Thank you, Chair.
Thank you to the panel for being here.
I have listened very closely, and I share some of the same views as Mr. Oliphant.
I have certainly dealt with a number of offenders and I've also dealt with a number of victims. When you look at it from all sides, I think we have let society down somewhat with an expectation that we have a system that is effective. We heard very clearly, and Mr. Davies pointed it out in what we heard.
Ms. Bethell, you indicated a drunken kiss at an office party. That wouldn't result in the conviction of a sexual offence. We need to make certain that we understand here that these are people charged and convicted of sexual offences.
I listened to some of the concerns, and I appreciate what the concerns are, but Mr. Baggaley, I think you'd have to agree that anybody convicted of a sexual offence generally has had their name in the press, and frequently the public could Google that name. What in the world would be wrong with the police agencies having that information available to them in a central system, where they can access it?
The effectiveness of the program obviously won't work if we don't put the right information in. Take for example car registration. I think you'd recognize that. Registration of cars is in the system now.
What would be wrong with assembling that? Those people convicted of these sexual offences have been fingerprinted and photographed. What would be wrong with having some additional information there to deal with these issues to help the police in those cases?
And these are serious cases. When we have people coming here today, like the Stephensons, who have experienced that, I don't know how we can say to Canadians that we're trying to protect them by keeping other people's information secret when the information has already been made public. I look at this whole scenario, and I think sometimes we set up bridges—and I think Mr. Stephenson used a prime example—we set up the system with not enough information, and it won't work.
I think we heard from all of the police officers here on Tuesday that the systems we have in place do not cost a great deal of money. We don't seem to mind spending money on other registries, from a federal perspective, that are somewhat questionable. Why would we not want to expand this to give it the worthwhile tools to help the police community, to help our families, in many cases, come to a quicker conclusion?
Could you explain to us, under the privacy legislation, what would be wrong in enhancing that registry by putting the information in there that's already known?