Madam Speaker, I am pleased to have the opportunity to speak on Bill C-78. I sought the opportunity because over the past 15 years I have been active as a lawyer in the criminal justice system. As a lawyer I have worked with witnesses in court, as a defence counsel, as a crown prosecutor for the provincial government of Ontario and as a crown prosecutor for the federal government.
On other occasions I have worked as counsel for witnesses who were involved in witness protection programs. I have had the opportunity to see firsthand what happens to a person, particularly a member of the public, who becomes a witness and to people in the past who became involved in our less formal former witness protection program. I have also seen what happens when a witness is intimidated or when an accused person or a person involved in crime attempts to intimidate a witness.
It is now past the time when we should come forward and set out some clear legislation, some clear rules and clear guidelines and regulations to deal with persons who find themselves in the very delicate and very dangerous position of being a witness and being subject to duress and penalty from those who would seek to quiet them.
Criminals have successfully utilized fear and intimidation of potential witnesses to avoid prosecution and punishment for their criminal acts. Individuals will go to great lengths to avoid convic-
tion or to exact violent retribution from witnesses. We have recognized this. We have worked with this in the system for a long time. We now recognize that enforcement agencies need the support and the assistance of the public to further their investigations and to achieve success in their efforts to bring criminals to justice.
That support would not be forthcoming in the absence of programs designed to ensure the safety of those citizens prepared to get involved by providing information or testifying against criminals.
Witnesses are the ultimate public servants. They are people without whom we could not operate our criminal justice system and without whom we could not bring criminals to the courts and to justice. Witnesses fall into several categories. There are witnesses who are paid to be witnesses and who receive salaries for that, public servants, police officers, investigators at Revenue Canada or at Canada Customs, investigators in various forms of activities that could result in criminal prosecutions. These people are accustomed to dealing with criminals. They also have a role in life that allows them within the system to have the protection of their office and the protection of their job.
On the other end of the spectrum there are ordinary citizens who by coincidence or accident find themselves witnesses to crimes: somebody is walking down the street and they see a bank robber getting away or they witness a car accident in which one of the drivers was criminally negligent or drunk.
Some members of the public become witnesses by virtue of their status as victims of crime. These witnesses by and large come forward and provide a tremendous public service with little concern for their own personal safety as a result of their testimony.
Witnesses who may have been involved with organized crime or other forms of criminal activity and who come forward, as much as they may want to come forward, have their lives affected adversely. These are people who live under threat, people who live in fear of some kind of punishment from those they would seek to accuse or witness against.
There are also witnesses we seek out, we being the government or the agency doing the investigation. These witnesses fall into the general loose category of informants, paid informants or sources. It is an unfortunate fact of life that sometimes we have to go to criminals to bring criminals to justice. Sometimes we have to go to people involved in an activity to have their assistance in bringing to justice the main perpetrators.
The legislation is intended to cover these people and to protect them in the event their lives are in danger. The legislation will cover agents who participate in investigations as well as informants.
The witness protection program act defines a witness as a person who has given or who has agreed to give information or evidence or has agreed to participate in a matter relating to an inquiry or the investigation or prosecution of an offence whose security is at risk as a result. Also included in the definition are persons who may require protection due to their relationship to or association with the people previously mentioned.
We are talking about people who by accident or on purpose become involved in an investigation and who are under duress from those who would be investigated as a result. Protection under the act can include relocation, accommodation, change of identity, counselling, financial support for those people or for any other purpose in order to ensure their security and to facilitate their re-establishment or their becoming self-sufficient. It covers a wide range of services that can be provided.
Not everyone involved in the witness protection program will live a secret existence in the future. They may simply require counselling or assistance to get on with their lives after the trauma of having dealt with this.
We know from previous speakers that the annual cost of the protection program is $3.4 million and that there will be no additional costs as a result of the legislation.
The legislation clearly defines what is expected of the government and what is expected of the witnesses as a result of this program. In the past there has been a problem because our program has been informal and because the program has been allowed to change with particular circumstances.
As a result there have been complaints from those who are protected and from the RCMP which administers the program that people's expectations are not being met and that the RCMP needs assistance in defining how far it can go and what it should do to protect the witness.
The new legislation will ensure a clear defined admission policy for witnesses, consistent treatment of cases across the country, a clear setting out of responsibilities and obligations of administrators of the plan and protectees entering the program, and a more defined management structure within the RCMP for the daily operation of the program, thereby increasing accountability.
This is an important section. I recall dealing with a witness who was under protection and who was having difficulty within the system making contact with someone to assist her or to give some answers on some information she required. Even as a lawyer it was a bit of a nightmare trying to get through the maze of administration to find someone who could assist her with her problem. The
more clearly defined management structure within the RCMP will assist to straighten that out.
A complaints procedure will be in place and the commissioner of the RCMP will submit to the solicitor general an annual report on the operation of the program.
During 1994 and 1995 we have provided protective services to 70 new witnesses, 30 of whom were referred by other agencies. The $3.4 million we are spending annually on the program will not increase as a result of the change in administration but the money will be spent more effectively. It will be spent more clearly on guaranteeing the safety of the witnesses.
It is important for the public to understand and appreciate that the witness protection program operates across the country, but it does not operate in a vacuum. In devising the statute and in setting out the scheme in the act we have consulted all the provinces and territories.
When someone applies for the program or when a decision is made to admit an applicant to the program, the following factors will be taken into consideration: the potential contribution the witness or source can make toward a police investigation; the nature of the offence under investigation; the nature of the risk to the individual; what alternate methods of protection are available; the danger to the community if the individual is admitted to the program; the potential effects on any family arrangements; the likelihood of the individual's being able to adjust; their maturity, their ability to make judgments and other personal characteristics; the cost of maintaining the individual in the program; and other factors the commissioner of the RCMP finds relevant.
It is important that there be a clear, defined decision making process to admit an individual into the program. In serious cases such as those requiring a change of identity or an admission of a foreign applicant, the decision to admit an individual will be made only by the assistant commissioner in charge of the program. A decision to terminate protection must also be made by the assistant commissioner.
This is only part of the Liberal safe streets, safe neighbourhoods program. Obviously we need statutes like this. No matter how much serious crime there is, we know there always will be crime and there always will be a need to protect people.
When we are protecting people we need to be able to say to Canadians we are protecting people worthy of protection, that we are protecting people when there is a serious risk and that we have a clearly defined methodology for doing it. As the economy becomes healthier, as we work toward the creation of jobs and the creation of prosperous communities, we will find there will be less and less violent crime on our streets.
Those who would seek to encourage Canadians to believe that violent crime is increasing at the present time are being disingenuous because we know statistically and from crime reports that is not the case.
The bill is not a response to the fearmongering that exists in certain quarters of society. It is a practical, concrete response to a need to clearly define and assist the criminal justice system in witness protection. It is a practical, pragmatic response to a situation we have been able to identify. It is part of the ongoing Liberal government plan for safe streets and safe communities in Canada.