Mr. Chairman, thank you.
I understand my colleague's position based on the Ontario example. However, don't forget that Ontario is a province. It passed a bill and now has a registry which operates based on its own criteria and parameters. That does not necessarily mean that when it's in place across Canada, and therefore affecting a larger proportion of the population, the effect or scope will be the same.
We're talking about one population and comparing it to a larger one. Will the registry have the same effects? Will it include the same number of offenders? Who will it operate? We're not sure.
If the Ontario model is working, that's great. Surely they have to review it there as well, to make adjustments. However, we cannot make comparisons saying that if it worked in Ontario, it has to work in Canada. We can make that assumption. We can assume that this model will work as well in Canada, but there is no guarantee. We have to review it in order to be sure. It's quite true that the Committee can look at this at any time and that it can review any matter it decides to. However, this amendment would require it to carry out such a review, so that it would no longer be based on whether the Committee felt it was necessary or not.
Mr. Chairman, members of Parliament come and go. Governments also come and go. Now, the situation around this table is what it is. It may be different two years from now. We don't know. Today we may all be very interested in reviewing the national sex offender registry, but two years from now, the people sitting at this table—may not be us—may not be interested in looking at whether this legislation is effective.
However, if it is an obligation under the act, they will be required to do so. They will have to look at this. Do you understand the difference, Mr. Chairman? It's a significant one. It may seem to be a minor distinction, but it is actually a very important one.
That's why I invite my colleagues to reconsider their position. We are all human, we are all entitled to make mistakes; that's what makes us human. So, we cannot say that we are 100% certain that all the laws we pass are perfect, because we are basing ourselves on an example either in Ontario or elsewhere in the world.
Let's look at the American example. It doesn't work. There is the infamous problem of false positives and the fact that people are included whose names should never have been there. The best example I can give you is the 18-year-old boy and the 16-year-old girl who are in love. That's really the typical example.
What are we seeking as a society? Do we want our young people to end up in a sex offender registry because they had sex with a 14-year-old girl? I don't understand. Do we want to make a judge powerless and force him to say to an 18-year-old boy that he is sorry, because if he had anything to do with it, he would not have included him in the registry? Unfortunately, because there is no loophole there, and even though he knows that the young man's name should not be in the registry, and even though the young man himself and his lawyer could demonstrate that his name should not be included, it's too bad, but the legislation forces a judge to include him in the registry.
Mr. Chairman, I have learned one important thing over my years in Parliament. When you include someone's name in a registry, it's extremely difficult to remove it afterwards. The best example of that are the people who are on a no-fly list. They have to fight and go to extreme lengths to have their name taken off the list because they are no longer allowed to fly. They are prohibited from flying. Why? Because their name resembles that of another supposed terrorist.
Again, we're dealing with assumptions. You may say that in the case of a sex offender registry… the person is charged and convicted of a crime, and so on. I understand all of that. However, in the exercise we are engaged in today, I think it's a shame we will be giving no opportunity to a judge to decide whether the person appearing before him could or should not be included in the national sex offender registry because, for example, the individual in question, who is an 18-year-old boy, had a relationship with a 16-year-old girl—he loves her, but the parents do not approve. I can imagine that happening. There are all kinds of scenarios that come to mind.
There is another more ridiculous scenario I could point to: one involving a man who is bathing naked—you obviously have to be naked when you bathe—in his bathroom, with the window open, and someone sees him. He is accused of being an exhibitionist. The lady across the street has a fit, exclaiming: “Good heavens, what is this? He is walking around naked! That's not right! I'm calling the police. He is an exhibitionist, officer.” Then the man is told that he was seen, not only by the lady on the first floor, but also by a little 2-year-old girl, etc. And this fellow ends up in court. You're an exhibitionist, are you? So what are we going to do? Put his name in the sex offender registry, without giving him any opportunity to prove that including him in the registry is not really useful? That is the substantive question we should be asking.
And there is another question, which concerns me greatly: will this registry be effective? Witnesses who came before the Committee told us that there are too many names in the registry—like the U.S. example—and that it's not effective. We need an effective registry which clearly identifies sex offenders. We need to put money into it, and we need to be able to assess it. It's true that the registry is already in place, but because of this new way of managing it, we have to know whether it's working or not. And that requires an evaluation—not a “possible” or “probable” evaluation, “if the Committee feels like it”. There has to be a statutory requirement with respect to the registry.
In closing, I'd just like to say that it is critical that this bill be evaluated, but not based on the whims of certain members of the Standing Committee on Safety and National Security who may be sitting at this table two years from now; it has to be prescribed by law. It doesn't commit you to anything. In fact, when you are sure of yourself, and when you know you have a good law, you shouldn't be afraid to have it reviewed subsequently. Why this fear? I can understand as regards the first amendment, which gives the judge that option, and there is reverse onus on the part of the client. It may be ideological, and depending on the period, we may be a little further to the right or to the left. However, when it comes to a report, how can we not agree?
The only thing I can see is that people are clearly not interested in being told two years from now that this registry may not be that effective. I would just like to say one thing, Mr. Chairman.
If, two years from now, I am still alive and am sitting in front of you or in front of your chair—because you may not be there at that point—I will request such a report. That is something I can say; in fact, it's already in writing.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.