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BILL C-7: THE YOUTH CRIMINAL
JUSTICE ACT
Prepared by:
David Goetz
Law and Government Division
12 February 2001
Revised 14 December 2001
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY OF BILL
C-7
HOUSE
OF COMMONS
|
SENATE
|
Bill
Stage |
Date |
Bill
Stage |
Date |
First
Reading: |
5 February
2001
|
First
Reading: |
30 May 2001
|
Second
Reading: |
26 March
2001
|
Second
Reading: |
25 September 2001
|
Committee
Report: |
3 May 2001
|
Committee
Report: |
8 November 2001
|
Report
Stage: |
28 May 2001
|
Report
Stage: |
|
Third
Reading: |
29 May 2001
|
Third
Reading: |
18 December 2001
|
Message sent to the House of Commons: 18 December
2001
Concurrence in Senate Amendments: 4 February 2002
Royal Assent: 19 February 2002
Statutes of Canada 2002, c.1
N.B. Any substantive changes in this Legislative
Summary which have been made since the preceding issue are indicated
in bold print.
|
|
|
|
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
BACKGROUND
DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS
A. Preamble,
Definitions and Principles
1. Preamble
2. Definitions
(Clause 2)
3. Declaration
of Principle (Clause 3)
B. Part 1:
Extrajudicial Measures
1. Introduction
2. Principles
and Objectives
3. Warnings, Cautions
and Referrals
4. Extrajudicial
Sanctions
C. Part
2: Organization of Youth Criminal Justice System
1. Introduction
2. Youth
Justice Courts
3. Youth
Justice Committees
4. Conferences
5. Justices
of the Peace and Youth Justice Court Clerks
6. Provincial
Directors
D. Part 3:
Judicial Measures
1. Pre-Charge
Screening
2. Right
to Counsel
3. Notices
to Parents
4. Pre-Trial
Detention
a. Introduction
b. Rules
Governing the Pre-Trial Detention of Young Persons
c. Pre-Trial
Detention of Adults Subject to the Youth Criminal Justice System
d. Placement
with Responsible Person as Alternative to Detention
e. Review
of Bail Decisions
5. Appearance
6. Medical and
Psychological Reports
7. Child
Welfare Referral
8. Adjudication
9. Appeals
E. Part 4: Sentencing
1. Introduction
2. Purposes
and Principles
a. Introduction
b. Purpose
and Principles of Youth Sentencing
c. Principles
Applicable to Custodial Youth Sentences
3. Pre-Sentence
Report
4. Youth
Sentences
a. Overview
b. Sentencing
Inputs
c. Possible
Youth Sentences
d. Youth
Sentence for Murder
e. Intensive
Rehabilitative Custody and Supervision
f. Serious
Violent Offence Determination
g. Total Duration
of Youth Sentences
h. Additional Custody
Sentences
i. Continuous
vs Intermittent Custody
j. Reasons
for Sentence
k. Non-Application
of Criminal Code Sentencing Provisions
l. Weapons
Prohibitions
m. Allocation
of Funds for Victim Assistance
n. Orders with
Conditions for Conduct
o. Transfer
of Sentences
p. Review of
Non-Custodial Sentences
5. Adult
Sentences
a. Overview
b. Minimum Age for
Presumptive Offences
c. Application
by Young Person against Adult Sentence
d. Application
/ Notice by Attorney General for Adult Sentence
e. Election as to Mode
of Trial
f. Determination
re Liability to Adult Sentence
g. Young Person
Sentenced to Imprisonment
6. Effect
of Termination of Youth Sentences
F. Part 5:
Custody and Supervision
1. Purpose
and Principles of Youth Custody and Supervision
a. General Purpose
and Principles
b. Separation
of Youth from Adult Offenders
2. Level
of Custody
3. Persons
Age 20 or over at Time of Sentencing
4. Youth
Workers
5. Reintegration
Leave
6. Transfer
/ Placement into Adult Facility
7. Review
of Custodial Youth Sentences and Early Release
a. Introduction
b. Review of Custodial
Youth Sentences
c. Review
of Other Orders
8. Release
on Completion of the Custodial Portion
a. Conditions
for Supervision
b. Conditions
for Conditional Supervision
9. Detention
beyond the Custodial Portion
a. Application by
Provincial Director
b. Application by Attorney
General
c. Review of Order
by Court of Appeal
10. Breach
of Conditions
G. Part
6: Publication, Records and Information
1. Introduction
2. Protection
of Privacy of Young Persons
3. Fingerprints and
Photographs
4. Records
That Might Be Kept
5. Access
to Records
H. Part 7:
General Provisions
1. Exclusion
from Hearing
2. Offences
and Punishment
a. Overview
b. Interference with
Youth Sentence
c. Failure to Comply
with Youth Sentence
d. Breach
of Publication, Records and Information Provisions
e. Breach
of Pre-Sentencing Detention Provisions
f. Use
of Prohibited Employment Application Form
3. Application
of the Criminal Code
a. General
Applicability of Criminal Code Provisions
b. Mental
Disorder
c. Summary Conviction Procedures
4. Evidence
a. Admissibility
of Statements
i. Statements
to Persons in Authority
ii. Statements
during Pre-Sentence Assessments
b. Establishing the
Age of the Accused
5. Creation and
Funding of Programs
6. Miscellaneous
COMMENTARY
BILL C-7: THE YOUTH
CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT
BACKGROUND
Bill C-7, the Youth Criminal
Justice Act (YCJA), was introduced in the House of Commons on 5 February
2001 by the Honourable Anne McLellan, Minister of Justice. The bill
is similar to Bills C-3 and C-68 of the 36th Parliament.
However, Bill C-7 contains a number of changes which respond to some of
the criticisms of Bill C-3, such as:
-
fine tuning the Bills
Declaration of Principle to ensure an emphasis on rehabilitation and
the needs of the young person;
-
greater flexibility
for the provinces in the presumptive application of adult sentences
to persons under 16;
-
clarifying the harmonization
principle in youth sentencing;
-
greater flexibility
in custodial sentencing; and
-
narrowing the basis
for admitting youth statements obtained in breach of certain statutory
protections.
Bill C-7 would repeal and
replace the Young Offenders Act (YOA), adopted by Parliament in
1982, in force since 1984, and amended in 1986, 1992, and 1995.
(This Act had itself replaced the 1908 Juvenile Delinquents Act.(1))
Bill C-7 was developed and based upon A Strategy for the Renewal of
Youth Justice, released by the government in May 1998 as its response
to Renewing Youth Justice, the April 1997 Report of the House of
Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs.
DESCRIPTION AND ANALYSIS
A. Preamble, Definitions
and Principles
1. Preamble
The bill includes a Preamble
setting out the context within which Parliament is legislating, including
a description of the broad social issues it is addressing and the legislative
goals it expects to achieve. In recent years, Parliament has more
frequently had recourse to preambles and other similar legislative techniques
to indicate to government institutions, the courts and Canadians how it
expects its legislation to be interpreted and applied. Similar goals
are pursued by the use of legislative statements of purposes, principles,
objectives, and factors to be considered. This bill uses these legislative
techniques in several different contexts.
The Preamble contains five
declarations or assertions that aim to put the rest of the bill into a
policy context. The first Preamble statement holds that the community
shares a responsibility to deal with the developmental needs of young
persons and to guide them into adulthood. The second statement
asserts that communities, families, parents and others should adopt multi-disciplinary
approaches to prevent youth crime by dealing with its underlying causes,
responding to the needs of young persons, and providing guidance and support
to those at risk of criminal offending.
The third Preamble statements
declares that information about youth justice, youth crime and the effectiveness
of measures taken to address it should be available to the public.
The fourth Preamble statement
recalls that Canada is a party to the United Nations Convention on
the Rights of the Child and recognizes that young persons, in addition
to the constitutional protections available to all Canadians, have special
guarantees of their rights and freedoms.
Finally, the Preamble states
that the youth criminal justice system must command respect, foster responsibility,
and ensure accountability through meaningful consequences and effective
rehabilitation and reintegration. The system is to reserve its most
serious interventions for the most serious crimes, and to reduce the present
over-reliance on incarceration for non-violent young persons.
Although the YOA contains
a Declaration of Principle in section 3, it does not include a Preamble
as such.
2. Definitions
(Clause 2)
Clause 2 of the bill contains
a number of definitions essential to the application of the proposed law.
Many key terms and their definitions particularly those that relate
to the scope of application of the statute are the same as in the
YOA; for example, the definitions of the terms child, young
person, and adult, would continue to restrict the application
the Act to persons between the ages of twelve and eighteen years.
Also, the term offence would continue to mean an offence created
by an Act of Parliament or by a regulation, rule, order, by-law, or ordinance
of an Act of Parliament, other than an ordinance of the Yukon Territory
or Northwest Territories. Clause 2 would amend this definition only
to add a reference to offences created by the new Nunavut Legislature
to those that would be excluded from the meaning of offence
under the Act. As under the current YOA, young persons who committed
provincial or territorial offences would have to be dealt with under applicable
provincial or territorial legislation.
Clause 2 would also add
some new definitions of terms arising from other proposed changes to the
legislation. For example, the term presumptive offence
would refer to offences for which an adult sentence is presumed to be
appropriate, namely: certain offences of violence when committed
by a young person who is at least 14 years of age or some higher
age, between age 14 and 16, designated by the province under clause 61.
These offences would include the four offences currently set out in the
presumptive transfer provision of section 16(1.01) of the YOA; that is,
first or second degree murder, attempted murder, manslaughter, and aggravated
sexual assault. To this list would be added any serious violent
offence for which an adult could be sentenced to a term of imprisonment
in excess of two years if, prior to the commission of that offence, at
least two different judicial determinations had been made that the young
person had committed a serious violent offence. Clause 2 would also
add the new term serious violent offence (an offence in the
commission of which a young person causes or attempts to cause serious
bodily harm).
Finally, some of the current
terms used and defined in the legislation would be altered. The
term alternative measures would be replaced by extrajudicial
measures, although the definition would remain the same. This
is also the case for the term disposition, which would be
replaced with the term youth sentence, highlighting that,
while the consequences may not be the same, young offenders are, like
adults, being held accountable under the law for their offending behaviour.
The term ordinary court and its definition would be eliminated
from the Act; this would follow the proposed elimination of the provisions
for the transfer of certain young offender cases to the adult criminal
justice system. In their place, Bill C-3 would give youth justice
courts (the proposed new title for youth court) access to
adult sentences in certain circumstances.
3. Declaration of
Principle (Clause 3)
Clause 3 of the bill sets
out in general terms Parliaments legislative intention in enacting
Bill C-3. Unlike the Preamble, the Declaration of Principle enunciated
in clause 3 would be contained within the body of the legislation, thus
giving it more interpretative weight in enunciating the values to be respected
in the administration and application of the proposed law.
Clause 3(1) contains four
interlinked and ranked statements of principle. The first asserts
that the youth criminal justice system is intended to promote the long-term
protection of the public by preventing crime, rehabilitating young offenders
so as to reintegrate them into the community, and ensuring there are meaningful
consequences to offences committed. The second set of principles
would establish that the youth criminal justice system is to be separate
from that of adults and must emphasize rehabilitation and reintegration,
fair and proportionate accountability, enhanced procedural protection,
timely intervention that reinforces the link between offending behaviour
and its consequences, and a promptness and speed in dealing with such
cases given young persons perception of time.
The third set of principles
would establish that, within the limits of fair and proportionate accountability,
the measures taken against young persons who commit offences should: reinforce
respect for community values; encourage repair of harm done to victims
and the community; be meaningful for the young person, given his or her
needs and level of development; respect gender, ethnic, cultural and linguistic
differences; and respond to the needs of young persons with special requirements.
