Merci, monsieur le président.
My name is Jason Gratl, and I am the vice-president of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association. In my private life, non-volunteer life, I act as a criminal and constitutional litigator.
The British Columbia Civil Liberties Association, as many of you know, has taken an interest in the last decade in affairs involving national defence, and Bill C-41 is no exception. We are a non-profit, non-partisan, public interest organization devoted to the protection of civil liberties and human rights within British Columbia and Canada, and in addition in circumstances where some of our citizens are acting off Canadian soil.
I can say at the outset that the B.C. Civil Liberties Association takes the position that many of the amendments proposed by Bill C-41 do represent an improvement over the status quo, and we would support many of these provisions in Bill C-41. Where the bill is in our view found to be lacking is in its absence of attention to procedural fairness issues arising from the summary trial process. While many of those are beyond the scope of any improvements or amendments to Bill C-41, we believe that the principal problems or the greatest problems can be rectified with two small amendments to the National Defence Act.
The first amendment would be the removal of the provision allowing detention to be imposed as a sanction following a conviction under a summary trial. The relevant sections are found in section 163(3)(a) of the National Defence Act, in respect to commanding officers at summary trial, and 163(4), which involves a summary trial presided over by a delegate of the commanding officer. The first sets out the potential for detention for a period not exceeding 30 days, and the second detention not exceeding 14 days. In our view, those ought to be repealed. They are simple provisions to address in Bill C-41. As a pragmatic political question, it's available to the membership of this committee to address that particular issue within this session.
The second issue is that we would recommend an enactment of a restriction of the creation of a criminal record arising from summary trials.
The remainder of my remarks will be oriented to the question of how these proposed amendments or additions to Bill C-41 can be supported.
We begin from the principled stance that the Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of Canada as set out in section 52, part VII, of the Constitution Act. It's the supreme law of Canada. It's supreme over the National Defence Act, and absent any justification under section 1 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms it can't be abridged. The larger analysis of the summary trial process for the B.C. Civil Liberties Association is informed by section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which, as the committee will be well aware, protects an individual's right to liberty and security of the person. There's a wealth of case law supporting the proposition that detention represents an abridgement of liberty.
That brings us into the question of whether the deprivation of liberty can be justified in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. The principle of fundamental justice that has sway in this context is the principle that the greater the consequences to an individual resulting from a process, the greater the procedural protections must be. We see in the case of Charkaoui the possibility for deportation to face torture, so the level of procedural protection must be as high as possible. We see in a case called Rodgers from the Supreme Court of Canada that in cases where individuals have been convicted, the DNA can be taken even retroactively because the interest in that context is not that great.
So the greater the abridgement of interest, the greater the procedural protection might be, and here, with the deprivation of liberty, with the possibility of detention for 14 or 30 days, we fall somewhere along the high range of the requirement for procedural protection.
The committee is familiar with many of the problems with the summary trial process, the restrictions on access to counsel and the limited training opportunities for advising officers. One of the best sources for information regarding the problems with the summary trial process is found in the annual JAG survey of the summary trial process, where surveys were distributed to participants in the summary trial process.
The 2007 report—just to choose one, for example—reveals some troubling trends. Approximately 5% of persons tried by summary process reported that they were not offered an election to court martial. Those are not cases where no court martial option was available, but rather where, by statute, court martial was to be available and the individual was to be put to an election. Fully 5% of individuals who were tried say they weren't even given that option.
Only 76% of persons tried by summary trial process indicated they'd been given their choice of advising officer. That means the presiding officer dictated, contrary to the people's wishes, who their advising officer would be. And 49% of persons tried by summary trial process reported that their advising officer did not explain to them their right to speak with military defence counsel. As well, 70% of persons tried by summary trial process reported that the advising officer did not assist them with examining witnesses during the trial.