I will endeavour to be shorter than that to leave more time for questions.
Thank you, Mr. Chair and colleagues, for being here at committee to discuss Bill C-16, the protecting victims act. This is an important piece of legislation that I believe is going to improve safety outcomes in a number of different contexts, including gender-based violence and the protection of kids online, in addition to making certain other changes that will, in my view, strengthen the capacity of the justice system to respond to pressing social challenges.
That said, before I get to the bill itself, I think it would be helpful to talk about the context for the committee's examination of Bill C‑16.
We have a strategy to protect the public and to strengthen public safety. The strategy has three pillars.
The first is to strengthen criminal law reforms to ensure we have laws in the Criminal Code that are designed to enhance public safety and ensure that serious crimes are met with serious punishments.
The second pillar of this strategy is focused on supporting the front line. This includes 1,000 new RCMP officers and 1,000 new border officials, but it also includes giving law enforcement the tools they need, whether that is, more recently, Bill C-22 or other authorities that will help them investigate and prosecute and help them protect the public from crime through prevention efforts.
The final pillar of the strategy is making the upstream investments to help build healthier communities and healthier people in the long term. This is where we're talking about investments in mental health and addictions, in affordable housing and in programs that target at-risk youth, to ensure that as we build healthier people in healthier communities, we have a long-term opportunity to reduce violent crime in Canada.
Today's bill really falls under the first pillar: strengthening criminal laws in this country.
There are a number of different themes that I hope to draw your attention to. Of course, there are several dozen different measures in this bill—we have 83 distinct changes—but I'm going to focus on a few key ones.
First, I want to discuss the importance of addressing the femicides that are occurring around the country. I've seen the stories in the news. This year, Quebec alone has had seven femicides, and that is a shame. We need to take action to stop femicides, not just in Quebec, but also across the country.
There is a gross injustice taking place in this country when it comes to the murder of women, often at the hands of their intimate partners. We have an opportunity to respond by creating a constructive first-degree murder charge in cases of femicide. This will include murders that are committed in different contexts, including hatred-motivated murders, where someone is targeting a victim, for example, on the basis of their gender. It will include murders that are committed in the context of a coercive and controlling relationship. It will also include murders that are committed in the context of the commission of a sexual offence.
I want to pause on the issue of coercive control for a moment, because in addition to it being a qualifier for a constructive first-degree charge in cases of femicide, we've made the decision in this bill to move forward with the criminalization of coercive control as a stand-alone offence. We want to do this because we have an opportunity to have the justice system intervene before a relationship becomes violent and before violence becomes fatal.
Through our engagement in the preparation of this bill, time and time again we saw those who have spent their lives and careers studying the issue citing coercive and controlling behaviour as being predictive of future violence that may take place in the household. We are not talking about ordinary facets of a healthy relationship. We are not talking about arguments over who's going to manage the household finances. We are talking about behaviours that would reasonably cause a person to fear for their physical or psychological safety.
In addition, this bill makes changes to the charge of criminal harassment, ensuring that it's modernized for new technologies, but also ensuring that we've shifted the test towards an objective standard rather than a subjective standard, given the feedback we heard about how difficult it can be for victims of criminal harassment to demonstrate what they in fact felt, rather than what a reasonable person would feel in the circumstances.
There are a number of other issues in this bill that I want to draw your attention to, including the creation of a number of new sexual offences. In particular, I'll direct you to portions of the bill that speak to changes with regard to Canada's criminal laws insofar as they impact the distribution of intimate images. I'd like to focus on the two key ways in which we are changing the law.
The first is to ensure that criminalization applies to not only the distribution of these intimate images without consent, but also the threatened distribution of images.
There's one other feature that has found itself in the news, perhaps for obvious reasons. Our laws need to be able to keep pace with changing technologies in this country. We've seen a preponderance of cases making their way through our communities, into the newspapers and occasionally into our courts involving the use of artificial intelligence to create deepfakes of intimate images, which bear the likeness of a person known to the prospective offender. I say prospective because the Criminal Code today does not necessarily recognize the use of AI deepfakes the same way that it would recognize intimate images that are captured through other technologies.
In my home province of Nova Scotia, very recently we saw a judge dismiss charges against an accused person. It was not that the act was not heinous or morally culpable; it was because the definition of intimate images in the Criminal Code does not include those that are created through the use of artificial intelligence. This bill proposes to change that and deliver justice to victims who are having their likeness used for such an inappropriate and morally culpable reason. With the modernization of the Criminal Code, we will be able to ensure that these behaviours are captured and that wrongdoers are punished for their actions.
In addition to certain new sexual offences that are being established, we are going to be increasing the penalties for certain sexual crimes, including voyeurism and summary sexual assault. We will be looking at a number of other matters when it comes to sentencing as well. By and large, these changes are made to provide equity between existing provisions within the code and to align the maximum sentences in some charges with the maximum sentences that pertain to other charges that take place in a sexual context.
While we're on the subject of expanding maximum penalties, this bill also takes significant steps to restore mandatory minimum penalties for a wide variety of crimes where a mandatory minimum penalty either has been struck down or maintains its place within the Criminal Code today but carries with it constitutional vulnerability as a result of the treatment by the court of mandatory minimums that existed previously.
This is a response, very directly, to the Senneville decision from the Supreme Court. We made the decision to restore these mandatory minimums, but took the court's direction by creating a safety valve for only those circumstances where the mandatory minimum would be grossly disproportionate.
It's important to ensure that the constitutionality of these provisions is protected if we want the provisions to be useful. The provisions that exist today are offering no protection to anyone, because the court has indicated that they will be struck down when challenged. We have found a way forward that reflects the feedback included in decisions of the Supreme Court.
Part of the reason we chose this particular approach was the public statements we've seen in the House of Commons and elsewhere from members of both the Conservative Party of Canada and the Bloc Québécois. Our desire was to find a path forward that would gain multipartisan support to ensure that we could address this particular issue professionally and in a way that would stand the test of time.
There were other strategies we looked at, for reasons that I'm happy to get into during questions. We've chosen to move forward with the strategy outlined in the bill.
There are other changes we made, particularly to protect kids against exploitation, including in an online environment. This includes changes to sextortion, including not only the distribution but also, as I mentioned in the context of intimate images, the threatened distribution of child sexual abuse material. It also involves changes to child-luring provisions within the code, to ensure that they are incorporated within the definition of sextortion for the purpose of this bill. A series of other penalties range from depicting bestiality to inviting exposure, and a series of other measures impact mandatory reporting and other facets. Suffice it to say, we've taken feedback from stakeholders who have made it their life's work to protect victims.
I have one item I'd like to complete before I finish with the time I've been allotted. It's on the issue of delays and the court process.
Over the last number of years, according to news reports, we've seen nearly 10,000 cases dismissed for delay. It's not because trials have come to their conclusion and had a not-guilty verdict rendered, but because stays of proceedings have been issued. This often comes up in complex drug investigations. It also often comes up in sexual assault contexts.
It's never felt like justice to me that the potential perpetrator of a crime would benefit from a stay allowing them to live in the same community where the victim resides. This bill proposes to address that challenge in a number of different ways. One is addressing delays directly by seeking to streamline procedure. Another is encouraging the court to use a lengthened timeline for complex cases and, when that time is hit, to consider remedies other than a stay of proceedings.
Mr. Chair, I think my time is up, so I am ready to answer the committee members' questions.
Thank you.