The final set of principles would establish that special considerations
apply in respect of proceedings against young persons; more specifically:
that young persons have rights and freedoms in their own right;
that victims should be treated with courtesy, compassion, and respect;
that victims should be provided with information; and that parents should
be kept informed and encouraged to support their children in addressing
their offending behaviour.
Many of these same principles
can be found in section 3(1) of the YOA, except that the new Declaration
of Principle in clause 3(1) of the bill attempts to organize the principles
into appropriate themes and provides for some sort of hierarchy within
each theme.
Overall, the proposed new
Declaration of Principle appears to reflect a shift away from considerations,
such as societys denunciation of offending behaviour, and the short-term
protection of the public from offenders, that tend to favour custodial
dispositions for young offenders. In general, the new Declaration
of Principle proposed in clause 3(1) of the bill is consistent with the
recommendations of the House of Commons Justice and Legal Affairs Committee
in its 1997 report.(2)
The other major difference
from the current Declaration of Principle in the YOA would be the addition
in clause 3(1)(d) of references to the needs, interests and role of victims
in the youth justice system.
Like section 3(2) of the
current Act, clause 3(2) of the bill would require that the legislation
be liberally construed in accordance with the Declaration
of Principle.
B. Part 1:
Extrajudicial Measures
1. Introduction
Part 1 of Bill C-3 deals
with extrajudicial measures, the proposed new term for what
are currently known as alternative measures under the YOA,
whereby young persons can be held accountable for their offending behaviour
without proceeding with a formal charge through the courts. Out-of-court
responses, such as police warnings, cautioning, referral to community
programs, apologies to victims, acknowledgement and reparation of damage,
and community service work, are seen as providing more meaningful consequences
for much youth crime, as well as being faster and less costly than interventions
through the formal court system. Moreover, providing for such non-judicial
alternatives is in keeping with Canadas obligations under the United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (see article 40(3)(b)
of the Convention). Recent studies have shown that, in comparison
with countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom, Australia,
and New Zealand, Canada has been under-utilizing such measures and has
thus tended to divert fewer youth crime cases from the formal court system.(3)
Part 1 of the bill seeks
to address a recommendation of the 1997 House of Commons Justice Committee
report for reform of the youth justice system to accommodate various alternatives
to court proceedings.(4) The provinces would, however,
retain considerable flexibility with respect to the specific details of
the various extrajudicial measures and the extent to which they would
implement them.
While the YOA currently
makes provision for alternatives to formal court proceedings, it provides
little guidance as to their precise nature, when they are likely to be
most appropriate, who should decide on their use, and what they should
aim to achieve. Bill C-3 seeks to fill this gap by providing a more
detailed and structured framework for the use of these non-judicial measures.
Under alternative measures in the present legislation, some act, such
as community service work, is performed in consideration for which a charge
is withdrawn by the prosecution. Bill C-3 would expressly incorporate
less formal responses such as police warnings, cautioning, and
referral to community programs which could be applied even more
quickly, without any charge being laid. Some of these informal alternatives
have always been available to police; however, there is some evidence
that the exercise of police discretion in deciding not to lay charges
has declined in recent years.(5) Bill
C-3 would confer statutory recognition on these less formal non-judicial
responses to youth offending behaviour, oblige police to consider their
suitability in each case, and would create a presumption of their suitability
with respect to non-violent first offenders.
2. Principles
and Objectives
Part 1 of the bill first
sets out a series of principles and objectives which are intended to animate
and inform the thinking of those involved in the design and application
of extrajudicial measures (primarily, provincial justice ministries, police
and prosecutors). Clause 4 declares that the following principles
would be applicable to this Part of the bill, in addition to those set
out in the overall Declaration of Principle for the bill in clause 3(1):
-
extrajudicial measures
are often the most appropriate and effective way to address youth
crime;
-
extrajudicial measures
allow for effective and timely interventions focusing on the correction
of offending behaviour;
-
in the case of a non-violent
offender with no previous convictions, extrajudicial measures are
to be presumed to be adequate to hold the young person accountable
for his or her actions; and
-
extrajudicial measures
should be used whenever they are sufficient to hold the young person
accountable for offending behaviour, notwithstanding that the young
person may have committed previous offences.
Clause 5 sets out objectives
for extrajudicial measures; they should:
-
provide an effective
and timely non-judicial response to offending behaviour;
-
encourage young persons
to acknowledge and repair the harm caused to the victim and the community;
-
encourage families of
young persons to be involved in the design and implementation of the
measures;
-
provide an opportunity
for victim participation in decisions on the measures selected and
to receive reparation; and
-
respect the rights and
freedoms of young persons and be proportionate to the seriousness
of the offence.
3. Warnings, Cautions
and Referrals
The bill proposes two broad
categories of extrajudicial measures: warnings, cautions, and referrals
to community-based programs, for less serious cases; and extrajudicial
sanctions, for more serious cases.
Clause 6(1) of the bill
would require police first to consider, in light of the principles set
out in clause 4 (above), the appropriateness of a warning, caution (if
available see below), or program referral, before proceeding with
a formal charge or with extrajudicial sanctions. Failure to follow
clause 6(1) would not, however, invalidate any charge laid against the
young person (clause 6(2)).
The availability of cautioning
by police or prosecutors as an extrajudicial measure would depend on having
such programs established by the provincial and federal attorneys general
pursuant to clauses 7 and 8. Unlike a mere warning given
immediately by police on the spot or at the young persons home,
a caution would generally take place later at a police station
or prosecutors office and might involve an apology by the offender
to the victim. However, the bill does not indicate any specific meaning
for warning or caution, or the distinction between
them.
Under clause 9, evidence
that any offence had been dealt with by way of a warning, caution, or
referral, or evidence that police had taken no further action in respect
of an offence, would not be admissible as proof of prior offending behaviour
by a young person in any youth justice court proceedings with respect
to that young person. This restriction would relate primarily to
sentencing hearings for any subsequent offences.
4. Extrajudicial
Sanctions
Where a warning, caution,
or referral was not thought adequate to deal with a young person (because
of the seriousness of the offence, the nature and number of previous offences,
or any other aggravating factor), recourse could be had to extrajudicial
sanctions (clause 10(1)). Extrajudicial sanctions would correspond
to the current model of alternative measures under the YOA.
They would represent a more serious and formal response than the other
extrajudicial measures. As under the current legislation, extrajudicial
sanctions would operate like a conditional discharge, but without any
adjudication of guilt. Provided the young person fulfilled certain
conditions such as reparation of damage caused to the victim or
community service work the criminal charge would be withdrawn or
dismissed.
As with the other extrajudicial
measures, the bill is silent as to the precise nature of the sanctions
envisioned. These details would be left to the provinces.
The bill would, however, continue to stipulate conditions and restrictions
on the use and effect of extrajudicial sanctions. These would be
the same as those currently applicable to alternative measures under the
YOA (see: YOA, section 4; and Bill C-7, clauses 10(2) to 10(6)):
-
an extrajudicial sanction
must be part of a program of sanctions authorized by the Attorney
General or persons designated by the lieutenant governor in council
of the province;
-
an extrajudicial sanction
must be an appropriate response, with regard to the needs of the young
person and the interests of society;
-
the young person must
fully and freely consent to be subject to the extrajudicial sanction;
-
before consenting to
an extrajudicial sanction, a young person must be advised of his or
her right to legal representation and be given the opportunity to
consult counsel;
-
the young person must
first accept responsibility for the act or omission that forms the
basis of the offence;
-
there must be, in the
opinion of the prosecution, sufficient evidence to justify proceeding
with the prosecution;
-
prosecution of the offence
must not be legally barred;
-
the young person must
not deny involvement in the offence;
-
the young person must
not express the wish to have the charge dealt with by the court;
-
no admission of guilt
made by a young person as a condition of being dealt with by an extrajudicial
sanction is admissible against a young person in any civil or criminal
proceedings;
-
the use of an extrajudicial
sanction is not a bar to prosecution or judicial proceedings against
the young person, except to the extent that the young person has complied
with the terms and conditions of the sanction.
The bill would also provide
that certain third parties would be informed of the use of extrajudicial
sanctions. Clause 11 would require the oral or written notification
of the parents of the young person and clause 12 would give the victim
the right to be informed of the young persons identity and of the
sanction applied.
C. Part
2: Organization of Youth Criminal Justice System
1. Introduction
Part 2 of Bill C-7 would
provide a statutory basis for the existence and powers of certain key
actors in the youth criminal justice system.
2. Youth
Justice Courts
Clause 13 would provide
for the designation of youth justice courts, either by provincial
legislation or by the provincial or federal executives. A judge
of a court so designated would be a youth justice court judge. This
would replicate existing provisions in the YOA, except that the name of
the courts designated for young offender cases would be changed from youth
court to youth justice court.
Clause 13 would also provide
that other criminal courts, which would otherwise be adult courts, would
be deemed to be youth justice courts for the purposes of any youth
cases before them. Instead of providing for the transfer of certain
serious youth cases to the adult criminal justice system, as is done under
the YOA, Bill C-7 would make adult sentences available within the youth
court system. To do this, however, young offenders would have to
be allowed the options of preliminary inquiries and jury trials, which
are available in the adult system in serious cases, but which are currently
unavailable in the youth court system, except in the case of murder.
Designated youth justice courts would generally consist of inferior
courts presided over by provincially appointed judges. However,
these types of courts do not generally have the jurisdiction to try criminal
cases where there has been a preliminary inquiry(6)
and they never conduct jury trials. Clause 13 would, therefore,
permit federally appointed superior court judges, who already have the
jurisdiction to try such cases, to sit as youth justice court judges,
retaining their powers as superior court judges (under clause 14(7)).
As with the current YOA,
the youth criminal justice system would retain jurisdiction over adults
in respect of alleged offences committed while they were under 18 years
of age. Clause 14 would give youth justice courts exclusive jurisdiction
over federal offences allegedly committed by persons between the ages
of 12 and 17 inclusive, with the exception of regulatory offences dealt
with under the Contraventions Act and offences subject to military
jurisdiction under the National Defence Act. Clause 14 would
also expressly confer jurisdiction on youth justice courts to make preventative
orders such as peace bonds. As is the case with youth courts under
the YOA, youth justice court judges under Bill C-7 would, for the purposes
of carrying out the provisions of the legislation, be considered to be
provincial court judges or justices of the peace and would have the jurisdiction
and powers of a summary conviction court under the Criminal Code.
Superior courts deemed to be youth justice courts under Bill C-7 would,
however, also retain their jurisdiction and powers as a superior court.
As with the YOA, Bill C-7
would preclude extrajudicial measures or judicial proceedings from being
taken in respect of any offence after the expiry of any applicable limitation
period. Unlike section 5(2) of the YOA, however, clause 14(3) of
the bill would provide an exception to this general prohibition where
the Crown prosecutor and the young person agreed. Thus, the prosecution
would be able to proceed summarily in cases where it would otherwise be
forced to proceed by indictment in order to retain the ability to prosecute.
Clause 15 of the bill would
deal with contempt of court in the youth justice system, for the most
part, re-enacting the current provisions on contempt set out in section
47 of the YOA. A youth justice court would have the same powers
to deal with contempt of court as a superior court judge in that province;
youth justice courts would have jurisdiction over any contempt by a young
person against any court, and over contempts committed in the face of
a youth justice court by an adult; a young person convicted of contempt
of court would be subject to a youth sentence under Part 4 of the bill;
section 708 of the Criminal Code would apply to contempt proceedings
against adults in the youth justice courts. This last provision
would enable youth justice courts to deal summarily with adult witnesses
who failed to attend or remain at youth justice court proceedings when
legally required to do so, and to impose fines of up to $100, imprisonment
for up to 90 days, or both, in such cases. Unlike the current youth
courts, however, the proposed youth justice courts would not necessarily
have any exclusive jurisdiction over contempts committed by young
persons.
