Madam Speaker, I am intrigued with the subject of identification of people. Fortunately I do not have an identical twin; the world could not take two of us. There is little doubt that I am a unique individual. The DNA that would identify me is like an individual serial number that is cranked out at the time of manufacture. This identifies me as a unique person.
When my wife and I were first married we moved to a little town in Alberta. Some of my acquaintances, having come from a large city, said “How can you stand living in that town? Everyone knows what you are doing”. I said “But I am not ashamed of anything I am doing so let them know who I am”. The reason I say that is that I think it underlies the principle we are debating in this DNA bill.
Those people who have not done anything wrong want the identification process to work correctly so they are not incorrectly accused of and convicted of a crime. On the other hand, those who have done something wrong are the ones who in our little town would hide behind the shades at night and leave town so no one would know what they were doing because they were not doing things they were proud of or they could defend in the community.
Consequently when we come to identification there really is a dual question. It is that ancient question of a justice system. There are two objectives in the justice system with respect to identification of criminals. As my colleague has just stated, the overriding principle of our system ought to be the protection of law abiding citizens. Consequently what we want to do is to correctly identify those in society who are not playing by the rules. They are the ones engaging in criminal activity which endangers the life, property and safety of ourselves and our families.
What we want to do in this dual objective of identification is to correctly identify the person who has actually done the crime. The second part of that which is really the mirror image of it, is to make sure that we do not falsely identify a person. In other words, we want to identify the person who is guilty and name the person as guilty rather than innocent. On the other hand, we want to be able to demonstrate that the person who is innocent is falsely accused.
I taught mathematics and statistics for a number of years and we had in sampling for example the type A and type B errors. One error was where if one had a sample in a manufacturing process and wanted to know whether or not a batch should be approved, one error was that you let the thing slide through when in fact it should be rejected. The other error was that you rejected it when in fact it was a sample that was within the specifications.
DNA is new technology which enables us to do this. It enables us to identify individuals in a unique way. With respect to criminal activity, it is unique because individuals who commit certain crimes leave behind telltale traces of identification. It is as if I had my social insurance number on little pieces of paper and whenever I walked, every three feet one of those little pieces of paper would drop and they could be traced to see exactly where I went. Criminals leave particles of skin, hair and other parts of their bodies in various ways. Sometimes they are injured and they leave some blood. There are many different ways in which to get a unique sample that carries the serial number of the individual.
What we are talking about here is using that technology in the most efficient way so that our law enforcement people can identify correctly the people who are actually guilty and exonerate those who are not guilty.
With respect to the motions that are before us today, I would like to speak just in generalities. We need to make sure that the police have the mechanisms to ensure that the DNA samples which are collected and kept are done so in such a way that the identification process can be implemented in the most efficient way.
Consequently there is a great need to make sure that the police are able to collect samples and maintain them in a secure fashion. Certainly we also have to guard against the incorrect use of DNA as an identifier because obviously those who become aware that this is the identification that is used will soon invent ways of transplanting DNA evidence in order to implicate people who are innocent. All of those processes have to be very carefully safeguarded.
It seems that what we are talking about here is protecting the innocent and making sure that the guilty ones are the ones who are hauled on the carpet.
As I was saying in my analogy with respect to being ashamed of what one is doing, I really think that we err when we make rules favouring even the accused. I have often said that if I am accused of a crime I want the truth out if I am innocent, I really do. If there is a databank somewhere which contains the DNA identification codes of a whole bunch of different individuals and I am innocent of that for which I have been accused, I would appreciate there being a databank available so that the true culprit could be found, arrested and found to be guilty.
Frankly, I think that only those who are afraid of being caught would like to see the samples destroyed in a timely fashion. They would want to make sure that the track of identification is wiped out as quickly as possible in order to reduce the probability that they would be identified, accused and convicted of the crime.
When it comes right down to it, on behalf of law-abiding citizens of the country we want to strengthen this bill. We want to make it so strong that it actually works and works efficiently and favourably to its purpose. Those who say that we cannot do this and that they do not want to do it, to a degree I do not really care what they say. They may have their objections but what takes precedence here?
We talk so much about the rights of privacy, the rights of this and the rights of that. I sincerely ask at what stage do we say that the rights of law-abiding citizens and the rights and the protection of those citizens takes precedence over somebody having a DNA sample that maybe they should not have? That becomes secondary.
Of course I would be very concerned if somebody had my fingerprint, my DNA signature and was able to use it incorrectly against me. I want safeguards on that, there is no doubt about it. At the same time, let us not hamper our police forces and our law enforcement agencies in their ability to do their work.