposure prophylaxis, would be at risk of prosecution because of the inconsistencies in the various directives. The same is true of the federal directive, which lacks clarity and does not totally rule out the possibility of prosecution in a similar scenario.

In 1967, while justice minister, Pierre Elliott Trudeau proclaimed that there was no place for the state in the bedrooms of the nation, and that statement still holds true as regards our discussion today. Any involvement of the criminal justice system should be limited to cases involving intentional or actual transmission of HIV. The justice system should not penalize an individual for failing to disclose their HIV status under the pretext that they are committing fraud.

In terms of the best way to address non-disclosure of HIV status, I would point to the fact that all UN member states pledged to promote a social and legal environment supportive of and safe for voluntary disclosure of HIV status, further to the 2006 Political Declaration on HIV/AIDS. Canada has yet to follow through on that pledge. The current context of criminalization does not encourage HIV-positive people to come forward publicly and thus become role models. Nor does it protect individuals when disclosing privately. Under the current circumstances, people may enter into a loving relationship from a place of mistrust, which is absurd.

With the tremendous strides made on the treatment front, stigmatization and criminalization are now the biggest issues of concern, according to any group of people living with HIV—or PLWHAs—in any context. Criminalization is an integral part of the stigma we continue to face. The OAN maintains that the best way to address the issue of non-disclosure of HIV status is through education, reduced stigmatization and, of course, access to treatment. Through its positive leadership development institute program and special workshops, the OAN addresses not only the issue of disclosure by people living with HIV, but also leadership building to inspire role models for the community.

The OAN stands with the endorsers of the Community Consensus Statement in calling on all three levels of government to support the development of resources and training to address misinformation, fear and stigma related to HIV. Training should be conducted by experts in HIV and be extended to judges, police, Crown prosecutors and prison staff nationwide. Better co-operation with the criminal justice system and public health authorities hinges on education and stigma reduction.

The federal government should ensure greater alignment between its directive and provincial directives on criminal prosecution, but that is only part of the solution. The OAN recognizes that aligning provincial directives with the federal directive poses a challenge and therefore echoes the Canadian Coalition to Reform HIV Criminalization in calling for Criminal Code reforms along with sound prosecutorial guidelines, including for provincial Crown attorneys. The two are not mutually exclusive, and both are, in fact, necessary.

Ending the over-criminalization of HIV requires legislative reforms to remove the non-disclosure of HIV from sexual assault provisions and ensure it applies only in cases of actual and intentional transmission.

Although PLWHAs like myself are grateful for the progress that's finally been made on an issue that is so vital to us, our peers and our communities, we urge elected officials to go one step further and amend the Criminal Code, in keeping with expert recommendations such as those of the Canadian Coalition to Reform HIV Criminalization.

Together, let's put a stop to this. Let's make sure that the unfair and ineffective discrimination against marginalized populations comes to an end. Let us work together effectively to put an end to this epidemic.

Thank you for listening.

8:55 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much, Mr. Bilodeau.

We will go to Mr. Kirkup.

8:55 a.m.

Professor Kyle Kirkup Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa, As an Individual

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

Good morning. My name is Kyle Kirkup. I am an assistant professor at the University of Ottawa Faculty of Law.

Over the past decade I have published a series of peer-reviewed articles about the criminal law's regulation of gender and sexuality in Canada, including the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure. I have also written expert reports on LGBTQ human rights issues for the Office of the Correctional Investigator, the Ontario Human Rights Commission and the Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police.

My main point this morning is this. Canada targets people living with HIV for non-disclosure at one of the highest rates in the world. Our current approach leaves people living with HIV with considerable confusion about when they are legally required to disclose their status. It targets marginalized communities, including women. It fuels stigmatizing messages about people living with HIV. As well, it ultimately undermines public health.

To be sure, the federal prosecutorial directive issued in late 2018 was a step in the right direction in order to limit unjust prosecutions.

Now the federal government should take the next logical step, one recommended by a coalition of civil society organizations across Canada. HIV non-disclosure should be removed from the reach of the Criminal Code in all but the clearest of cases where there is the intentional and actual transmission of HIV.

I want to start by just briefly laying out the history of HIV non-disclosure in Canada. In the aftermath of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, it would have been open to Parliament to enact new Criminal Code offences to target HIV non-disclosure or transmission. It chose not to do so. Therefore, beginning in the 1980s, we saw judges graft instances of HIV non-disclosure onto existing Criminal Code offences, varying from common nuisance to administering a noxious substance to criminal negligence causing bodily harm to aggravated assault to aggravated sexual assault and even, in extreme cases, to murder.

