Thank you.
My name is Karen Segal. I'm from the Women's Legal Education and Action Fund, also known as LEAF. I'm joining you from LEAF's national office in Toronto. Thank you very much for having me back and for inviting LEAF to speak to this committee on this issue.
LEAF is a national non-profit that advances women's equality rights. Over the past 35 years, LEAF has played a key role in advancing women's rights in law through litigation, law reform and public legal education. Sexual assault law and the development of sexual assault law through a feminist lens is a fundamental element of LEAF's work due to its close proximity to women's equality rights.
As this study considers sexual assault law and questions around sex and consent, it is a study that is particularly relevant to LEAF's mandate. I am aware this committee has heard extensively from advocates in the HIV/AIDS community who seek to end the harsh criminalization of individuals living with HIV. LEAF supports this important objective, but to further assist this committee, I will focus my submissions here on the impact of this area of law on women's equality rights.
As an organization that advocates for the equality rights of women and girls. There are three key areas that we are interested in regarding the law of HIV non-disclosure. First, HIV non-disclosure prosecutions have led to an increase in the number of women as accused persons being convicted of aggravated sexual assault. That has had a particular impact on women from marginalized communities. Almost 80% of women living with HIV are indigenous or racialized women, a group that already faces serious over-criminalization in Canada. That over-criminalization is a product of systemic race and sex discrimination that will be exacerbated through the harsh criminalization of HIV.
Further, HIV non-disclosure prosecutions can make women more vulnerable to intimate partner violence. For example, in the case of Regina v. D.C., one of the seminal Supreme Court of Canada cases in this area, the complainant was an abusive partner who brought his allegations of HIV non-disclosure against his former spouse after she brought forward allegations of domestic violence against him. He waited until that point despite having known about her HIV status for many years, which is an example of how HIV prosecutions can be used by abusive men as a tool of their abuse.
On the other hand, despite the fact that most cases of HIV transmission occur among men who have sex with men, the majority of HIV non-disclosure prosecutions occur in the context of heterosexual relationships with women bringing complaints of sexual assault against men. The safety and bodily autonomy of this group of women as complainants also animates LEAF's proposed response to HIV non-disclosure.
Finally, the development of the law relating to HIV non-disclosure has altered the law of sexual assault to the detriment of women's equality rights. LEAF has a particular interest in the law of sexual assault because sexual assault is a gendered crime that disproportionately impacts women. Because non-disclosure of HIV is dealt with under the law of sexual assault, advocates in this area have sought to limit the scope of behaviour prohibited under sexual assault laws due to the concern that expansion of the kind of behaviour considered to be a sexual offence would further criminalize people with HIV.
Unfortunately, the changes that many advocates have advocated for apply to all sexual assault trials, not just those involving HIV non-disclosure. Success in advocacy to limit the application of sexual assault law risks decreasing protections provided for women against sexual violence. In this way, the limitation of the law to advance equality of people living with HIV has actually undermined important protections for women's equality rights.
In response to these complex concerns, LEAF engaged in a multi-year consultation with feminist experts nationwide, including scholars and legal practitioners, which resulted in the law reform position that we have provided to you.
I will give you an overview of that position now.
First, it is imperative that HIV non-disclosure be removed from the law of sexual assault. Sexual assault affects one in three Canadian women and in 2014 less than 1% of sexual assaults led to conviction. Impunity for sexual violence is a human rights crisis in Canada and further limiting the protection of the law in this area will hurt women. On the other hand, further criminalization of people with HIV will hurt equality rights in Canada.
The proper response is to remove HIV non-disclosure from sexual assault law altogether. LEAF proposes that HIV non-disclosure be prosecuted under criminal provisions that do not deal with sexual assault and only when the accused was reckless and transmission actually occurred.
This serves three purposes. First, it limits the punitive over-criminalization of people living with HIV.
The requirement of transmission would act essentially as a proxy for the factors identified in the recent federal prosecutorial directive that outlines when HIV non-disclosure should be prosecuted, specifically that it should be prosecuted only when the individual either did not use a condom or properly use ARVs. As I've heard from my friends on this panel, studies indicate that those methods are just about 100% effective at preventing transmission, so transmission would act as a proxy for someone failing to take one of those two steps.
While the recklessness requirement leaves open the possibility that, in some circumstances, transmission would not be criminal, depending on the steps taken by the accused to prevent transmission, this would reduce the over-criminalization of the most marginalized women in Canada.
The second reason that we propose this is that leaving some room for the criminal law in cases of reckless transmission of HIV provides some protection for women who have contracted HIV from partners who acted recklessly and took no care to prevent transmission of the virus.
Finally, this proposal would protect the robust and broad scale of consent that is fundamental to women's equality rights and the right to bodily autonomy. It would prevent courts from having to contort the law of sexual assault to fit the context of HIV non-disclosure, which is a very different set of circumstances from those usually seen in sexual assault prosecutions.
As I've outlined in our written submissions to you, we urge this committee to take this opportunity to clearly signal that the principles outlined in seminal sexual assault decisions, such as R. v. Ewanchuk, which give women the right to decide who touches their body and how, and clearly indicate that voluntary consent is required for any sexual touching, remain the foundational principles of sexual assault law and continue to bind future courts.
Finally, we would propose that prosecutorial directions for HIV non-disclosure are necessary to ensure that marginalized women are protected from violence. We've submitted to you in our submission that the reckless transmission of HIV non-disclosure should be prosecuted under non-sexual assault provisions of the Criminal Code. We would further submit that the transmission should not be an offence when the accused feared violence would result from disclosing their HIV status or feared violence if they insisted on condom use.
As we know, the use of a condom is a gendered requirement and women don't always have as much control over condom use as their partner if they engage in sex under duress, were coerced into sex or the sex occurred without the consent of the accused.
In short, to best protect the equality rights of people living with HIV and to protect women from sexual violence, we propose that HIV non-disclosure be removed from sexual assault law and that the reckless transmission of HIV should be prosecuted under criminal provisions that do not deal with sexual assault, with clear prosecutorial guidelines that ensure that women are not criminalized for the violence committed against them.
Thank you very much for hearing from LEAF.