Clause 16, dealing with
the jurisdictional problem that arises when an offence charged is alleged
to have been committed during a period that includes the accuseds
18th birthday, would confer jurisdiction on the youth justice
court in such cases. Where it was proven during the proceedings
that the offence had in fact been committed after the accused had attained
the age of 18, the youth justice court would be free to sentence the accused
as an adult.
Clause 17 would replicate
section 68 of the YOA to confer on the judges of the youth justice courts
in each province the power to make rules for the youth justice courts
on matters such as: the duties of the officers of the court; practice
and procedure before the court; the forms to be used; and any other appropriate
matter considered expedient to attain the ends of justice.
Such rules of court would be subject to any regulations made by the Governor
in Council under clause 155. As with such rules under the YOA, rules
of court made under clause 17 would have to be approved by the provincial
lieutenant governor in council and be published in the provincial gazette.
3. Youth
Justice Committees
Section 69 of the YOA provides
for the creation of youth justice committees, which are committees of
citizens appointed to assist without remuneration in the administration
of the Act or in any programs or services for young offenders. The
actual establishment of such committees is left to each provincial attorney
general, or such other minister as designated by the lieutenant governor
in council of the province, who is also responsible for specifying how
committee members are appointed and the functions of the committees.
Clause 18 of the bill would
retain this provision, but would remove the stipulation that committee
members serve without remuneration and would authorize the federal Attorney
General to establish such committees as well. Clause 18 would also
provide specific legislative guidance as to the functions of the committees.
Pursuant to clause 18(2), youth justice committees could perform the following
functions:
-
giving advice to the
police or Crown attorneys on the appropriate extrajudicial measure
in a particular case;
-
soliciting the concerns
of the victim and facilitating his or her reconciliation with the
young person;
-
ensuring that various
community support resources were available to the young person;
-
helping to coordinate
the interaction of the youth criminal justice system with child protection
agencies or community groups involved with the young person;
-
advising the federal
and provincial governments on compliance with the provisions of the
legislation which grant rights to young persons or provide for the
protection of young persons;
-
advising the federal
and provincial governments on youth criminal justice policies and
procedures;
-
providing information
to the public on the legislation and the youth criminal justice system;
-
acting as a conference
(see below); and
-
any other functions
assigned by the federal or provincial attorney general.
By enhancing the legislative
emphasis on youth justice committees, and by emphasizing their potential
role in coordination between the youth criminal justice system and other
institutions and systems involved with young persons in the community
(such as the education and child protection systems), clause 18 of the
bill would address key aspects of the 1997 Justice Committee reports
conclusions and recommendations. However, while that report seemed
to favour achieving coordination with these other institutions and systems
through their representation on the youth justice committees,(7)
Bill C-7 is silent as to the composition of these committees.
4. Conferences
As with youth justice committees,
conferences are intended to allow persons outside the court system to
be involved in the youth criminal justice system by formulating more creative
community-based responses to youth offending. However, unlike youth
justice committees, conferences would generally be ad hoc groups
of individuals convened to deal with a specific case. Typically,
a conference would bring together in an informal setting the offender,
his or her family, the victim, and the victims supporters, with
a view to an open discussion of the offence and its impact, and arriving
at a resolution, such as an apology, restitution, or community service.
The conference concept was inspired by family group conferencing experiences
in other countries, such as New Zealand and Australia, and successful
experiments in certain remote communities in Canada, as well as Aboriginal
models of community or circle sentencing. The 1997 House
of Commons Justice Committee report recommended that the youth criminal
justice system be reformed to accommodate alternative responses to youth
crime, such as conferencing.(8)
Clause 19 of the bill would
provide a legislative basis for such conferences. Clause 19(1) would provide
that conferences could be convened by a youth justice court judge, the
provincial director for youth criminal justice (see below), a police officer,
or any other person charged with making a decision required under the
legislation. Clause 19(2) suggests possible mandates for such conferences:
to give advice on extrajudicial measures, conditions for pre-trial release,
and sentences, including the review of sentences and reintegration plans
(see below, with respect to clauses 59, 89 and 93-95). As with the
youth justice committees, the bill leaves considerable flexibility as
to the actual implementation of conferencing, but provides the provinces
with authority to make rules for the conduct of such conferences (other
than those convened by a youth justice court judge or justice of the peace,
which would presumably be subject to rules made under clause 17 (clause
19(3)).
5. Justices
of the Peace and Youth Justice Court Clerks
Clauses 20 and 21 of the
bill would effectively re-enact existing YOA provisions dealing with the
powers of justices of the peace and youth court clerks (see YOA sections
6 and 65). The only change would be clause 20(2), which would clarify
that justices of the peace could conduct peace bond proceedings against
young persons under section 810 of the Criminal Code. However,
any failure or refusal by a young person to comply with an order by a
justice of the peace to enter into a recognizance (peace bond) would have
to be referred to a youth justice court.
6. Provincial
Directors
Provincial directors are
persons, groups of persons, or bodies appointed or designated by the provinces
to perform the duties assigned to provincial directors under the YOA:
overseeing aspects of the youth criminal justice system, such as detention
and custody of young persons, pre-sentencing assessments, administration
of supervision or probation orders, and the review of dispositions.
Bill C-7 would retain this position and, in clause 22, would effectively
re-enact section 2.1 of the YOA which permits provincial directors to
authorize other persons to perform their duties and functions under the
legislation on their behalf.
D. Part 3: Judicial
Measures
1. Pre-Charge
Screening
Clause 23 would permit pre-charge
screening programs to be established by the various provincial and federal
attorneys general. The purpose of such programs is to divert cases
away from the formal judicial process where a lesser response, such as
extrajudicial measures (currently, alternative measures) would
be adequate. For the most part, this provision would merely provide
a federal statutory framework for and recognition of pre-charge screening
and diversion programs that already exist.
Clause 24 would ensure that
the opportunity to screen appropriate cases out of the formal judicial
process extended to private prosecutions, by requiring that the relevant
attorney generals office consent to any such prosecutions.
2. Right
to Counsel
Section 10(b) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees to every person who is arrested
or detained the right to retain and instruct counsel without delay
and to be informed of that right. Section 11 of the YOA expands
upon this basic guarantee by specifying in greater detail young persons
right to counsel in the youth criminal justice system, and how that system
is to give effect to that right. Clause 25 of the bill would essentially
replicate the provisions of section 11 of the YOA.
There would be a general
statement of a young persons right to retain and instruct counsel,
and to do so personally (i.e., this right need not be exercised through
a parent or guardian even though it may involve a contractual relationship),
at any stage of proceedings against the young person, including before
or during any consideration as to the appropriateness of an extrajudicial
sanction as an alternative to judicial proceedings (clause 25(1)).
Clause 25 goes on to propose
that young persons would have to be advised of their right to counsel,
and be given a reasonable opportunity to exercise that right at specific
points in the youth criminal justice process. The police would be
required to conform with this provision upon the arrest or detention of
a young person (clause 25(2)). Thereafter, courts or review boards
conducting various proceedings under the bill would likewise have to advise
the young person of his or her right to counsel, unless the young person
was already represented (clause 25(3)).
Where a young person wished
to obtain legal counsel, but was unable to do so, courts or review boards
conducting proceedings would have to refer him or her to the provinces
legal aid program for the appointment of counsel (clauses 25(4)(a) and
25(6)(a)). If no legal aid program was available to the young person,
or if the young person was unable to obtain counsel through the program,
the court or review board would have to direct that he or she be represented
by counsel (clauses 25(4)(b) and 25(6)(b)) to be appointed by the provincial
attorney generals office (clause 25(5)).
Clause 25(7) would provide
that a court or review board could permit the young person, at his or
her request, to be assisted by an adult whom it considered to be suitable,
rather than by legal counsel.
Clause 25(9) would provide
that a statement of the young persons right to be represented by
counsel would have to be included in various documents issued in connection
with the proceedings against the young person.
The courts would also continue
to be responsible for ensuring that a young person was represented by
counsel independent of the young persons parent, where it appeared
that there was a conflict of interest between the parent and the young
person or that this would be in the best interests of the young person
(clause 25(8)).
Clause 25 would also add
two new provisions on young persons right to counsel in the youth
criminal justice system. Clause 25(10) would clarify that nothing
in the bill would prevent a province from establishing a program for the
recovery of the costs of such counsel from the young person or from his
or her parents; however, such costs could be recovered only after all
the proceedings in the case had been completed. Clause 25(11) would
restrict the application of certain of the above requirements to accused
persons under 20 years of age at the time of their first appearance before
the youth justice court in respect of an offence.
3. Notices
to Parents
In order to reinforce the
principle of parental responsibility, the YOA includes provisions requiring
that parents be notified when young persons become involved with the youth
criminal justice system, and, in some cases, that parents attend youth
court proceedings. These provisions (sections 9 and 10) of the YOA would
be preserved in clauses 26 and 27 of Bill C-7.
Clause 26(1) would require
a young persons parent to be notified as soon as possible when the
young person was arrested and detained pending a court appearance.
In cases where the young person was issued a summons or an appearance
notice, or was released by police pending a court appearance, clause 26(2)
would require the police to give a parent written notice of the summons,
appearance notice, promise to appear, undertaking, or recognizance, as
the case might be. Under a new provision, clause 26(3), a parent
would also have to be given written notice of any ticket issued to a young
person under the Contraventions Act (which deals with federal regulatory
offences).
In cases where no parent
appeared to be available, any notice under clause 26 could be given to
any adult relative who was known to the young person and was likely to
assist him or her. Where no such relative was available, notice
could be given to another appropriate adult known to the young person
and likely to be of assistance. Where there was doubt as to who
should be given a notice under clause 26, clause 26(5) would allow the
court to decide the issue.
Generally, the failure to
give the notices required under clause 26 would not affect the validity
of proceedings under the bill (clause 26(9)); however, where the notices
were not given, and none of the persons to whom such notice could be given
attended court with the young person, the court would have to either:
adjourn the proceedings so that notice could be given as the court directed;
or dispense with the notice, if the court deemed it appropriate (clauses
26(10) and (11)).
In a new provision, clause
26(12) would restrict the application of the parental notification requirements
to cases where the accused was less than 20 years of age at the time of
his or her first appearance before a youth justice court in respect of
the offence in question.
Where a youth justice court
was of the opinion that the attendance of a young persons parent
was necessary or in the young persons best interest, the court could
order such attendance at any stage of the proceedings (clause 27).
A parent who failed to attend as required by the youth justice court,
without lawful excuse, would be liable to be summarily convicted and punished
for contempt. Clause 27 would not apply to proceedings commenced
by ticket under the Contraventions Act.
4. Pre-Trial
Detention
a.
Introduction
Notwithstanding the presumption
of innocence, the criminal justice system recognizes the need for the
pre-trial detention of accused persons in some cases. In both the
adult and youth criminal justice systems, pre-trial detention is aimed
at: ensuring the accuseds future attendance in court to deal
with the charge; the protection or safety of the public, including the
prevention of further criminal offences; and ensuring the integrity of
the administration of justice. As a general matter, the onus is
on the prosecution to show that pre-trial detention is necessary; however,
the onus to avoid pre-trial detention shifts to the accused where he or
she is charged with: certain serious indictable offences; any indictable
offence where the accused is not ordinarily resident in Canada; any indictable
offence committed while the accused had other criminal charges pending;
or breaching conditions of pre-trial release.
The bill would, with some
minor refinements, retain the provisions on pre-trial detention of young
persons set out in section 7 of the YOA.
b.
Rules Governing the Pre-Trial Detention of Young Persons
A new provision, clause
28, would clarify that, except as inconsistent with or excluded by the
bill, the provisions of Part XVI of the Criminal Code that apply
to the judicial interim release and pre-trial detention of adults would
also apply to young persons.