This ill-defined, ad hoc approach left people living with HIV with considerable confusion about the precise circumstances under which they were legally required to disclose their status.

After over a decade of legal confusion, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Cuerrier in 1998. Here, the court held that people living with HIV had a legal duty to disclose their status whenever there was a so-called “significant risk of serious bodily harm”. Failure to do so constituted fraud within the meaning of paragraph 265(3)(c) of the code, which would transform what would otherwise be consensual sex into aggravated sexual assault. We know that aggravated sexual assault is one of the most serious offences in the Criminal Code. It carries with it the maximum punishment of life imprisonment as well as a mandatory designation as a sex offender.

Following the decision, the confusion did not end, however. Risk of HIV transmission is a notoriously difficult concept to apply, engaging questions about which sexual activities were performed, whether a condom was used, whether the person living with HIV had a low viral load, whether either partner had any other sexually transmitted infections, and a constellation of other factors.

Therefore, again, in 2012 the Supreme Court tried to clarify this legal standard in a case called Mabior, this time explaining that people living with HIV had a legal duty to disclose their status whenever there was “a realistic possibility of transmission”. The court went on to explain that, at least in the context of penile-vaginal sex, if the accused person had a low viral count and a condom was present, there was no legal duty to disclose their status.

In the face of this legal regime, and after years of advocacy done by people living with HIV, we started to see the emergence of long overdue prosecutorial guidelines, because this legal standard continued to be very difficult to apply in practice. In 2016, former minister of justice and attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould stated publicly that the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure “further stigmatizes those living with HIV”.

Then, two years later, she issued the directive to the Director of Public Prosecutions, which sets out four guiding principles designed to govern prosecutorial decision-making: first, not to prosecute people with suppressed viral loads; second, not to prosecute people where condoms were used or where only oral sex was performed, unless there were other risk factors present; third, to use non-sexual offences with lower levels of blameworthiness in appropriate circumstances; and fourth, to determine if public health authorities had provided services to a person accused of not disclosing their status when determining whether a prosecution would be in the public interest.

While this directive is a step in the right direction, and one that promises to help guide similar kinds of directives being constructed by provincial attorneys general across the country, it is important to underscore the limited jurisdiction of this directive. It only applies to prosecutions done in Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.

Despite efforts to clarify the law and issue prosecutorial directives, people living with HIV continue to experience profound harms as a direct consequence of HIV non-disclosure. While the harms are expansive, I want to emphasize at least four. These harms lead me to conclude that statutory amendments are needed.

First, confusion remains about when people living with HIV are legally required to disclose their status. Indeed, the current state of HIV non-disclosure is antithetical to a fundamental precept of criminal law, one that I teach my students in my first-year class. Individuals ought to be able to clearly know what steps they ought to take to avoid contravening the Criminal Code.

Second, there is strong empirical evidence to suggest that the burden of criminalization is not distributed evenly across our communities. In particular, black and indigenous people are disproportionately targeted by criminal prosecutions. On this point, I would direct the committee to review the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network’s 2017 report entitled “HIV Criminalization in Canada: Key Trends and Patterns” that tracks every known prosecution for HIV non-disclosure beginning in the late 1980s and finishing in 2016.

Third, HIV non-disclosure prosecutions fuel stigmatizing messages about people living with HIV. For example, in many instances, HIV non-disclosure prosecutions are subjected to intense media coverage. In 2010, for example, the Ottawa Police Service issued a press release for a man they already had in custody, publishing his name, photo and details of his sexual orientation and his medical condition. Issuing this press release led to a series of sensationalist stories in newspapers such as the Ottawa Sun that continued throughout the trial process. These stigmatizing stories are yet another collateral consequence of the misguided approach to HIV non-disclosure in Canada.

Lastly, the criminalization of HIV non-disclosure runs the risk of undermining public health. By way of a concrete example, health care providers may be placed in the unenviable position of having to provide legal information to people living with HIV about how to avoid coming into conflict with the criminal law. This is simply not the role they ought play.

Ultimately, Canada has the unfortunate distinction of prosecuting people living with HIV for non-disclosure at one of the highest rates in the world. The approach causes very real harms. To be sure, the federal prosecutorial directive issued in late 2018 was a step in the right direction, but the directive is not enough.

