Thank you, Madam Chair.
To expand on that a bit, here's the problem.
Madam Levman, you've mentioned that the government heard about this particular aspect. I can tell you that I don't remember hearing that in the witness testimony we heard. I'm not doubting that you heard it. Maybe someone did. Maybe someone at the table can correct me on whether this became a theme from the witness testimony we had on Bill C-332, but it's introducing an element to us.
I want to just clarify one point. You mentioned, Ms. Levman, that this would have to be a pattern. There's nothing in my reading of this legislation that suggests the pattern of behaviour has to include multiples of these elements.
Your testimony was that a pattern is at least twice, so my reading of this bill—and I'm going to call it a new bill, Bill G-2—is that “Everyone commits an offence who engages in a pattern”—which means two or more—“of conduct referred to in subsection (2)” and “being reckless as to whether that pattern could cause their intimate partner to believe that the intimate partner’s safety is threatened” and a bunch of terms in there that could be broadly interpreted.... If we then go to the items of conduct referred to in proposed subsection 264.01(2), they include, if we go all the way down, proposed subparagraph 264.01(2)(c)(vii), for example. I'll use this one because it's the one Mr. Fortin was talking about, but I could use others from this list. It reads, “threatening to die by suicide”.
That tells me that if someone threatens twice to kill themselves, maybe because they're in a fight with their spouse or intimate partner and they're arguing back and forth over something—it could be anything.... Let's say the person says, “Well, I'm just going to kill myself and end this”, and then a couple of weeks later there's a fight over something different and they say it again. The testimony we've heard today is that by doing twice, it's a pattern. It's a pattern of non-criminal behaviour, because that's what we're talking about here. We're not talking about criminal behaviour. We're talking about non-criminal behaviour that, by virtue of it being a pattern and falling under this legislation, is now criminal behaviour because this is in the Criminal Code. Through their doing these non-criminal things in a pattern, we, with this bill, are criminalizing them, which means we have to be very careful.
In the Criminal Code, there are criminal thresholds around evidence and the things we choose to include, as Canadians, as criminal. There are then a bunch of items in here that, per your testimony, are not criminal. Threatening to kill yourself is not criminal. By including it in this list, we are criminalizing it in the context of coercive control. We're making that decision without hearing any testimony about it.
You mentioned that the scenario I described would not be criminal because it would have to involve some of the others, but to be clear, my reading of this is that nowhere in the legislation does it say you have to do any multiples of these things. It could be the same offence, for example, around finances, access to health services or threatening to die by suicide. The same offence—a pattern of that—could be captured under controlling behaviour. We don't have to have multiples.
Is that correct? Nowhere in the bill does it say it has to be more than one of these things.