Thank you.
I move amendment NDP-20, which provides a subclause after line 7 on page 49, reading as follows:
(1.1) A person who is convicted by summary trial of an offence, or who has been so convicted before the coming into force of this subsection, has not been convicted of a criminal offence.
This amendment would ensure that all people who are subject to a summary conviction trial can be treated as cases of military discipline, and given, in accordance with section 163 of the National Defence Act, specifically subsection 163(3), by a commanding officer, they can receive:
a sentence in which any one or more of the following punishments may be included: (a) detention for a period not exceeding thirty days;
—and we're talking about imprisonment here in the detention centre in Edmonton for a period not exceeding 30 days—
(b) reduction in rank by one rank; (c) severe reprimand, (d) reprimand, (e) a fine not exceeding basic pay for one month, and
—I guess and/or—
(f) minor punishments.
All of these punishments are available to a commanding officer who, after a summary trial, can give any one of these sentences. It involves, as Clayton Ruby mentioned in his testimony, the liberty of the subject.
Detention for 30 days is a serious matter. It involves someone being imprisoned against his or her will. It's a significant punishment in the law and involves a situation where you don't have the benefit of proper procedure—the lack of a public hearing, the lack of constitutional rights, and the lack of respect for what's called natural justice. You don't know the case against you, because you don't have the same kind of disclosure that's available in a criminal trial in a civil system.
We have a very elaborate system of disclosure before our provincial courts, even when someone is charged with a minor offence. Those procedural protections are not available in circumstances where someone is facing a summary trial procedure. You don't have the right to counsel. You don't have a trained judicial officer determining your guilt or innocence. You don't have rules of evidence. You don't have an impartial tribunal in the sense of the meaning of the law for someone who not only is impartial but also is seen to be impartial.
You could have a judge, or someone judging your case, who knows you, knows the witnesses, could be a friend of the witnesses, or in many respects knows the facts before things happen. There is a whole series of matters that aren't available with respect to a summary trial, that are taken for granted, and, in fact, are the basics of an impartial tribunal and a fair procedure.
It's a circumstance that does not find itself in the civil law system outside of the military, and yet it's the mode by which more than 98% of the trials that take place take place in the summary trial system. That's approximately 2,000 a year. In the last year that we have records for, 97% were actually found guilty.
As has been pointed out, 94% of the people who are convicted or found guilty, after the passage of this legislation—again, going by the one year that we have records for—will be exempted from a criminal record. Some 107 Canadian Forces members in the year for which we are examining would have a criminal record, having been tried in a circumstance where you don't have the procedural rights to what's called procedural fairness, which is a constitutional requirement.
There have been some arguments about whether it's charter compliant or not. We've had witnesses come before us. Colonel Drapeau was one, a practising lawyer who practises military law and has written the text from which I've quoted. He has expressed his view about the concerns about the lack of procedural fairness and the legal difficulties from a constitutional point of view.
Mr. Clayton Ruby, one of the leading criminal lawyers in Canada, and one who has a sterling reputation, his text on sentencing in Canada is one that is most often used across the country. He is also, as he pointed out, the constitutional litigator and editor of the Canadian Rights Reporter, which is a law journal dealing with constitutional cases. He makes it clear that one of the reasons.... I believe Mr. Opitz asked him why there has been no challenge. I think he explained it quite well, the fact that individuals had to mount the case, to actually bring that case.
The suggestion again has been made that Justice Lamer and Justice LeSage said that the military justice system was constitutional. I think that argument was dealt with by several of our witnesses.
I guess Mr. Ruby said that we've never seen the legislation being challenged in that particular...that when you're dealing with constitutional challenges, you actually have to look at the challenge in a particular section of the code.
He said in his testimony:
There's been reference to the military justice system being constitutional; it is constitutional, in my view, in the sense that having a separate and different justice system for the military is constitutional. That's all that anyone is saying. No one has ever examined these provisions one at a time for constitutional compliance.
When he's saying “no one” he means no court. He added:
It's right to say that it's expeditious. It works well for the guys in charge, but it really is beyond any rational thought to call this fair. The judge....
And I guess we're talking here about judge in the service tribunal, which could be a commanding officer, or could be a delegate.