Another new provision, clause
29, is aimed at situations where the courts might be making inappropriate
use of pre-trial detention in respect of young persons. Clause 29(1)
would stipulate that young persons must not be subject to pre-trial detention
as a substitute for appropriate child protection, mental health or other
social measures. Under clause 29(2), a presumption would be created
that the pre-trial detention of a young person was not necessary to protect
the public where the young person could not be sentenced to custody if
convicted of the offence charged. This presumption would not prevail,
however, where there was a substantial likelihood that the young person
would, if released, commit a criminal offence or interfere with the administration
of justice. It is not clear how this new presumption would differ
from the test that would otherwise be applicable in such cases under Part
XVI of the Criminal Code.
Young persons who were arrested
and detained prior to sentencing would be detained separate and apart
from adults (clause 30(3)) in facilities provincially designated for temporary
detention (as opposed to facilities for persons actually serving sentences
of imprisonment) (clause 30(1)). However, these restrictions would
not apply where a young person was being temporarily restrained after
arrest and was under the supervision and control of a peace officer (clause
30(7)). Moreover, young persons could be detained with adults where
a youth justice court judge or a justice of the peace was satisfied that:
having regard to the young persons safety or the safety of others,
he or she could not be detained in a place of detention for young persons;
or there was no such place of detention within a reasonable distance (clause
30(3)). In a change from section 7(2) of the YOA, clause 30(3) of
the bill would add that, in making such a determination, the court would
have to have regard for the best interests of the young person.
This addition would bring Canadian law on this subject more into line
with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, to which Canada
is a party.(9)
Provincial directors would
retain the authority to transfer detained young persons from one place
of temporary detention to another (clause 30(6)). Also, the pre-trial
detention of young persons would remain subject to the decision of any
provincially designated person or body whose authorization was required
in connection with the detention of a young person in the province (clause
30(8) and (9)).
c. Pre-Trial
Detention of Adults Subject to the Youth Criminal Justice System
Clauses 30(4) and (5) would
add new rules to provide for accused who were adults when subject to pre-trial
detention under the bill, or who became adults during this period.
If a youth justice court considered it to be in the best interests of
the young person, it could order the transfer to an adult facility of
a young person who turned 18 while in pre-trial detention (clause 30(4)).
Such a transfer would only be on the application of the provincial director
and only after the young person had been given an opportunity to be heard.
Accused persons who were 20 years of age or older, and who were subject
to pre-trial detention in respect of charges in the youth justice court,
would have to be detained in an adult facility (clause 30(5)).
d.
Placement with Responsible Person as Alternative to Detention
Clause 31 of the bill would
retain the YOA provisions for the placement of a young person in the care
of a responsible person as an alternative to pre-trial detention
(see YOA section 7.1). This option would be open to the court in
cases where the young person would otherwise be detained and where both
the young person and the responsible person were willing to enter into
such an arrangement. Written undertakings to comply with various
conditions would be required of both parties. Such a placement arrangement
could be terminated by order of the youth justice court on the application
of either party or any other person; in the latter case, the court would
make an order relieving the parties of their obligations under the arrangement
and issue a warrant for the young persons arrest. The young
person would then be brought back before the youth justice court for a
bail hearing.
Clause 31 would make some
changes to these provisions. Clause 31(1) would specify that a director
or employee of a program for young persons could be a responsible
person into whose care a young person could be placed pending trial.
Under clause 31(2), the judge or justice conducting a bail hearing in
respect of a young person would have to inquire as to the availability
of a responsible person for such a placement, before ordering the young
persons detention in custody. Finally, where such a placement
arrangement was terminated and the young person was brought back before
the court, the court could simply substitute another placement arrangement,
rather than holding another bail hearing (clause 31(6)).
e.
Review of Bail Decisions
With respect to the review
of orders releasing or detaining young persons before trial, the current
YOA provisions (section 8) would effectively be re-enacted in clause 33
of the bill.
Bail review proceedings
for young persons would, for the most part, be similar to those in the
adult criminal justice system, but with the involvement of an additional
layer of judicial review in some cases. An application to review
a bail decision made by a justice of the peace or a provincial court judge
who was not a youth justice court judge would first be made to a youth
justice court, rather than directly to a judge of the provinces
superior court of criminal jurisdiction, as would be the case in the adult
system (clauses 33(1) and (7)).
An application to review
a bail decision made by a youth justice court judge who was a superior
court judge would be made to a judge of the relevant court of appeal,
except in Nunavut, where such a review would be conducted by another judge
of the Nunavut Court of Justice (clauses 33(5) and (6)).
In the case of an offence
referred to in section 522 of the Criminal Code which refers
to indictable offences that, in the adult system, can be tried only by
a superior court of criminal jurisdiction (the most important of which
is murder) a young person could be released only by a youth justice
court judge (clause 33(8)). Any review of such a decision would
go to the court of appeal (clause 33(9)).
5. Appearance
As with section 12 of the
YOA, clause 32 of the bill provides that certain information must be formally
conveyed to an accused young person at the time of his or her first appearance
in court to answer to a criminal charge: the precise nature of the
charge as set out in the information; the right of the young person to
be represented by counsel; and, if applicable, the prospect and consequences
of being dealt with as an adult if the young person is convicted (clause
32(1)). However, the young person can waive this requirement if
his or her counsel advises that the young person has been informed of
these matters (clause 32(2)).
Clause 32(3) would provide
that, before accepting a plea to a charge from an unrepresented young
person, the court would have to: satisfy itself that the young person
understood the charge; if applicable, explain to the young person the
consequences of being liable to an adult sentence and how the young person
could apply for the imposition of a youth sentence instead; and explain
to the young person that he or she could plead guilty or not guilty to
the charge, or, where the young person might be liable to an adult sentence
if convicted, explain his or her options as to the mode of trial. If
not satisfied that the young person understood the foregoing matters,
the court would have to direct that the young person be represented by
counsel (clause 32(5)). If not satisfied that the young person
understood the charge, the court would have to enter a plea of not guilty
and proceed with the trial, except where the young person would be liable
to an adult sentence and had to elect the mode of trial (clause 32(4)).
6. Medical and Psychological
Reports
The provisions of the YOA
dealing with medical, psychiatric, and psychological assessments of young
persons (section 13) would effectively be reproduced in clause 34 of Bill C-7
(except that references to transfer proceedings would be replaced by references
to the imposition of adult sentences consistent with the new sentencing
scheme proposed in Part 4 of the bill).
Pursuant to clause 34(2)
of the bill, court-ordered medical, psychiatric, or psychological assessments
could be conducted for the following purposes:
-
considering an application
for review of a bail decision;
-
deciding on an application
for or against the imposition of an adult sentence;
-
making or reviewing
a youth sentence;
-
considering an application
to continue custody beyond the custodial portion of a
sentence of custody and supervision;
-
setting conditions for
release from custody on conditional supervision;
-
making an order suspending
or reinstating conditional supervision;
-
authorizing disclosure
of information contained in a youth record; or
-
making an intensive
rehabilitative custody and supervision order (this sentence would
be available only where a young person was convicted of certain serious
violent offences).
Clause 34(1) would provide
that a youth justice court could order that a young person be assessed
by a qualified person, either on the consent of the young person and the
prosecutor, or otherwise, where the court believed that such an assessment
was necessary for one of the purposes listed above and where:
-
the court had reasonable
grounds to believe that the young person might be suffering from a
physical or mental illness or disorder, a psychological disorder,
and emotional disturbance, or a learning or mental disability;
-
the young person had
a history of repeated youth convictions; or
-
the young person was
accused of a serious violent offence.
For the purposes of conducting
such an assessment, clause 34(3) would enable the court to remand the
young person in custody for a period not exceeding 30 days. However,
the court could only do this without the consent of the young person where
it was satisfied that custody was necessary to conduct the assessment,
or the young person had to be detained in custody in any event (clause
34(4)).
The qualified person would
be required to report to the court in writing the results of the assessment
(clause 34(1)), which would form part of the record of the case (clause
34(12)). Unless disclosure of such a report would be harmful to
the young person (see below), the court would have to send a copy of it
to the young person, defence counsel, the prosecutor, and a parent of
the young person who was in attendance at the proceedings or was otherwise
taking an active interest in the case (clause 34(7)). On application
to the court, the prosecution or the defence would be given an opportunity
to cross-examine the qualified person on the report (clause 34(8)).
Notwithstanding the foregoing,
a private prosecutor would be denied access to all or part of such a report
where, in the courts opinion, the information was not necessary
for the prosecution of the case and its disclosure might be prejudicial
to the young person (clause 34(9)). Moreover, the youth justice
court would be required to withhold from a young person, his or her parents,
or a private prosecutor, all or part of any such report whose disclosure,
in the courts opinion, would seriously impair the treatment or recovery
of the young person, or would likely endanger the life, safety or psychological
well-being of another person (clause 34(10)). The report could be
disclosed to those persons where the court was of the opinion that disclosure
was essential in the interests of justice (clause 34(11)). Furthermore,
notwithstanding any other provision of the bill, a qualified person could
disclose information in such a report to a person having the care of a
young person in custody who was thought likely to endanger his or her
own life or safety or that of others (clause 34(13)).
7. Child
Welfare Referral
At any stage of proceedings
against a young person, a youth justice court judge may refer the young
person to a child welfare agency to determine if he or she is in need
of child welfare services (clause 35).
8. Adjudication
Clause 36 of the bill would
simply provide that, where a young person pleaded guilty to an offence
and the youth justice court was satisfied that the facts supported the
charge, the court must find the young person guilty of the offence.
Otherwise, the youth justice court would have to proceed with a trial
and then either find the young person guilty or not guilty, or dismiss
the charge. This would effectively re-enact the provisions of sections
19(1) and (2) of the YOA.
9. Appeals
The provisions of the bill
governing appeals of youth justice court decisions are similar to those
contained in the YOA (see sections 27, 47(6) and 10(4)).
Clause 37(1) would provide
that appeals in respect of offences prosecuted by indictment would be
governed by the Criminal Code provisions for appeals in indictable
cases (Part XXI), subject to any modifications required in the circumstances.
Clause 37(5) would similarly apply the provisions of Part XXVII of the
Criminal Code to summary conviction appeals in the youth system.
Where a young person was tried jointly for indictable and summary
conviction offences, an appeal would be governed by the provisions for
appeals in indictable cases (clause 37(6)).
Clauses 37(2) and (3) would
provide for appeals in contempt of court cases. Although contempt proceedings
under the bill would be summary in nature, under clauses 37(2) and (3)
an appeal of a conviction or sentence for contempt imposed by a youth
justice court would be dealt with as an appeal in a case prosecuted by
indictment.
Clause 37(4) would provide
for the consolidation of appeal proceedings with respect to a number of
matters relating to sentencing. Unless the appellate court ordered
otherwise, certain findings and orders of the youth justice court that
followed a conviction would all have to be part of the same appeal proceeding:
a finding that an offence was a serious violent offence (clause
42(9)); a decision on an application for or against the imposition of
an adult sentence (clause 72(1)); a decision on an application for a publication
ban on information that could identify a young person dealt with under
the bill (clause 75(3)); or a decision on the custodial placement of a
young person who had received an adult sentence of imprisonment (clause
76(1)).
In jurisdictions where the
youth justice court was a superior court, an appeal on a summary conviction
matter would lie to the relevant court of appeal (clause 37(8)).
There would be an exception for Nunavut, where such an appeal would lie
first to a judge of the Nunavut Court of Appeal, from whose decision there
could be a further appeal to the full court (clause 37(9)).
Clause 37(10) would provide
that there could be no appeal of a youth justice case to the Supreme Court
of Canada without the leave of that Court. This is consistent with
the current YOA section 27(5), except for the elimination of the requirement
that the Supreme Courts leave for the appeal must be granted within
21 days of the court of appeal decision (or within such extended time
as the Court might, for special reasons, allow). In the absence
of this special deadline, the 60-day deadline provided for in the Supreme
Court Act (section 58) would apply.