The federal government should now begin the process of removing HIV non-disclosure from the reach of the Criminal Code in all but the clearest of cases where there is intentional and actual transmission of HIV. If Parliament undertakes the project of legislative reform, it will be critical to ensure that experts, especially those who have been targeted by unjust prosecutions, are meaningfully consulted. Once and for all, it is time to move away from the misguided approach of criminalizing HIV non-disclosure in Canada.

Thank you.

9:05 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much. It's much appreciated.

Mr. McClelland, the floor is yours.

9:05 a.m.

Alexander McClelland Doctoral Student, Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture, Concordia University, As an Individual

Thank you to the Chair and the members of the justice committee.

I'm currently a doctoral student at Concordia University. Later this year, I'll begin a Social Science and Humanities Research Council Banting postdoctoral fellowship in the department of criminology at the University of Ottawa. I'm also a member of the Canadian Coalition to Reform HIV Criminalization.

For my doctoral research, I was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Concordia University to examine the experiences of people living with HIV across Canada who have been charged, prosecuted or threatened criminally in relation to alleged HIV non-disclosure. To my knowledge, this is the first qualitative research study, globally, that is focused specifically on HIV criminalization from the perspectives of the people who have lived it.

Today I'll share findings from that study. I've also provided to the committee clerk statements about the experiences of the harms of criminalization from the people who are currently incarcerated.

In speaking directly with people who have been criminally charged, my research calls into question dominant understandings of the courts and media that people living with HIV are violent perpetrators who are actively trying to transmit to others. Rather, what comes to be institutionally understood as wrongdoing is much less obviously so. Because of criminalization, complex and nuanced situations—including people's silence, fear, actual disclosure or in some cases their inability to address their own HIV status—is forced by the criminal justice system into a dichotomous narrative of victim and perpetrator.

I conducted 28 interviews with 16 people from five different provinces. I spoke with five women and 11 men. One of the women identified as a transwoman. This was a diverse group of people who comprise a wide range of experiences across the spectrum of people who are facing criminal charges in relation to HIV non-disclosure. Many of them are socially marginalized, including black and indigenous people, gay men, people who live in poverty and women with histories of street-based sex work. The youngest person I interviewed was in their mid-teens at the time of charges and the oldest was in their mid-fifties.

The interviews consisted of detailed questions about people's experiences from the time they found out they were criminally charged, to, if relevant, their arrest, court proceedings, sentencing, incarceration, release and their lives outside after their sentence. Three of these people had been threatened with criminal charges by police, while 13 had been formally criminally charged—all with aggravated sexual assault. HIV transmission was alleged to have taken place in only one of these cases.

All of the women I interviewed indicated having long histories of sexual abuse by men and discussed a context where disclosure was highly complex due to their lack of power in the relationships. A woman I spoke with was charged with aggravated sexual assault because she had been gang-raped and did not disclose to her rapists. Another woman who was threatened with criminal charges was raped at knifepoint, yet she was the one threatened with charges of aggravated sexual assault. Both had histories of sex work and authorities did not treat their accounts of their sexual assaults seriously. One of these women told me that if she's guilty of anything, she's guilty of being raped.

The charge of aggravated sexual assault was extremely confusing for people because they understood that the sex they had was consensual—outside of those two instances. A majority of the people in the study were concerned about transmitting HIV to someone else. They understood that they acted in a manner so as to protect their partners from potential transmission, such as noting that they took their medications regularly, rendering them uninfectious, or that they used condoms, or both. One woman I spoke with handed her partner a condom prior to sex, which he did not use. She is now a registered sex offender. In some cases, people had disclosed to their partners who later went to police and lied about the disclosure having taken place.

Due to being charged with a criminal sanction usually reserved for the most violent, non-consensual, actual sexual assaults, combined with being HIV-positive, the people I spoke with were confronted with intensified forms of punishment, violence and discrimination. This included denial of bail and ultimately incarceration for long periods of time on remand prior to trial or before charges were dropped or stayed, extraordinary release conditions as part of bail, or conditional release that included being mandated to present oneself to police 24 hours in advance of proposed sex with their sexual partner and having the partner consent to sex in front of police. The people I interviewed who had these conditions imposed had undetectable viral loads.

