Mr. Speaker, I rise today to speak in the debate on Bill C-206, an Act to provide for the relocation and protection of witnesses.
The hon. member for Scarborough West, the sponsor of this bill, deserves to be commended by all of us in this House for raising an issue that concerns law enforcement agencies not only in Canada but throughout the world.
For ten years, the need to protect witnesses has steadily grown, in direction proportion to increasing violence by criminals who act on their own or belong to organized crime. We need only remember the television news last night and this morning where threats were made; I am thinking of threats made in Italy against some judges and others by a criminal when he appeared in court. For this reason alone, then, the hon. member's bill is pertinent and certainly timely.
In the proceedings on Bill C-206, the Source-Witness Protection Program of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police was often mentioned. For obvious reasons, the RCMP is reluctant to disclose anything at all on this subject. Nevertheless, since it is the main program of this kind in Canada, we must have an idea of its extent and effectiveness to properly understand all the issues raised by this private member's bill.
This is why I am pleased to have this opportunity to present to the House a general outline of the RCMP's Source-Witness Protection Program.
First, let me put the program in its context. Source-Witness protection programs were always closely related to organized crime investigations. The expression "organized crime" includes various criminal activities, including the smuggling of large quantities of drugs, murders, aggravated assaults, money laundering, as well as extortion and robbery. As you know, it was strongly contended that organized crime was responsible for the smuggling activities in my riding, in your riding, and elsewhere.
More often than not, the perpetrators of these crimes also use fear and intimidation to make sure that witnesses and possible informants remain silent. However, the protection of witnesses now has a much greater scope. It is disturbing to see that, over the last few years, individual criminals have started to rely on fear and intimidation too. Let me go back to the comments I made earlier. These people are prepared to do anything to avoid being found guilty or to take revenge on witnesses.
Consequently, an increasing number of citizens need protection because of their role in cases which have nothing to do with organized crime. It is because of this increasing need to protect witnesses and informants, and also because of the priority given to the fight against major national and international drug smuggling rings that the RCMP's Source-Witness Protection Program was created in 1984.
The creation of this program was also based on several other factors.
There is the increasing need to use informers instead of RCMP undercover agents to penetrate complex criminal organizations. There is also the increase in violent crimes in Canada. There are, furthermore, obvious signs of extremist and terrorist activity in Canada. And finally, even more importantly, there is the jurisprudence on disclosure of information since the Charter of Rights and Freedoms was adopted.
All these factors have led to increased use of the RCMP's witness protection program.
Originally unique to the RCMP, the program is now used to provide protection for witnesses and informers through provincial and municipal police services across Canada.
Many of these services depend solely on the RCMP for this protection, but some of the bigger services have created their own units. They do not call on the RCMP for assistance except in cases where this is necessary in order to facilitate an identity change.
Most people entering the RCMP sources witness protection program in the mid-1980s were associated with major drug trafficking activities, but as I mentioned before, this has changed.
Today a growing proportion of the people entering the program have been involved in Criminal Code offences such as murder and serious assault. Obviously not every witness qualifies for witness protection despite the thousands of serious assaults that take place each year in Canada but the RCMP and other police forces must exercise care and good judgment when deciding who is eligible for witness protection and who is not.
These common sense safeguards ensure that the number of witnesses and informants do not outstrip the human and financial resources allocated to support the various witness protection programs.
In the last 10 years, the witness protection programs of the RCMP and other police departments have become highly effective enforcement tools against criminals who previously were able to use threats and violence against the witnesses to their crimes to avoid prosecution and conviction. The success of the witness protection program of the RCMP and other police departments speaks for itself.
Of the large number of witnesses and informants and their families who have been relocated over a 10-year period, none have come to any harm. That is a very important issue for us to consider, the effectiveness of what has been done thus far.
The RCMP carry out an average of 50 witness relocations per year. Of this number, approximately 10 cases are in support of other police departments. The direct cost of maintaining the RCMP's witness protection program averages $1.1 million per year.
When those expenses are added to the human resources cost to support the program, its total annual cost exceeds $3 million. Based on current trends, the costs of the program will probably increase as more people are given protection. However the costs are relatively cheap when measured against the impact that witnesses and informants have on individual criminals and organized crime.
There is no more devastating evidence than the firsthand testimony of a trusted accomplice exposing the inner workings of a criminal organization or that of a witness who has seen a serious crime take place and can identify the perpetrators.
Whether a witness or informant, these individuals are invaluable assets to the police and to the judicial system, not to mention society as a whole. In many cases the testimony cannot be replaced by any other investigative means no matter how expensive. This is especially true of drug enforcement.
Here the availability of the RCMP witness protection program has prompted informants and witnesses to come forward and assist the police and testify in court against major national and international drug traffickers despite the proven ability of these organizations to exact violent retribution. These witnesses have provided crucial first hand information to further investigations which otherwise would have been obtained at considerable cost to police resources, human and otherwise.
Major police investigations often require the police to use investigative techniques such as long term telephone intercept, extensive surveillance and the attempted infiltration of target groups using undercover police officers. These techniques are usually more expensive than the cost of providing protection for a witness or an informant.
Since starting the witness protection program, the RCMP has built up an infrastructure of experienced members and contacts. RCMP officers are available in every province and territory to support witness relocations and protection, to obtain secure identity changes and to provide the necessary provincial documents to authenticate these changes.
At headquarters in Ottawa, RCMP members have developed a national RCMP witness protection policy and procedures and contacts to facilitate the changes that must be made within numerous federal government databanks where a witness or informant receives a new identity.
A witness protection program is an enforcement tool that must be administered to some extent under the veil of secrecy. If information about police methods and procedures were to leak out, criminals could use this knowledge to locate and harm their accusers, not to mention the chill it would have on future witnesses. For this reason, witness protection is one of the most sensitive law enforcement techniques used by the police.
The RCMP is well aware of the sensitivity and the need for all to take suitable precautions. This holds true whether the witness or informant requires a complete protection package or just short term emergency protection during court proceedings.
The RCMP also provides the same level of quality service to any other police department that requests advice or direct assistance in that regard.
Witness protection is not a cure for violent crime or for organized crime, but it is an important weapon in the law enforcement's arsenal to investigate and to convict those who participate in organized and other serious crime in Canada. In short, witness protection is here to stay.
The RCMP source witness program and other witness protection programs initiated to date in Canada are constantly undergoing review, change and improvement to ensure that they complement the justice system and provide effective, secure support for the protection of witnesses.
I see Bill C-206, the proposed act to provide for the relocation and protection of witnesses, as part of that process for change and for improvement.