Like the current section
27(5) of the YOA, clause 37(10) of the bill precludes appeals as of right
(i.e., without the need to seek leave) to the Supreme Court of Canada
in indictable cases. An adult accused can appeal without leave to
the Supreme Court on any question of law on which there is a dissent in
the court of appeal, or on any question of law where the court of appeal
has substituted a conviction for an acquittal (Criminal Code section
691). The effect of section 27(5) of the YOA and of clause 37(10)
of the bill is to foreclose this right of appeal in youth justice cases.(10)
Clause 37(11) would preclude
any appeal from youth sentence review proceedings (see below, with respect
to clauses 59 and 94-96).
E. Part
4: Sentencing
1. Introduction
It is in the area of sentencing
that Bill C-7 proposes the most substantive changes to the current law.
First of all, the bill would add a statement of purpose and principles
applicable to youth sentencing in general, as well as a series of principles
to govern the use of custodial youth sentences in particular. Unlike
the general principles expressed in the Declaration of Principle in clause
3, which would apply to the interpretation and application of the bill
in general, these principles set out in Part 4 would be specifically directed
to sentencing. The bill also proposes to create some new youth sentences,
expand the category of cases where an adult sentence could be imposed,
and alter the procedure for gaining access to adult sentences.
2. Purposes
and Principles
a.
Introduction
Clauses 38 and 39 of the
bill set out a series of principles that would guide the youth justice
courts in the sentencing of young persons who were subject to a youth
sentence under the bill. Clause 38 deals with principles and factors
that would be applicable to the imposition of youth sentences generally,
while clause 39 sets out the conditions for imposing a sentence of custody
on a young person. Clauses 38 and 39 would apply only where the
young person was to be given a youth sentence. In cases where an
adult sentence was to be imposed, the Criminal Code rules and principles
for sentencing would apply.
b. Purpose and
Principles of Youth Sentencing
Clause 38(1) asserts that
the purpose of imposing a youth sentence is: to hold a young person
accountable for an offence through the imposition of just sanctions that
have meaningful consequences for the young person and that promote his
or her rehabilitation and reintegration into society, thereby contributing
to the long-term protection of the public.
Clause 38(2) provides that
youth sentences would have to be determined in accordance with the following
principles, as well as those set out in the bills Declaration of
Principle in clause 3.
a) the sentence
must not result in a greater punishment than would be appropriate for
an adult convicted of the same offence committed in the same circumstances;
b) the sentence
would have to be similar to the sentences imposed, in that region of
the country, on other young persons found guilty of the same offence
committed in similar circumstances;
c) the sentence
would have to be proportionate to the seriousness of the offence and
the young persons degree of responsibility for it; and
d) all reasonable
alternatives to custody should be considered, particularly in the case
of aboriginal youth; and
e) subject
to c), the sentence would have to:
i. be the
least restrictive sentence that was consistent with the overall goal
of youth sentencing set out in clause 38(1) (above);
ii. be the
sentence most likely to promote the young persons rehabilitation
and reintegration into society; and
iii. promote a
sense of responsibility in the young person, including his or her
acknowledgement of the harm done to the victim and the community.
Clause 38(3) would require
the youth justice court to take the following factors into account when
determining a youth sentence:
a) the degree of
participation of the young person in the offence;
b) the harm
done to the victims and whether it was intentional or reasonably foreseeable;
c) any reparation
made by the young person to the victim or the community;
d) any time
spent by the young person in pre-trial detention as a result of the
offence;
e) previous findings
of guilt against the young person; and
f) any other aggravating
and mitigating circumstances relevant to the purpose and principles
set out in this clause.
The purpose and principles
of youth sentencing proposed in clause 38 reflect many of the overall
goals of the youth criminal justice system identified in the bills
Declaration of Principle (clause 3). With the exception of clause
38(2)(a), the foregoing purpose and principles are also similar to many
of those applicable to the sentencing of adults (see sections 718 to 718.2
of the Criminal Code, as well as the relevant jurisprudence).
However, consistent with the philosophy underlying the retention of a
separate criminal justice system for youth, the purpose and principles
of youth sentencing proposed in clause 38 of the bill do not place the
same emphasis on denunciation and deterrence of unlawful conduct, which
remain prominent considerations in the sentencing of adults (see section
718(a) and (b) of the Criminal Code).
The one sentencing principle
that is unique to the youth system, proposed in clause 38(2)(a), is that
a youth sentence must not be greater than that appropriate for an adult
convicted of the same offence under similar circumstances. This
would enhance the protection afforded by the current limitation on youth
punishment in section 20(7) of the YOA, which only prevents youth sentences
from exceeding the maximum punishment applicable to an adult for
the same offence. Clause 38(2)(a), however, would require youth
justice courts to keep youth sentences within the upper limit of what
similarly situated adults would actually receive.
c. Principles
Applicable to Custodial Youth Sentences
Clause 39 seeks to further
de-emphasize the use of custodial sentences in the Canadian youth criminal
justice system. This aim is motivated by a perception that there
is currently an over-reliance on incarceration in that system. Indeed,
government statistics suggest that Canadas youth incarceration rate
is considerably higher than the Canadian rate for adults and the youth
rates in other industrialized countries. Clause 39 would preserve
and expand upon the provisions in section 24 of the YOA which also seek
to underscore the principle that custody should be reserved for only the
most serious youth cases.
Clause 39(1) stipulates
that the youth justice court could not sentence a young person to custody
unless:
(a) the young person
was guilty of a violent offence;
(b) the young person
had failed to comply with previous non-custodial sentences;
(c) the young person
was guilty of an indictable offence for which an adult could be sentenced
to imprisonment for more than two years and had a history of youth court
convictions; or
(d) in an exceptional
case, the young person has committed an indictable offence and it would
be inconsistent with the purpose and principles of youth sentencing
set out in clause 38 (above) to impose a non-custodial sentence in light
of the aggravating circumstances of the offence.
Clause 39(2) would further
preclude the imposition of a custodial sentence except where the court
had considered all reasonable alternatives to custody raised at the sentencing
hearing and determined that no alternative sentence or combination of
sentences would accord with the purpose and principles of sentencing in
clause 38. In making this determination, clause 39(3) would require
the court to consider submissions concerning: alternatives to custody
that were available in the jurisdiction; evidence of compliance with previous
non-custodial sentences; and the alternative sentences used in similar
cases.
Clauses 39(4) and 39(5)
would foreclose the courts use of certain factors to justify the
imposition of custodial sentences. Clause 39(4) stipulates that
the fact that a young person had previously received a particular non-custodial
sentence would not preclude resort to that sentence for a subsequent offence.
In other words, courts should not feel compelled to impose a more severe
sentence when a young person re-offended. Clause 39(5) would preclude
the use of custodial sentences as a substitute for appropriate child protection,
mental health, or other social measures.
Clause 39(6) would require
the court to consider a pre-sentence report on the young person, unless
the court was satisfied that a report was unnecessary and both the defence
and prosecution consented to dispensing with it (clause 39(7)).
To help ensure that youth
justice courts follow the foregoing restrictions and pre-conditions attaching
to the imposition of a custodial sentence, clause 39(9) would require
the sentencing court to give reasons why a non-custodial sentence would
be inadequate for achieving the purpose of youth sentencing in clause
38(1) (above), including, in the case of a custodial sentence imposed
under clause 38(2)(d), the reasons why the case is exceptional.
Once a youth justice court
decided that a custodial sentence was appropriate and necessary, clause
39(8) would, in determining the length of the sentence, require the court
to be guided by the purpose and principles in clause 38. The court
would be forbidden from taking into consideration the fact that the young
person might be released from custody during the supervision portion of
such a sentence (see below) and that the sentence would be subject to
regular and periodic review by the court (see clause 94 in Part 5 of the
bill). In other words, in determining the length of a custodial
sentence, the youth justice court would have to assume that the young
person would serve the whole period in custody.
3. Pre-Sentence
Report
Pre-sentence reports are
intended to provide courts with an independent source of background information
on an offender that would be useful in determining a sentence. There
is provision for such reports in both the youth and adult criminal justice
systems. In the youth system, however, they are currently referred
to as pre-disposition reports in keeping with the vocabulary
of the YOA. Under Bill C-7, since dispositions would
become youth sentences, the pre-disposition reports
would become pre-sentence reports, as in the adult system.
Otherwise, clause 40 of the bill would essentially re-enact the relevant
YOA provisions (section 14).
Clause 40(1) would require
a provincial director to cause a pre-sentence report to be prepared and
submitted to a youth justice court whenever the court thought it advisable
or was required to consider such a report (which would be the case where
the court was considering a custodial sentence), before imposing sentence.
To the extent that it was
relevant to the purpose and principles of sentencing set out in clauses
38 and 39 (above), clause 40(2) would require that, where possible and
applicable, a pre-sentence report include:
-
the results of an interview
with the young person, the young persons parents, and, if appropriate,
the young persons extended family;
-
the results of an interview
with the victim;
-
the recommendations
from a conference (see clause 19 in Part 2);
-
the age, maturity, character,
behaviour, and attitude of the young person, and his or her willingness
to make amends;
-
any plans suggested
by the young person to change his or her conduct or to improve himself
or herself;
-
the history of previous
findings of guilt for offences under federal, provincial, or municipal
law, and of any resulting community or other services provided to
the young person;(11)
-
the response of the
young person to previous sentences, dispositions or services provided;
-
the history of alternative
measures (YOA) or extrajudicial sanctions used to deal with the young
person and the young persons response to those measures;(12)
-
the availability and
appropriateness of community services and facilities for young persons,
and the willingness of the young person to avail himself or herself
of them;
-
the relationship between
the young person and his or her parents, and, if appropriate, between
the young person and his or her extended family, including the degree
of control and influence that these family members have over the young
person;
-
the young persons
school attendance and performance record and employment record;
-
any information that
might assist the court in determining whether there was a reasonable
alternative to custody under clause 39 (above); and
-
any information that
the provincial director considered relevant, including any recommendation
that the provincial director considered appropriate.
Clause 40(4) would require
the pre-sentence report to form part of the record of the case.
Copies of a pre-sentence report would be given to the young person and
his or her counsel, any parent of the young person in attendance at court
or who was otherwise taking an active interest in the case, and the prosecutor
(clause 40(5)). Moreover, on application to the court, the defence
or the prosecution would be entitled to cross-examine the author of the
report (clause 40(6)). However, in the case of a private prosecution,
all or part of the report could be kept from the prosecutor where the
court was of the opinion that the information might be prejudicial to
the young person and was not necessary for the conduct of the prosecution
(clause 40(7)).
Any court dealing with matters
relating to the young person, and any youth worker assigned to the young
persons case would be entitled to receive copies of a pre-sentence
report on request from the youth justice court that had received it (clause
40(8)(a)). The court could also supply a copy of the report to any
other person who, in the courts opinion, had a valid interest in
the case (clause 40(8)(b)). In addition, a provincial director could
make all or part of a pre-sentence report available to any person to whose
custody or supervision the young person had been committed, or to any
other person who was directly assisting in the care or treatment of the
young person (clause 40(9)).
According to clause 40(10),
no statement made by a young person in the course of the preparation of
a pre-sentence report would be admissible in evidence against him or her
in any civil or criminal proceedings, except for those relating to: the
imposition of a youth sentence; the review of a youth sentence; or the
decision on an application for or against the imposition of an adult sentence.
4. Youth
Sentences
a. Overview
Unless the youth justice
court ordered that a young person was to be subject to an adult sentence
in accordance with clauses 64(5), 70(2), or 72(1)(b) (see Adult
Sentences, below), the court would have to impose one, or a combination,
of the youth sentences listed below under clause 42(2). All the
current youth dispositions available under section 20(1) of
the YOA would be retained under Bill C-7. The bill proposes five
new youth sentences, however, and would provide that a portion of a sentence
of custody be spent in the community under conditions. Currently,
the YOA provides for a period of supervision in the community as a follow-up
to a custodial term only in the case of murder.