Additionally, people I spoke with told me that there was a widespread lack of knowledge of the current science of HIV by police, lawyers and courts. This put people who were criminally charged in the position of having to educate those tasked with criminalizing them about viral load and transmission. People felt that the police's stigma and ignorance was enabled by the legal context of criminalization.

All but two of the 14 people charged indicated that this was their first-ever criminal charge. Despite this, all but one of them were denied bail due to the perceived severity of the case, and were either held in remand or under house arrest for long periods.

Seven people I spoke with were prosecuted, with five of the seven pleading guilty. The reasons they indicated for taking a plea were the following: having been coerced by their lawyer into pleading despite having undetectable viral loads or having used condoms; being fearful of missing their families; or being ashamed of the charge and of having their HIV status exposed to the public. The longest sentence served was close to 15 years. The shortest sentence served was approximately two and a half years.

From the point of arrest through trial, incarceration and release, people I spoke with described a series of events that were marked by HIV-related stigma, panic, discrimination and fear. People described a range of forms of violence at the hands of government employees, namely police officers and prison staff. These included denial of health care and medication access from corrections employees. One person I spoke with almost died because guards would continually rip up his urgent requests to see a doctor in his face.

Other forms of violence included long periods of incarceration and administrative segregation as well as breaches of privacy wherein corrections officers would disclose their HIV status and charges in front of others, knowing that physical violence would or could result.

Additionally, there were assaults by police officers and corrections officers accompanied by stigmatizing comments and discriminatory behaviour. One man told me:

I was getting beaten by all the inmates because their corrections officers had disclosed my charge to people on the range. I was on an isolated range for violent murderers and would still get harassed. You know this rape charge and HIV was worse than being a murderer in their eyes. One officer pushed me to the ground naked holding me with a boot to my chest saying he would never touch a man with AIDS.

Another indigenous woman told me, “They treated me like dirt. They only touched me with gloves and would use really heavy alcohol rub afterwards. They talked down to me like I was a non-person, an AIDS person.”

Given the charge of aggravated sexual assault and the resulting registration as a sex offender, people were not able to get employment in areas where they had past experience and expertise. They were denied jobs when applying. Many were on social assistance, even though they wanted to work.

People were regularly denied housing. One person was told, “We don't rent to rapists.” The person had had their charges dropped by the crown but information about their case was widely available online.

All of the participants noted that they failed or did not meet the criteria of the various psychological tests to determine what kind of sex offender they were. A few noted that the tests themselves had caused ongoing psychological trauma. This was due to being forced to watch videos of child pornography and violent sexual assaults, as well as being coerced into defining their normal adult sexual desires as deviant or wrong, just because they had HIV.

The past charge continued to extend into their daily lives by threatening their economic security. One indigenous woman told me, “I'm not allowed to work in the school I used to. I love working with kids, but now the school won't allow me to.” One man told me “To label someone as a sex offender, that's for life. I have to carry this for the rest of my life. I think that's unfair.”

All of the people I spoke with had a very hard time psychologically coping with being understood as a violent rapist. As a result of their experiences of criminalization, all had either tried to commit suicide or had long periods of suicidal ideation. Today, a majority of the people I spoke with live with post-traumatic stress disorder, which has a wide range of impacts on their daily lives.

Through speaking with criminalized people directly, it becomes apparent that applying the criminal law, specifically the laws of sexual assault, causes greater harm, often exacerbating situations that are already marked by stigma, trauma, shame and discrimination.

Thank you.

9:15 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much.

Now, last but not least, Mr. Elliott.

9:15 a.m.

Richard Elliott Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Thank you to the members of the committee.

I want to take a moment to thank Alex for sharing those stories of people living with HIV, and what is some really incredible and groundbreaking research, and really important in underscoring to the members of the committee why this is an issue of such concern to people living with HIV and those of us involved in the HIV response in Canada.

The harm that follows from using the criminal law in the overly broad way that is currently being seen in Canada is real; it is deep; it damages people's lives in ways that are vastly disproportionate to whatever the perceived risks of harm may be in a variety of circumstances that are currently caught up in the scope of the criminal law.

I work for an organization called the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network. I'm a lawyer, I've been with this organization for more than 25 years now, and have been co-counsel for us and other organizations as intervenors in a number of the cases that have been mentioned before the Supreme Court and a number of appellate courts across the country.

I have distributed a number of documents to you today, some of which have already been mentioned, that I would like to draw your attention to as I go through my remarks.