...may not be impartial; he could be friends with the witnesses. No transcript is kept, and there is no right of appeal or to full disclosure of the case against you. You're made to stand like a child in front of the tribunal for its entirety. This is demeaning and unfair. We should not hesitate to acknowledge that and change it.
That's his very strong opinion about this.
We've had this argument before at this committee. The last time we talked about it, it was suggested that, well, you know, you can't have people not getting a criminal record for some things that ought to attract public opinion, that the public should know about it.
That may be, but what is the solution? I think the solution was stated by Clayton Ruby in his testimony. He said that if you want someone to attract a criminal record, you must provide the proper procedures, or have them charged in criminal court.
One of the things that was raised the last time was sexual assaults. Right now the military deals with them under section 129, Conduct Prejudicial to Good Order and Discipline. That's a rather general section for something as specific and significant as sexual assault. But it's only been in the last 15 years that the military has actually tried sexual assaults. Since 1998 the changes to the act provide for that type of charge, as I understand it.
So if there is a sexual assault, it obviously needs to be dealt with and be taken seriously. The method should then be to bring in the civilian authorities to carry out such a prosecution. Otherwise, before someone can have a criminal record, you must ensure that the procedures and protections are in place.
We heard some suggestion in a general way that when you sign up for the military you sign away your rights. I don't think that when someone takes the oath of office in the military they are asked to give up the legal protections of the Charter of Rights and due process with respect to their liberty. They are the people who are fighting on our behalf to protect the Constitution and offering to sacrifice themselves to pursue that. Yes, there are specific issues with respect to the Charter of Rights. One of them is actually contained in the charter, but there is no suggestion that people waive their constitutional rights.
Mr. Ruby said:
It has been said that when you enlist in the military, you waive your constitutional rights. This is nonsense. It is legal nonsense because the charter has its own provisions for exempting certain laws, and each one must be justified on an individual, focused basis. You can't have a blanket exemption for the military about anything as general as that. The look at the legislation the particular practise is fact-specific, and it can't be based on general concepts like the need for discipline in the armed forces, because that attracts every aspect of armed forces life.
That, I would suggest, is a proper answer to this notion that when you join the military you don't have the protection of the Charter of Rights when it comes to being treated as an offender, being sentenced to a fine and imprisonment and ending up with a criminal record.
I think we've talked about this quite a lot in our debate and argument. I think our side has clearly accepted and advanced the argument that military justice is different from civilian justice. That is constitutional in the sense that it's appropriate to have a separate system of military justice, and there are reasons why that justice system would be harsher than the civilian justice system. All of those things are accepted. The consequence might be that you might end up in a military prison for things you would not be incarcerated for in civilian society. As long as the system is fair and properly administered, that's appropriate.
Where we are seeking to draw the line is to prevent this process, which doesn't meet the constitutional standard in terms of procedural fairness and the rights of an accused person. We want to ensure that it would not leave you with a criminal record that would follow you for the rest of their life or until you are able to obtain, I would say, some kind of pardon. However, our law has now been changed to take away even the notion of a pardon, which, again, we opposed vehemently, but which the government nevertheless, with its majority in the House, passed.
This is a very important principle, one that we think is at a very high level of significance. It has to do with the constitutional rights of the people who join our Canadian Forces who we ask to give unlimited liability with their own lives in the service of their country. As we know from the past 10 years, we've seen quite a number of individuals lose their lives in the service of their country in Vietnam and elsewhere as a result of their being willing, in a voluntary army and air force and navy, choosing to join the Canadian Forces and serve their country. They deserve our consideration, our respect, with respect to ensuring that while military justice may be different, it's not going to stick them with a criminal record contrary to their having the constitutional protections, in the absence of the constitutional protections that they are in fact fighting for and willing to sacrifice for and joined the Canadian Forces in the service of.
That's the most succinct way I can put it, Mr. Chair. This is an extremely important amendment. It's very different from the amendment we just passed. The amendment we just passed has to do with excluding certain particular sections in a circumstance where the penalty is not high, not beyond the item set out. This is a different category. This is based on the mode of trial. If we have a summary trial resulting in a conviction, that ought not to attract a criminal record. If there are circumstances or offences or charges that need to be laid based on what happened, and it's deemed to be important enough that a conviction ought to result in a criminal record, and a public record, so that other employers and others who come into contact with that individual have means to know what they've done, then the system ought to be changed, or they ought to be tried in a civilian court.