Thank you, Mr. Chair and members of the committee, for the invitation to speak with you today.
My name is Dr. Nicole Myers. I'm an associate professor at Queen's University. I've been studying issues around bail and pretrial detention for almost 20 years.
Following a tragic event, it is understandable that people, especially the police, are upset and concerned about what's happened and would like to find a way to make sure it does not happen again in the future. I agree that our bail system merits review and attention.
While a tragic incident may be what motivates a critical review of the law and the operation of the system, systematic empirical data needs to be what informs our conclusions about the system and the directions for change. When we think about bail, we must be mindful of the foundational principles of the criminal justice system and the rights enshrined in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, including the presumption of innocence and the right to reasonable bail.
The Supreme Court of Canada has emphasized that restraint must be exercised in the bail decision, with the starting position being that accused are to be unconditionally released. To hold people accountable for their actions and to sanction and punish behaviour, we must first convict people of the offence for which they've been charged.
What do we know? We know that Canadian crime rates, including violent crime rates, continue to be at historic lows. However, the bail decision in Canada has become generally more restrictive and more risk-averse over time. For example, in Canada the number of people in pretrial detention has exceeded the number of people convicted and sentenced to provincial custody since 2005-06. In 2021-22, 70.5% of the provincial jail population across Canada was in pretrial detention. The rate at which we use pretrial detention has more than doubled in the last 40 years, and the number of people in pretrial has quadrupled in this time.
Given the rate, number and proportions of people in remand, it is clear that Canada is not lenient when it comes to pretrial detention. Many people are serving time before they have been found guilty.
One of the biggest difficulties we face is that there is no accurate, reliable way to predict who is going to go on to commit crimes in general or serious violent offences in particular. Our criminal justice system cannot and should not be expected to identify, address and eliminate all future risks. Any attempts to predict risk are both unreliable and discriminatory, especially against indigenous people, Black people and other racialized communities.
The law already provides mechanisms to keep people in pretrial custody where appropriate, including for reasons of public safety.
Keeping people in pretrial detention removes them from the community and may provide some short-term public safety. This protection, however, is temporary and is undermined by longer-term negative public safety outcomes.
Custody is not only incredibly expensive; it is also criminogenic. Even short periods of time in custody make it more, not less, likely that someone will commit further offences in the future.
The specific proposal to create more reverse-onus provisions is not an effective way to achieve the objective of enhancing public safety. Reverse-onus provisions are problematic and unnecessary, as they fail to acknowledge the inequality of power and resources between an accused and the state. When a person's liberty is at stake, the state ought to bear the onus of demonstrating that detention is justified, rather than an accused person bearing the onus of demonstrating why they ought to be released.
If the risk of an accused is significant, the Crown will make these submissions to the court, and an accused can be detained; if they are released they will be subject to conditions and monitoring in the community. It is a slippery slope to pursue, making the system more restrictive when our provincial jails are already full of legally innocent people. Tightening the bail system and increasing our reliance on pretrial detention will have discriminatory outcomes on the most marginalized, the most over-policed and the most disproportionately incarcerated in society, compounding disadvantage, having the opposite of our intended effect of making the communities less rather than more safe.
The best way forward is through a thorough and principled review of the law that brings together justice system actors and community stakeholders to consider the purposes of bail and how to best balance rights with public safety. We might consider that rather than making amendments to section 515 of the Criminal Code, we step back and reconceptualize and fully replace the law on bail, with recent Supreme Court of Canada decisions in mind, explicitly outlining principles, objectives and directions for how decision-makers are to exercise their discretion.
We should set up and encourage the police to use their powers of release, including judicial referral hearings that were created by Bill C-75. Having fewer minor matters starting in bail court will give the courts more time and resources to focus on those that are more risky or more serious.
We should improve efficiency and case processing, including access to justice. More funding for legal aid will help reduce the number of people who are held in custody as well as the amount of time that people are detained or subject to conditions in the community. We might think about developing specific, principled hurdles to detention.
The crisis in our bail system is not one of an overly lenient or lax system. What happened is undoubtedly tragic. Allegations of violence, especially repeat violence, are concerning. There are opportunities for reflection and change. The question, however, is one of priority. Are we more interested in short-term or long-term public safety? I encourage everyone to uphold the principled purposes and limits of the criminal law by prioritizing the latter.
Thank you.