The first is a document that was already mentioned by Professor Kirkup, and that is this document that outlines for you the key trends and patterns in HIV criminalization from the late 1980s until the end of 2016. It analyzes all the known prosecutions, and represents the best, most comprehensive analysis of HIV criminalization cases to date in Canada.

Obviously, since it only goes until the end of 2016, it is now slightly dated. I just want to let you know that based on the tracking of cases since then, we can say that approximately 200 people have been prosecuted to date in more than 200 separate instances. Yet despite the advances in science and our understanding of HIV transmission, we continue to see prosecutions being brought in cases where there is simply no scientific basis for doing so.

As has already been mentioned, there is also a disproportionate impact of HIV criminalization on a number of different populations. Among men who have been charged, black men are disproportionately represented. Among women who have been charged, indigenous women are disproportionately represented. In the years since the Mabior decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in 2012, there has been a significant increase in the number of gay men being charged. I think it's also worth noting that of the cases we have documented, the majority do not involve alleged transmission of HIV.

We have a problem; the data shows it. The harms you've heard about as well, of this broad and consistent use of the criminal law, you've heard in the remarks that have come from Martin and from Kyle and from Alex.

I want to take a moment to draw your attention to an additional document that I've shared with you, which is a summary of the law regarding sex offender registries, because given that the charge most often used now to prosecute allegations of HIV non-disclosure is aggravated sexual assault, if a guilty plea or a conviction follows a trial, it is currently mandatory under the law that this person be designated as a sex offender, and this is presumptively for life, given the charge. There's a minimum of 20 years before you can even apply for the possibility of being removed from the sex offender registry, and you've heard from some of the other witnesses the harms that follow from being designated a sex offender.

Let's keep in mind that we're talking here about circumstances in which the sexual assault described by law is not what we normally think of as a sexual assault. These are not instances of forced or coerced sex; these are instances of consensual sexual encounters where it is alleged after the fact that the non-disclosure of certain information turns that into an offence under the law that should be treated in the law the same as a violent rape. There is a mismatch here between the reality of people's lives and how we negotiate consensual sexual relationships and how the criminal law is being deployed. The consequences are severe.

You've also heard reference—and I'll think you'll hear reference from other witnesses—to the harms that happen not just to individuals, and those have been laid out very eloquently, but the broader public harms to the public interest, including public health.

When it becomes the case that finding out your HIV status means that you risk prosecution and potentially being convicted and designated as a sex offender for life for having consensual sex with a partner, even under the broad state of the law as it stands now, for circumstances in which there was no risk of transmission, or at most, a negligible risk of transmission, that is a real disincentive to getting testing, and there is some evidence to support this concern.

It also undermines the therapeutic relationship between service providers and people looking for health services, because anything you say to a health care worker, a social worker or other support worker can be used against you as evidence in a criminal proceeding, and in fact it has been and is regularly used in these criminal proceedings. In doing so, we conscript the health system and social services into the service of prosecuting people who are looking for support, including support, in some cases, around disclosure to partners and also practising safer sex and taking other measures to prevent transmission.

This is not good public policy. At the end of the day, I would suggest, the harms of HIV criminalization, particularly the broad scope of HIV criminalization that currently is characteristic of Canadian law, significantly outweigh any purported benefits of doing so. In fact, there is an emerging consensus, which has been forged over the years in response to the broad application of the criminal law, that there is indeed a problem and there is indeed a need for change.

We were encouraged to see the former federal attorney general recognize, a couple of years ago, the problem of the over-criminalization of HIV and recognize that steps needed to be taken to address it, to limit the scope of criminalization. The Department of Justice then conducted a year-long study—which, of course, you will have seen—that reached a number of fairly sound conclusions that also reflect the need to limit HIV criminalization, because Canadian law, in the way it has evolved, is too broad and too harsh.

There's particular concern expressed in the Justice Canada report about the use of sexual assault law as a vehicle for dealing with cases of alleged HIV non-disclosure. In fact, that concern is widely shared.

