As far as the Criminal Code is concerned, again, Ms. Morency mentioned the key offences in her opening remarks. If the mistreatment is in the form of unwanted or harmful touching, we have a full range of assault offences that would cover that. But a lot of what we heard and was reported on that took place in long-term care was in the form of neglect, meaning the failure to protect residents from the transmission of disease, failure to provide necessary hydration and nutrition in some circumstances, and failure to deal with bedsores or other types of illnesses and injuries.
The Criminal Code does contain several offences. The most important offence would be section 215, which is the failure to provide the necessaries of life. That is a duty-based omission-type offence, which means that it only applies to persons who have the legal obligation to provide the care. Where they fail to provide the care, thereby endangering life, that is criminally punishable. That is an offence that certainly applies in the long-term care context.
There's a more general version of a negligence-based offence called criminal negligence causing bodily harm or death. It has a slightly higher criminal law standard, so the behaviour must be a marked and substantial departure from the standard of care a reasonable person would use in the circumstances for the context of criminal negligence causing bodily harm or death. Those offences are also punishable by a higher maximum penalty than the offence of failing to provide the necessaries of life, which has a slightly lower threshold. The departure from the standard of care need only be marked. But, they do cover a lot of the same conduct. You would see charges laid for both offences in some circumstances, and that would cover both the failure to provide necessary care and also, if care is provided, but in a very significantly negligent manner, that could be captured by the criminal negligence offences as well.