The five new proposed youth
sentences are: a reprimand; an intensive support and supervision
program order; a program attendance order; a deferred custody and supervision
order; and an intensive rehabilitative custody and supervision order (see
clauses 42(2)(a), (l), (m), (p), and (r), below). However, the availability
of a number of these new sentences would be dependent on the establishment
of programs by the provinces.
b.
Sentencing Inputs
Where a youth justice court
found a young person guilty of an offence, clause 41 would permit the
court to refer the matter to a conference for recommendations as to the
sentence (see clause 19).
Clause 42 would set out
the various youth sentences available and certain rules and conditions
associated with them. Before imposing a youth sentence, the court
would have to consider: any conference recommendations; any pre-sentence
report; any representations made by the prosecution or defence; any representations
made by the parents of the young person; and any other relevant information
before the court (clause 42(1)).
c.
Possible Youth Sentences
Clause 4 2(2) would require
a youth justice court that found a young person guilty of an offence to
impose one or any combination of the following sentences that were not
inconsistent with each other (where applicable, the corresponding YOA
provision appears in parenthesis):
a) a reprimand (new);
b) an absolute discharge
(YOA s. 20(1)(a));
c) a conditional
discharge (with supervision by the provincial director) (YOA s. 20(1)(a.1));(13)
d) a fine to a maximum
of $1,000 (YOA s. 20(1)(b));(14)
e) an order to pay
certain types of damages to another person (YOA s. 20(1)(c) however,
the new provision would add references to applicable Quebec civil law
terminology);(15)
f) an order for
the restitution of property to another person (YOA s. 20(1)(d));(16)
g) an order to compensate
any innocent purchaser of property in respect of which the court had
made a restitution order (YOA s. 20(1)(e));(17)
h) an order to compensate
any person in kind or by way of personal services, in lieu of monetary
damages or compensation under e) or g) (YOA s. 20(1)(f));(18)
i) an order to perform
a community service and to report to, and be supervised by, the provincial
director or a person designated by the court (YOA s. 20(1)(g));(19)
j) make any prohibition,
seizure, or forfeiture order that could be imposed under federal legislation
(except a prohibition order under section 161 of the Criminal
Code(20)) (YOA ss. 20(1)(h) and 20(11));
k) place the young
person on probation for up to two years (YOA s. 20(1)(j));
l) subject to the
agreement of the provincial director, order the young person into an
intensive support and supervision program as directed by the provincial
director (the content of any such programs would be determined by the
provinces existing programs provide for closer monitoring and
more support than ordinary probation) (new);
m) subject to the
agreement of the provincial director, order the young person to attend
a non-residential program approved by the provincial director, for a
maximum of 240 hours over a period of up to six months (new);(21)
n) make a custody
and supervision order of up to three years, where the young person was
found guilty of an offence punishable by life imprisonment under the
Criminal Code, or up to two years, in any other case under
this sentence, the young person would be ordered to spend two-thirds
of the period in custody, and one-third in the community under conditions
(this designated period of supervised release would be analogous to
statutory release for adults under the Corrections and Conditional
Release Act, and would be a change from the current custody disposition
under YOA s. 20(1)(k));
o) make a custody
and supervision order of up to three years, where the young person was
found guilty of the presumptive offence of attempted murder, manslaughter
or aggravated sexual assault the youth court judge to specify
the portion of the period to be spent in custody (new);
p) make a deferred
custody and supervision order (this would be like a suspended or conditional
sentence in the adult system) for a period of up to six months, subject
to appropriate conditions;(22) (23)
q) continuous custody
and supervision for up to seven or ten years (applicable only to murder,
see below) (YOA s. 20(1)(k.1));
r) intensive rehabilitative
custody and supervision (applicable only to murder, attempted
murder, manslaughter, aggravated sexual assault, or a third serious
violent offence, in certain circumstances, see below) (new);
or
s) impose any other
reasonable and ancillary condition on the young person that the court
considered advisable and in the best interests of the young person and
the public (YOA s. 20(1)(l)).
d. Youth Sentence for Murder
In addition to any of the
other above sanctions that the court considered appropriate, where a young
person subject to a youth sentence was convicted of murder, a youth justice
court would have to impose one of the following sentences:
-
in the case of first
degree murder, custody and supervision for up to ten years, with a
continuous custodial period of up to six years, followed by conditional
supervision in the community (clause 42(2)(q)(i)); or
-
in the case of second
degree murder, custody and supervision for up to seven years, with
a continuous custodial period of up to four years, followed by conditional
supervision in the community (clause 42(2)(q)(ii)).
As an alternative, the court
could, in an appropriate case, make an order of intensive rehabilitative
custody and supervision (see below), subject to the same maximum periods
for the custodial and supervision portions of the sentence (clauses 42(2)(r)(ii)
and (iii)).
As with the current section
20(1)(k.1) of the YOA, a young person found guilty of murder and sentenced
under clauses 42(2)(q) or (r) of the bill would face the possibility of
being incarcerated for five years or more, thereby triggering the right
to a jury trial guaranteed in section 11(f) of the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms. Therefore, as with sections 19 and 19.1
of the YOA, clauses 66 and 67 of the bill (see below under Adult
Sentences) provide for an election as to mode of trial in such cases.
Clauses 66 and 67 would,
however, expand the trial options available to young persons in this situation.
Currently, where a young person wants a preliminary inquiry, he or she
must elect to be tried by a judge and jury. Under clauses 66 and
67, a young person in that situation could elect to have a preliminary
inquiry and be tried by a judge alone, thus enjoying the same right of
election as is available under the Criminal Code in most indictable
cases.
e. Intensive
Rehabilitative Custody and Supervision
Under clause 42(2)(r), a
new youth sentence an intensive rehabilitative custody and
supervision order could be made in respect of a conviction
for murder, attempted murder, manslaughter, aggravated sexual assault;
or any other offence involving serious violence that would be punishable
in the adult system by imprisonment for more than two years, where the
young person had previously been found guilty of at least two such offences.
Pursuant to clause 42(7), this sentence would be subject to the
following prerequisites: the young person would have to suffer from a
mental illness or disorder, a psychological disorder, or an emotional
disturbance; a plan of treatment and intensive supervision would have
to have been developed for the young person, and there would have to be
reasonable grounds to believe that the plan might reduce the risk of the
young persons committing another presumptive offence; and the provincial
director would have to consent to the young persons participation
in the program. The order would commit the young person to an initial
period of continuous intensive rehabilitative custody, followed by conditional
supervision in the community for the remaining period of the order.
In cases other than murder (see above), such an order would be for a maximum
period of three years in the case of an offence punishable under the Criminal
Code by imprisonment for life, or two years, in any other case (clause
42(2)(r)(i)).
Although it would be up
to the provinces to give content to the sentence by establishing the necessary
programs, this proposed new sentence is intended to provide greater control
and treatment for serious violent offenders with significant psychological,
mental, or emotional illnesses or disturbances. However, clause
42(8) ensures that a young person subject to such a sentence retains his
or her rights regarding consent to treatment.
f. Serious
Violent Offence Determination
Pursuant to clause 42(9),
a youth justice court that had found a young person guilty of an offence
could, on the application of the prosecution and after hearing both parties,
determine that the offence was a serious violent offence and endorse the
information accordingly. A serious violent offence is
defined in clause 2 of the bill as an offence in the commission
of which a young person causes or attempts to cause serious bodily harm.
Upon the third such determination, a young person who was at least
14 (depending on whether the province has opted to set a higher minimum
age for the presumptive application of adult sentences under clause 61)
would be subject to an adult sentence, unless the young person could satisfy
the court that a youth sentence would be sufficient to hold him or her
accountable.
g. Total Duration of Youth
Sentences
Clause 42(14) would limit
the total duration of a youth sentence in respect of any single offence
to two years, except for an order of prohibition, seizure or forfeiture
(clause 42(2)(j)), an order for custody and supervision, or an order for
intensive rehabilitative custody and supervision (clauses 42(2)(n),(o),(q)
or (r)). Where the young person was found guilty of more than one
offence, the combined duration of the youth sentences would be limited
to three years, except for first and second degree murder, where the total
duration of youth sentences would be limited to ten and seven years, respectively
(clause 42(15)). Equivalent provisions are found at sections 20(3)
and (4) of the YOA.
Consecutive sentences would
be available where a young person was under sentence for an offence when
a new sentence involving custody was imposed, or where a young person
was found guilty of more than one offence in respect of which the court
imposed a term of custody (clause 42(13)).
Consistent with section
20(5) of the YOA, clause 42(17) would provide that a youth sentence imposed
on a young person would continue in force after the young person became
an adult.
h. Additional Custody Sentences
Clauses 43 to 46 of the
bill would deal with the effect of an additional youth sentence of custody
imposed for an offence committed prior to the start of a sentence that
a young person was already serving.
In such cases, clause 43
would provide that, for the purposes of calculating the total length of
the young persons sentence and the respective custodial and community
portions (i.e., release under supervision in the community subject to
conditions, or conditional supervision), the two sentences would effectively
be added into a single custodial sentence deemed to commence at the beginning
of the earlier sentence. The new merged sentence would be subject
to the limits set out in clause 42(15) above (i.e., ten years, in the
case of first degree murder; seven years, in the case of second degree
murder; and three years, in all other cases), and the total custodial
portion of such a merged sentence would be limited to six years under
clause 46.
Clause 44 would provide
for the effective extension of the custodial portion of the sentence being
served in order to take account of the additional custodial sentence.
Clause 45 would provide
for the termination of community supervision and the return to custody,
where the custodial portion would be effectively extended by the additional
custodial sentence. However, even where the additional custodial
sentence did not automatically extend the custodial portion to be served,
the provincial director would have the discretion under clause 45(2) to
have the young person remanded into custody for a review of the case.
Pursuant to clause 45(3), the provincial director would be obliged
to do this where the young person had been released under conditional
supervision before the end of the custodial portion of the earlier sentence
(see clauses 94 and 96 in Part 5). These provisions are intended
to ensure that, even where an additional custodial sentence did not affect
the duration of the sentence already being served, there would still be
an opportunity for the responsible officials to revisit the case, since
the additional sentence might affect the young persons risk profile.
i. Continuous vs Intermittent
Custody
Consistent with YOA section
24.4, clause 47 would provide that, while youth custody sentences would
be deemed to be continuous custody, a youth justice court could order
a young person to serve the custodial portion of such a sentence on an
intermittent (i.e., weekend) basis, provided there was a youth custody
facility available that could carry out such a sentence. However, clause
47(2) would amend the law to restrict intermittent custody to cases where
the sentence was for 90 days or less. Moreover, intermittent custody
would not be available in the case of murder or in any case where intensive
rehabilitative custody and supervision was ordered. Clauses 42(2)(q)
and (r) above specify that a sentence involving a period of continuous
custody would have to be imposed in such cases.
j.
Reasons for Sentence
Clause 48 would require
a youth justice court to provide reasons for the sentence imposed in the
record of the case and, on request, to cause copies of the sentence and
reasons to be sent to: the young person; the young persons counsel;
a parent of the young person; the provincial director; the prosecutor;
and, in the case of a custodial sentence, the review board (which would
be responsible for conducting reviews on the level of custody in which
a young person was to be held see clause 87). An equivalent
provision is found in YOA section 20(6).
k.
