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Justice committee My understanding is it has not succeeded. There have been some cases, early on, after the enactment of the child pornography offence, and it has not succeeded. I'm not aware of a case under the voyeurism offence where there's been an issue with that. So in the context of Bill C-5
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee This became apparent when we looked at the case law. When we looked at the length of the sentence imposed, we saw that there were more sentences coming in at the low end of the spectrum. In other words, they were closer to the mandatory minimum penalty level. The other thing I
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee You have it in section 162, very close in the voyeurism offence. The change there is just for grammatical reasons. You have similar language in the child pornography offence in section 163.1.
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee Not that I'm aware of. In fact, a Supreme Court of Canada decision in the Sharpe case, the child pornography case in 2001, interpreted all of the components of the child pornography offence, including for sexual purpose and explicit sexual activity, which again the courts would b
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee I would like to respond in English. I understand the committee will be receiving a presentation by colleagues at the Canadian Centre for Justice Statistics. They may be able to provide you with more specifics. In 2005, 11 new mandatory minimum penalties were enacted in child-spe
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee Certainly, and it's as the minister said: the intention was to get at this predatory conduct before an actual contact sexual offence is committed. And yes, of course, there is an awareness of investigatory practices used by police currently under existing Criminal Code offences a
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee I'll do my best. I'm not the technical expert on the cyber aspects of criminal law. If the committee requests, if I may, I can obtain other assistance for you from one of my colleagues. Let me tell you, in terms of the use of the word “Internet”, certainly in developing Bill C-5
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee I might also add that my colleague has just reminded me that the Interpretation Act also has a definition of telecommunications. So concerning the intention here, you're correct. It is to—
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee It's “computer system” as defined by the Criminal Code, which is more than just a desktop.
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee It is, broadly.
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee The intention is to catch, yes, exactly what's available now and what is possible in the future in terms of identifying the nature of the communications that will be at play rather than just what specifically presents today. You're talking about the conceptual. I'm trying to fin
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee The defence of entrapment is available at common law. So it's not in the Criminal Code. But to assist you with this, section 172.1—the existing “luring a child” offence on which both new offences are modelled—engages similar types of practices to those you heard about from the w
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee The amendment that you see in clause 15 replaces the word that is currently.... For example, currently section 172.1—luring a child—talks about someone who, using “a computer system within the meaning of subsection 342.1(2) communicates with”. This is replacing the language there
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee I believe the term is originating in what is now Bill C-51.
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency
Justice committee You'll see the reference to “telecommunications” there, because the offence you're talking about, which is now found in clause 15, was originally in the predecessor to Bill C-51; it was in Bill C-46. So for consistency purposes, this is using the same language. The intention he
February 2nd, 2011Committee meeting
Carole Morency