We can also have the discussion right away.
I firmly believe that when we talk about solicitor-client privilege, the concept necessarily includes those limitations that are recognized in case law and as they appear in the rules of all bar associations and all law societies of Canada. Those limits are rather clearly spelled out, much better than what is suggested — with all due respect to the mover, Mr. Dosanjh--, in the next amendment.
We say that the special advocate has a solicitor-client relationship but there are certainly limits to that privilege, among which the fact that the solicitor must disclose information regarding serious crimes and also the solicitor cannot assist a client in the commission of a crime, as you well know.
Regarding the concept of “secret professionnel“, it says in English:
Privileged information as a lawyer.
We talk here about something that is well defined in case law. There is no need to try to add what Mr. Dosanjh proposes, where it says that the special advocate:
may disclose to the appropriate authorities information that has been disclosed to him or her by the permanent resident or foreign national if, in the opinion of the special advocate, such disclosure is necessary to prevent the commission of a criminal offence.
Furthermore, I think that this provision moved by Mr. Dosanjh, as it would appear in the act, would discourage some people to disclose everything they should be telling their lawyer.
An individual who does not know the laws of the land might wonder if what he or she might disclose to the advocate is legal in this country or not. An individual who consults, who talks to an advocate, must have the assurance that this advocate is not there to judge or to harm him.
This is why I would rather stick to the notion of solicitor-client privilege, which has been widely interpreted in case law and has legal meaning in its use by all bar associations of the country. There is a mention of a “criminal offence“. Could the commission of a criminal offence be the fraudulent rental of a car with a credit card belonging to somebody else or things of that order?
Nevertheless, I am convinced that in your mind and in the minds of all of us, it is obvious that if an individual discloses to an advocate plans for a terrorist attack, such an attack would obviously be illegal and viewed as similar to murder, as we have seen in organized crime cases. These certainly are not lesser offences. This is why I would prefer to stick to the notion of solicitor-client privilege, the limits of which are well recognized.