Non-Application of Criminal Code Sentencing Provisions
Consistent with YOA section
20(8), clause 50 would provide that the Criminal Code provisions
on sentencing (Part XXIII) would generally not apply in a case where the
young person was subject to a youth sentence. However, there are
certain exceptions to this, and a number of Criminal Code provisions
do apply to youth sentencing, namely: section 718.2(e) (sentencing
principle for aboriginal offenders); sections 722, 722.1 and
722.2 (provision for the admission of victim impact evidence); section
730(2) (continuation in force of appearance notice, promise to appear,
summons, undertaking, or recognizance in certain situations); and sections
748, 748.1 and 749 (provisions dealing with pardons, remission of sentence,
and the royal prerogative of mercy).
l.
Weapons Prohibitions
Clause 51 would provide
that, in addition to the youth sentences listed in clause 42(2) above,
young persons found guilty of certain offences would, like adults, be
liable to court-ordered prohibitions on the possession of weapons, ammunition,
explosives, etc. (the offences that would trigger such an order are set
out in sections 109(1)(a) to (d) and 110(1)(a) and (b) of the Criminal
Code). However, the periods specified in clause 51 of the bill
for the duration of such orders would be considerably less than the periods
applicable to adults under the Criminal Code (a maximum, in the
case of a discretionary order, or a minimum, in the case of a mandatory
order, of two years under the bill; versus a maximum or minimum, as the
case might be, of ten years under the Code). Clause 52 would provide
for the review of such orders, on application, by the youth justice court.
Equivalent provisions are found at sections 20.1 and 33 of the YOA.
m. Allocation of
Funds for Victim Assistance
Clause 53 would provide
for the direction towards victim assistance of revenue from fines imposed
on young persons under clause 42(2)(d). Clause 53(1) would permit
the lieutenant governor in council of a province to fix a portion of such
fines to be used in providing assistance to victims of offences as he
or she might direct. Where a province did not fix the percentage
of fines to be diverted to victim assistance, clause 53(2) would provide
that a youth justice court imposing a fine could order that the young
person also pay a victim fine surcharge of up to 15% of the fine, which
would be used to provide such assistance to victims as the lieutenant
governor in council of the province might direct.
Pursuant to clause 54(1),
before ordering a victim fine surcharge, the court would have to consider
the young persons ability to pay. The young person could pay
off all or part of a surcharge by performing work in a program established
by the province for that purpose (clause 54(2)).
n. Orders with Conditions
for Conduct
Clause 55 sets out terms
and conditions applicable to probation orders (clause 42(2)(k)) and orders
directing a young person into a program of intensive support and supervision
(clause 42(2)(l)). Similar provisions are found in section 23 of
the YOA. Such orders would have to include the following conditions,
to which the young person would be subject: that the young person
would have to keep the peace, be of good behaviour, and appear before
the youth justice court when required. The youth justice court could
also prescribe any of the following additional conditions requiring the
young person to:
-
report to and be supervised
by the provincial director or a designated person;
-
notify the court clerk,
provincial director, or youth worker of any change of address or place
of employment, education, or training;
-
remain within the territorial
jurisdiction of the court or courts named;
-
make reasonable efforts
to obtain and maintain suitable employment;
-
attend school or any
place of learning, training, or recreation where a suitable program
was available;
-
reside with a parent
or other appropriate adult who was willing to provide for the care
and maintenance of the young person;
-
reside at a place that
the provincial director might specify;
-
not to own, possess,
or have control of any weapon, ammunition, prohibited ammunition,
prohibited device, or explosive substance, except as authorized; and
-
comply with any other
conditions that the court considered appropriate.
In the case of a deferred
custody and supervision order under clause 42(2)(p), the terms and
conditions applicable to release on conditional supervision (see clause
105 in Part 5 Custody and Supervision) would apply.
o.
Transfer of Sentences
Clauses 57 and 58 provide
for the transfer of youth sentences to other territorial divisions outside
the jurisdiction of the sentencing youth justice courts; they would effectively
reproduce the provisions of sections 25 and 25.1 of the YOA.
p. Review of Non-Custodial
Sentences
Clause 59 would provide
for the review of non-custodial youth sentences (i.e., a youth sentence
under clause 42(2), other than under clause 42(2)(n), (o), (q) or (r)
the youth justice court. Clause 59 would effectively reproduce section
32 of the YOA. The sentence review mechanism would enable the courts
to revisit a sentence imposed on a young person and to consider whether
it was still appropriate in the circumstances, or whether it should be
varied or even terminated.
Review of a non-custodial
youth sentence would be available six months after it was imposed
or earlier with leave of a youth justice court judge on the application
of the young person, the young persons parent, the attorney generals
office, or the provincial director (clause 59(1)). A sentence review
could not take place until the completion of any appeal proceedings in
the case (clause 59(5)). To assist in its conduct of a sentence
review, the youth justice court could require the provincial director
to have a progress report prepared on the performance of the young person
since the sentence had gone into effect (clause 59(3)). Such a report
could include any information on the personal history, family history,
and present environment of the young person that the author of the report
considered advisable (clause 59(4)). The provisions governing the
distribution and disclosure of pre-sentence reports (see clauses 40(4)
to (10)) would apply to progress reports (clause 59(4)).
Pursuant to clause 59(2),
the grounds for reviewing a non-custodial youth sentence would be:
-
that there had been
a material change in the circumstances that led to the imposition
of the sentence;
-
that the young person
was either unable to comply with, or was experiencing serious difficulty
in complying with the terms of the sentence;
-
that the terms of the
sentence were adversely affecting the young persons opportunities
to obtain certain services, education, or employment; or
-
any other ground that
the court considered appropriate.
After conducting the review,
and hearing from the parties (i.e., the young person, a parent of the
young person, the attorney general, and the provincial director), the
youth justice court could either:
a) confirm the original
youth sentence;
b) terminate
the youth sentence; or
c) vary the original
youth sentence or impose a new youth sentence (other than a custodial
sentence), provided that the modified sentence was not more onerous
than the remainder of the original sentence (unless the young person
consented).
5. Adult
Sentences
a. Overview
Currently, under the YOA
a young person can be subjected to an adult sentence only if the proceedings
are transferred to the adult criminal justice system prior to judgment.
Transfer of cases to the adult system is dealt with in section 16 of the
YOA. The YOA provides for two forms of transfer: the general transfer
and the presumptive transfer.
The general transfer mechanism
is available only where the young person is at least 14 years of age and
is charged with an indictable offence (other than an indictable offence
that can only be tried in provincial court). Either the prosecution
or the defence can apply to the youth court to have a case transferred
to the adult system. Before ordering such a transfer, the court
must be satisfied that the goals of public protection and rehabilitation
of the young person cannot be appropriately reconciled in the youth system.
The party applying for the transfer usually the Crown prosecutor
has the burden of proof.
In 1995, the YOA was amended
to provide for the presumptive transfer of certain cases to the adult
system. These are cases where the young person is at least 16 years
of age and is charged with murder, attempted murder, manslaughter, or
aggravated sexual assault; the matter will proceed in the adult system,
unless either the defence or the prosecution can, on an application, persuade
the court that the goals of public protection and rehabilitation of the
young person can be appropriately reconciled in the youth system.
The party applying to prevent the transfer usually the defence
has the burden of proof.
Bill C-7 proposes a substantial
change from the YOA in this area. The bill would abolish the transfer
mechanism altogether and would instead provide for the imposition of adult
sentences within the youth criminal justice system. Similar to the
general transfer provision in the YOA, the prosecution would be able to
apply for an order that a young person was subject to an adult sentence
if convicted of an indictable offence punishable (in the case of an adult)
by imprisonment for more than two years. The current presumptive
transfer mechanism would be converted into a category of offences, called
presumptive offences, upon conviction for which the court
would have to impose an adult sentence, unless the young person had successfully
applied for an order that a youth sentence should be imposed. At
the same time, access to adult sentences would be expanded under the bill.
In addition to cases of murder, attempted murder, manslaughter, or aggravated
sexual assault, the category of presumptive offences under the bill would
be broadened to include young persons found guilty for a third time of
any serious violent offence. Moreover, the age at which a young
person could be presumed to be liable to an adult sentence would be lowered
from 16 to 14 years although a province could opt to keep the minimum
age for this purpose at 16 or set it at any age between 14 and 16 years.
In another change from the
YOA, the determination of whether or not a young person would be liable
to an adult sentence would be moved to the end of the trial i.e.,
after a finding of guilty, but prior to the sentencing hearing.
However, any young person facing an adult sentence would be entitled,
in non-presumptive cases, to pre-trial notice that the Crown intended
to seek an adult sentence, and, in all such cases, to elect to have a
preliminary inquiry and a jury trial. The move to a post-adjudicative
procedure is expected to be more efficient than the current pre-trial
transfer proceedings. Currently, much of the evidence adduced at
a transfer hearing must be adduced again at the trial or at the sentencing
hearing. Moreover, while a transfer decision is appealed separately,
before the trial of the case even begins, an order for or against the
imposition of an adult sentence would be appealable only at the end of
the trial, as part of the sentence. A post-adjudicative determination
is also more consistent with the presumption of innocence.
In proposing to replace
the pre-trial transfer procedure with a post-trial determination, the
bill is consistent with the recommendations of both the House of Commons
Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs in its 1997 report and
the Federal-Provincial-Territorial Task Force on the Youth Justice System.(24)
b. Minimum Age
for Presumptive Offences
Clause 61 would enable each
province (by order of its lieutenant governor in council) to set an age
greater than 14 but not more than 16, as the minimum age at which a young
person could be presumptively liable to an adult sentence.
c. Application
by Young Person against Adult Sentence
Clause 63 would provide
that a young person charged with, or found guilty of, a presumptive offence
could, at any time before the commencement of the sentencing hearing,
apply to the court for an order that he or she was not liable to an adult
sentence and that a youth sentence would have to be imposed. Where
no such application was made in such a case, clause 70 would require the
youth justice court to inquire whether the young person wished to make
such an application before proceeding to sentencing. If the Crown
prosecutor gave notice that the young persons application was not
opposed, the court would have to make the order.
d.
Application / Notice by Attorney General for Adult Sentence
Clause 64 would enable a
Crown prosecutor to apply to the court for an order that a young person
was liable to an adult sentence in respect of an indictable offence punishable
(as against an adult) by more than two years imprisonment and committed
after the young person had attained the age of 14. The application
would have to be made after the young person was found guilty, and after
any judicial determination under clause 42(9) (above) that the offence
was a serious violent offence, but before the commencement of the sentencing
hearing. Where the young person gave notice to the court that he
or she did not oppose the application for an adult sentence, the court
would be required to order that an adult sentence be imposed.
However, where the Crown
intended to make such an application or intended to establish that the
offence was a presumptive offence, the Crown would have to give notice
of that intention to the young person and the youth justice court before
the young person entered a plea to the charge, or, with the courts
leave, before the commencement of the trial. The Crown would also
be required, before a plea was entered, to give an additional notice to
the young person that the Crown intended to establish, after a finding
of guilty, that the offence was a third serious violent offence and, therefore,
a presumptive offence.
With respect to the named
presumptive offences of murder, attempted murder, manslaughter, and aggravated
sexual assault, no notice would be required. Nor would it be required
with respect to any included offence punishable (as against an adult)
by more than two years imprisonment.
Clause 65 would enable the
Crown to decline to seek an adult sentence in respect of a presumptive
offence. Where the Crown gave notice to this effect, the youth justice
court would have to order that the young person, if found guilty, would
not be liable to an adult sentence. The court would also have to
order a ban on publication of information that would identify the young
person as having been dealt with under the bill.
e. Election as to Mode
of Trial
Where a young person faced
a possible adult sentence, or wherever a young person was charged with
murder (see discussion on Youth Sentence for Murder, above),
clause 67 would provide for an election as to mode of trial: no
preliminary inquiry and a trial by a youth justice court judge; a preliminary
inquiry and a trial by a judge alone; or a preliminary inquiry and a trial
by a judge and jury. Such proceedings would generally be governed
by the relevant provisions of the Criminal Code (i.e., Parts XVIII,
XIX, and XX), except where inconsistent with the bill.
