With regard to the recognizance with conditions, it was the special Senate committee that recommended that the annual report for both the investigative hearing and the recognizance with conditions be an expanded annual report and that the Minister of Justice, or in this case the Attorney General of Canada, should be required to provide a statement along with reasons as to why he considers these two powers need to be renewed. We've taken that recommendation, and it's now in Bill S-7.
The House of Commons report recommended that the powers be extended for five years, and that recommendation is found in Bill S-7. As a result of the initial first attempt to bring back these provisions as they expired, when it was in the former iteration of Bill S-7, the Senate amended the legislation to make sure that there was a mandatory parliamentary review of these two powers before the powers expired. That amendment was made to Bill S-7 when it passed through the Senate, and that amendment continues to be part of this bill as well.
With regard to the investigative hearing, as you know, substantial safeguards were already in existence when the original legislation was passed in 2001, including the very robust use and derivative use immunity provision that the minister talked about earlier.
In addition, in order to respond to the recommendations of the House of Commons committee, which issued its own special report on these two powers in 2005 or 2006, I believe, we made a couple of extra changes.
The first was in relation to the requirement that had previously been existing in relation to using the investigative hearing to obtain information about a future terrorism offence. The condition was that you had to use reasonable attempts to get the information by other means; we decided to expand that not only to future terrorism offences but also to past terrorism offences, so for every case in which you want to use the investigative hearing, whether for a past or future terrorism offence, there would have to be an effort made by the police to obtain that information by other means. Reasonable attempts must have been made to obtain that information by other means.
Another change we made was because of the concern that was expressed before the House of Commons committee that was examining these two powers in the Anti-Terrorism Act in particular. There was a concern in relation to the investigative hearing. There is a power to arrest with warrant someone who is about to abscond, for example, before attending the investigative hearing. The question was raised that if you arrest that person by means of a warrant, how long can you detain that person under that warrant before the person can be released?
We wanted to make absolutely certain that the limit on detention was very clear in the code, so we put in the same time limit for detention for witnesses before a criminal trial. We plugged that into the investigative hearing provision, and that's the section 707 of the Criminal Code under which a witness can be detained. For example, if a witness is served with a summons to testify at a criminal trial and there is evidence that the person is about to leave without testifying, the person can be arrested by means of a warrant or arrest. The maximum period of time, though, that the witness can be detained is for a total of 90 days--30 days basically, and subject to judicial review, up to a total of 90 days. There is now that additional protection.