I would draw to your attention a third document, a community consensus statement that has already been referred to by a couple of the witnesses. It was developed by the Canadian Coalition to Reform HIV Criminalization. You'll see on the back page of that consensus statement that 174 organizations across the country, both within the HIV sector and also, notably, beyond it have supported the calls to action that are in this community consensus statement. You'll note the variety of organizations that have supported the calls to action, in terms of both the geographic spread across the country and the number of different sectors that are represented, the number of different constituencies, that are represented here, from local HIV service organizations to legal clinics to the Native Women's Association of Canada to LGBT organizations to women's organizations and beyond. You also have a companion document that addresses some of the detail about how this community consensus statement was developed through a broad national consultation across the country.

It's not just HIV organizations and other community groups that have articulated concerns about the broad scope of the criminal law; it's also scientists. I want to draw to your attention a fourth document that I've shared with you. Published in The Journal of the International AIDS Society last year during the international AIDS conference, it is an expert consensus statement on the science of HIV in the context of the criminal law. It reviews in detail the best available science about the risks of transmission under various circumstances. You'll see on the front page the executive summary of the conclusions from those scientists. These are 20 eminent scientists from around the world. The lead author is actually the co-discoverer of the human immunodeficiency virus. It's been endorsed by another 70 leading scientists around the world as well as by the International AIDS Society, the International Association of Providers of AIDS Care and UNAIDS—so the three leading HIV scientific organizations in the world.

You'll see that a key message they articulate is that the criminal justice system often misappreciates or misunderstands the science that we have about HIV and the risks associated with various sexual activity under various sexual acts. That risk of transmission per act is actually much, much smaller than most people believe. I underscore that point because we have to remember that the criminal law, as it is being deployed in Canada, is operating on the basis that a single act that may pose a statistically negligible risk of transmission can have you treated in law as being equivalent to a violent rapist and designated a sex offender for life, with all of the harms that follow and that you've already heard about.

Scientists themselves have begun to speak out and to say, “We are concerned about the overreach of the criminal law.” This situation exists not just in Canada but elsewhere. I urge you to have regard for what the scientists are saying about the scope of the criminal law.

It's also women's organizations that have spoken out and that share the concern about the misuse of sexual assault law, for a variety of reasons. I believe, as a committee, you have also received a position paper from LEAF, Women's Legal Education and Action Fund, which articulates a number of the concerns about why using sexual assault law is problematic.

I would note that the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women has also specifically recommended to Canada that it limit the scope of criminal law to those cases of actual, intentional transmission of HIV, which, I should note, is consistent with the recommendations from UNAIDS and from the Global Commission on HIV and the Law.

Let me close by noting that we were grateful to see the directive from the former federal attorney general of Canada in December. As others have pointed out, that directive does indeed go some way toward limiting, at least in those jurisdictions where it's applicable, the scope of the criminal law. That is an important step forward.

However, as has also been underscored and is reflected in the community consensus statement that I've shared with you, it's not sufficient. We still need to see reforms to the Criminal Code that would oust the application of sexual assault law—because it's the wrong tool for the job—and that would limit any potential application of any criminal charge to those cases of actual and intentional transmission.

I'll stop there and would be happy to take any questions.

Thank you.

9:25 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Anthony Housefather

Thank you very much.

We will now go to our question period. We will start with Mr. Cooper.

9:25 a.m.

Conservative

Michael Cooper Conservative St. Albert—Edmonton, AB

Thank you to the witnesses.

Mr. Elliott, I'll begin with you.

You provided this report, and you noted that since 1989, there have been some 200 cases, involving you said 200 individuals—

9:25 a.m.

Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Richard Elliott

Approximately.

9:25 a.m.

Conservative

Michael Cooper Conservative St. Albert—Edmonton, AB

Approximately. I just wanted to clarify.

You further note that the vast majority of those cases—82%, or 163 out of 200—have occurred since January 2004. I'm trying to square those statistics with the statistics that were provided in the December 2017 Department of Justice report, which cited 59 cases between 1998 and April of 2017 involving HIV non-disclosure.

9:25 a.m.

Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Richard Elliott

I can't tell you exactly how Department of Justice Canada came up with those numbers. I can tell you that we track every charge or investigation that we're aware of across the country, either by talking to people who are themselves the subject of the prosecution or their defence counsel, or drawing on legal databases where a case has progressed to the point that there is a reported decision of some sort.

That's where the figure that I've given you comes from. It may be, although you'd have to check with Justice, that the figure they're referring to, which was just since...when did you say?

9:25 a.m.

Conservative

Michael Cooper Conservative St. Albert—Edmonton, AB

Between 1998 and April 2017.

9:25 a.m.

Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Richard Elliott

Yes. Those would be post-Cuerrier decisions, so cases that are post the Cuerrier decision from the Supreme Court of Canada, and it may be that Justice was only referring to reported cases where there's a reported decision in the database.

9:25 a.m.

Conservative

Michael Cooper Conservative St. Albert—Edmonton, AB

Right.

9:25 a.m.

Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Richard Elliott

But not every case will necessarily get reported in the database.

9:25 a.m.

Conservative

Michael Cooper Conservative St. Albert—Edmonton, AB

Okay, thanks for the clarification.

Mr. Elliott, you stated that the vast majority of cases do not involve actual transmission of HIV—fair enough—but at least looking at the reported cases cited by the Department of Justice, the 59 non-disclosure cases that were reported involve other blameworthy conduct, including the deliberate non-use of antiretroviral medication, active misrepresentation of HIV-positive status, absence of remorse, cases involving vulnerable complainants.

Could you speak to that?

9:25 a.m.

Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Richard Elliott

Yes.

I'm not sure that the Justice Canada report says that the majority of those cases involved those kinds of factors. Certainly, that would not be the case based on the data we have in our database. I would also underscore that this is why it's really important that our application of the criminal law be informed by the science.

As a general principle, we ought not to be using the criminal law except as a measure of last resort and except in those cases where there is serious harm or serious risk of harm to people. Keep in mind that criminalization has been deployed in many of those cases where there has been one single act or a statistically insignificant likelihood of HIV transmission. This is why I urge you to have a look at the expert consensus statement about the possibility of HIV transmission in various circumstances.

It's also important, I think, for us to draw a distinction between conduct that we may, in some circumstances, consider to be ethically objectionable and what we should be using the criminal law to deal with, especially when we're using one of the harshest tools in the criminal law with some of the most serious consequences. We ought not to be cracking a nut with a sledgehammer; and in some cases that's what we're doing in a good number of cases where there has been no harm, no intent to harm and no statistically significant risk of harm. In those circumstances, I suggest, going to the law of sexual assault is not a particularly helpful or warranted response.

I think it's also important to underscore that advocates who have been working on this issue have not said there should never be any application of the criminal law. I think you've heard consistently from everyone so far today, and it's the consistent recommendation of UN agencies and others that in those circumstances where there is actual, intentional transmission of HIV, then there is potentially a role for the criminal law to play. In Canada, at the moment, the scope of the law is much vaster than that narrower circumstance.

9:30 a.m.

Conservative

Michael Cooper Conservative St. Albert—Edmonton, AB

What about in the context of reckless behaviour or something that rises to a level of negligence? In most upper jurisdictions there are statutes that pertain to that, although sometimes penalties are less than intentional transmission.

9:30 a.m.

Executive Director, Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network

Richard Elliott

Yes. I think it's a good question.

Let me draw your attention to the guidance that UNAIDS, the joint UN program on HIV/AIDS, put out in 2013 that went through, in fairly exhaustive detail, the ethical, medical and legal considerations about the use of the criminal law. I think it is helpful to look at that when we start talking about concepts of negligence or recklessness because those are very fuzzy concepts. Within negligence and recklessness there is a broad interpretation of what rises to that level of moral or mental culpability, and there is a narrower interpretation. Perhaps you want to say, well, what about reckless conduct? Then we have to get into a discussion about when conduct is reckless and when it is reckless enough that it should arguably attract criminal liability.

You will see, for example, if you look at some of the guidance to prosecutors in other jurisdictions, like in the U.K., that it actually gets into detail, some of which is starting to be reflected in prosecutorial directives here. In some circumstances, for example, we should not consider conduct to be reckless. For example, if someone has not disclosed that he or she has HIV to a sexual partner but has used a condom, is that reckless behaviour? I would submit not, particularly given, as the scientists have pointed out, an intact condom correctly used is 100% effective at blocking the spread of HIV. In such a circumstance to treat such a person equivalent in law to a violent rapist seems to me a vast overreach in the criminal law.

I think there is a grey area and we need to get into specifics about what behaviour specifically.... As you've heard from some of the witnesses, people living with HIV still live with this fear and this uncertainty about when the disclosure is actually required. When the risks are so great of falling on the wrong side of that line, i.e., you become a sex offender for life with all that follows, then I think we owe people some clarity in the law. It is a very basic principle in the criminal law, as Professor Kirkup has articulated.