Notwithstanding this right
of election, clause 67 of the bill would include provisions similar to
those in the Criminal Code that allow an accuseds election
of the non-jury options to be overridden in certain circumstances.
Clause 67(5) of the bill would effectively permit the court to require
a trial by judge and jury with a preliminary inquiry where there were
multiple accused who had elected different modes of trial. This
provision is essentially the same as section 567 of the Criminal Code.
Clause 67(6), on the other hand, would permit the Crown prosecutor
to override the young persons election and require a jury trial
for any reason. This provision is based on section 568 of the Criminal
Code.
f. Determination
re Liability to Adult Sentence
Before making a determination
that a young person was liable to an adult sentence in respect of an offence
for which he or she had been found guilty, the court would have to hold
a hearing similar to a transfer hearing under section 16 of the YOA.
Clause 71 would require
a hearing, unless the application for or against the imposition of an
adult sentence, as the case might be, was unopposed. Like section
16(1.1) of the YOA, both the prosecution, the defence, and the accuseds
parents would have to be given an opportunity to be heard.
The test to be applied in
determining an application in respect of adult sentences under clause
72 would be whether or not a youth sentence would be adequate to hold
the young person accountable for the offending behaviour, in light of
the following factors: the seriousness and circumstances of the offence;
the young persons degree of responsibility, age, maturity, character,
background, and previous record; and any other relevant factors.
While the factors to be taken into account would be similar to those applicable
to a transfer application under section 16 of the YOA, the test itself
would be different. Section 16(1.1) of the YOA refers to the capacity
of the youth system to reconcile the twin objectives of public protection
and rehabilitation, but makes it clear that public protection is the paramount
concern. The test in clause 72, described above, would not contain
any explicit reference to public protection or rehabilitation; however,
the impact of the proposed test on outcomes is not immediately apparent.
As with a transfer application,
the court would have to consider a pre-sentence report in making a determination
under clause 72. Also, the court would, of course, have to give
reasons for its decision. Unlike a YOA transfer application decision,
however, which must be appealed separately, a decision under clause 72
could be appealed only as part of the ultimate sentence, unless the appeal
court ordered otherwise (see also clause 37(4)).
Clause 74 would provide
for the applicability of the Criminal Code provisions dealing with
sentencing (Part XXIII) and dangerous offenders (Part XXIV) to young persons
subject to an adult sentence. Where an adult sentence was upheld
at the conclusion of any appeal proceedings, or once the time for taking
an appeal had expired, clause 74 would convert a finding of guilt
against a young person into a conviction.
Where a young person was
found guilty of a presumptive offence, but the court decided against imposing
an adult sentence, clause 75 would nonetheless in some cases permit the
publication of information identifying the young person. This would
represent a change from the YOA (see section 38). Publication of
such information would be allowed, unless, on an application by the defence
or the prosecution, the court was persuaded that the goals of rehabilitation
served by suppression of the information outweighed the public interest
in publication.
g. Young Person Sentenced
to Imprisonment
When an adult sentence of
imprisonment was given, clause 76 of the bill would, like YOA section
16.2, leave the court a certain amount of discretion as to the type of
correctional facility in which the sentence would have to be served.
Clause 76(1) would require the sentencing court to order that the young
person serve all or any portion of the sentence in a youth custody facility
separate and apart from any adult; a provincial correctional facility
for adults; or, if the sentence was for two years or more, a federal penitentiary.
Before making its decision, the court would have to have a report prepared
and would have to give the following parties and stakeholders an opportunity
to be heard: the young person, a parent of the young person, the Crown
prosecutor, the provincial director, and representatives of the provincial
and federal correctional systems (clauses 76(3) and (4)).
Clause 76 would, however,
narrow the discretion of the sentencing court on the issue of placement.
Unlike YOA section 16.2, clause 76(2) would presume that: young persons
under 18 at the time of sentencing should be placed in a youth custody
facility; and those 18 or over at that time should be placed in the applicable
type of adult facility (i.e., a provincial institution or federal penitentiary,
depending on the length of the sentence). These presumptions could
be rebutted where the court was satisfied that the presumptive placement
would not be in the best interests of the young person or would jeopardize
the safety of others.
Once the deadline for appeals
had expired, any of the parties or stakeholders listed above could apply
to the youth justice court for a review of the placement decision (clauses
76(6) and (7)). After hearing the other parties and stakeholders,
the court could vary its order where it was satisfied that there had been
a material change in the circumstances that had resulted in the original
placement order (clause 76(6)).
Where a young
person aged 20 or older, a court making or reviewing a placement
order would have to send the person to the appropriate adult facility
unless it was satisfied that being in a youth facility would be in the
best interests of the young person and would not jeopardize the
safety of others (clause 76(9)).
Clauses 77 and 78 would
ensure that the rules governing conditional release (Part II of the Corrections
and Conditional Release Act), or earned remission of sentence (section
6 of the Prisons and Reformatories Act), as the case might be,
applied to any young person serving an adult sentence of imprisonment,
notwithstanding the fact that the young person had been placed in a youth
facility for all or a portion of the sentence.
Despite the foregoing, clauses
79 and 80 would provide that a person given an adult sentence of imprisonment
under the bill: if subsequently sentenced to imprisonment under another
federal Act (e.g., the Criminal Code), would have to be transferred
to an adult facility; and, if already serving such a sentence, would have
to remain in an adult facility.
6. Effect of
Termination of Youth Sentences
Clause 82 of the bill would
relieve a young person who had received a youth sentence from certain
consequences of being found guilty of a criminal offence. Like
section 36(1) of the YOA, clause 82(1) would provide that, where a young
person found guilty of an offence received an absolute discharge, or where
any other youth sentence imposed in respect of the offence had been completed
or terminated, the young person would be deemed not to have been found
guilty of the offence. Unlike the corresponding YOA provision, however,
the benefit of clause 82(1) would extend to persons who were still subject
to a weapons prohibition order under clause 51 above, or section 20.1
of the YOA. Clause 82(2) would further provide that the completion
or termination of a youth sentence would remove any disqualification to
which the young person might be subject under federal legislation by reason
of having been found guilty of the offence. Moreover, clause 82(3)
would prohibit the use of any job application form in the federal public
sector or in any federally regulated business that required disclosure
of a finding of guilt under the bill in respect of an offence for which
the youth sentence had been completed or terminated. Clauses 82(2)
and (3) offer similar benefits to those available through a pardon under
the Criminal Records Act (see sections 5(b) and 8).
A number of exceptions and
qualifications would apply to the general provision in clause 82(1) whereby
a young person who had completed his or her youth sentence would be deemed
not to have been found guilty of the offence. First of all, clause
82(1) would be subject to section 12 of the Canada Evidence Act.
In other words, a young person who was deemed not to have been
found guilty of an offence under clause 82(1) and who subsequently appeared
as a witness in a proceeding could still be questioned on that finding
of guilt as a matter of credibility. The previous finding of guilt would
also be available for use in subsequent proceedings respecting the young
person. It would be available as a basis for an argument of double
jeopardy (e.g., a plea of autrefois convict, or previously convicted)
in response to any further charge relating to the offence (clause 82(1)(a)).
A youth justice court could take such a finding of guilt into account
in considering an application for or against the imposition of an adult
sentence (clause 82(1)(b)). A court could also make use of the finding
of guilt in considering an application for judicial interim release or
in determining the appropriate sentence to impose for an offence (clause
82(1)(c)). Also, the National Parole Board or any provincial parole
board could use such a finding of guilt in considering an application
for conditional release or a pardon (clause 82(1)(d)).
According to clause 82(4),
a finding of guilt under the bill would not constitute a previous conviction
for the purposes of any federal offence for which a greater punishment
was prescribed by reason of a previous conviction, except: for the purposes
of determining that an offence was a presumptive offence (an offence for
which it is presumed that an adult sentence should be imposed see
part (b) of the definition of presumptive offence in clause
2(1) of the bill) or for determining the adult sentence to be imposed
on a young person. These exceptions would constitute a change from
the corresponding YOA provision (s. 36(5)).
F. Part 5:
Custody and Supervision
1. Purpose
and Principles of Youth Custody and Supervision
a. General Purpose and
Principles
Clause 83(1) of the bill
would declare that the purpose of the youth custody and supervision system
is to contribute to the protection of society by carrying out youth sentences
involving custody and supervision in a safe, fair, and humane manner;
and assisting young persons in their rehabilitation and reintegration
into the community as law-abiding citizens, through the provision of effective
programs both in custody and during supervision in the community.
Clause 83(2) sets out the following principles to be used in achieving
this purpose (in addition to those set out in the bills Declaration
of Principle in clause 3):
-
the use of the least
restrictive measures, consistent with the protection of the public,
personnel working with the young person, and the young person himself
or herself;
-
acknowledgement that,
except as necessarily curtailed as a consequence of a sentence under
the bill or any Act of Parliament, young persons sentenced to custody
would retain the rights of other young persons;
-
the involvement of the
families of young persons and members of the public should be facilitated;
-
custody and supervision
decisions should be made in a fair and forthright manner, and the
young person should have access to an effective review procedure;
and
-
the placements of young
persons when treated as adults should not disadvantage them with respect
to release conditions or eligibility.
b. Separation of
Youth from Adult Offenders
Clause 84 would require
that young persons committed to custody be held separate and apart from
any adult, subject to certain specified exceptions. These exceptions
would recognize that young persons subject to custody should not always
be held separate and apart from any adult because:
-
in the case of youth
who are to be detained prior to sentencing, it might be unsafe (for
themselves or others) to detain them in a youth facility, or such
a facility might be too far away from the young persons home
and family (see clause 30(3));
-
some young persons
under the bill could, in fact, be adults at the time of sentencing,
or could become adults while in youth custody (see clauses 76, 89,
92 and 93);
-
certain young persons,
even though they were still under 18, might merit an adult sentence
of imprisonment and, with regard to the best interests of such young
persons and the safety of others, it would not be appropriate to place
them or keep them in a youth facility (see clauses 76, 92(4) and 92(5));
and, at the same time,
-
with regard to the best
interests of the offender or the safety of others, it is not always
necessary or appropriate that every person subject to a custodial
sentence under the future YCJA who is or who becomes an adult should
necessarily be sent to an adult facility (e.g., the person could be
a low-risk inmate with only a short sentence to be served) (see clause
76).
The bill would enhance the
separation of youth and adult offenders, however, by narrowing the discretion
of the youth justice court in the placement of persons age 18 or over
who received a custodial sentence under the bill. There would be
a new presumption that any person 18 or older who received an adult
sentence of imprisonment under the bill would go to an adult facility
(clause 76(2)(b)). There would be an even stronger presumption to
this effect where this person was 20 or older (clause 76(9)). Moreover,
a person who was 20 or older when he or she received a youth sentence
of custody would have to be placed in an adult facility, without exception
(clause 89).
The increased emphasis on
the principle of separating adult and young offenders is aimed at enhancing
compliance with article 37(c) of the UN Convention on the Rights of
the Child, which requires states to ensure that every child deprived
of his or her liberty according to law is separated from adults, unless
to do otherwise is considered to be in the childs best interest.
While Canada is a party to this Convention, it has reserved the right
not to detain children separately from adults where this is not
appropriate or feasible.
2. Level
of Custody
Once a young person had
been committed to custody, it would be up to the provincial director to
determine the level of custody in which he or she would be held in accordance
with clause 85. Clause 85 would require provinces to offer at least
two levels of custody, distinguished by the degree of restraint.
In determining or redetermining the appropriate level of custody, the
provincial director would have to take the following factors into account:
-
the seriousness of
the offence and the circumstances in which it was committed;
-
the needs and circumstances
of the young person, including proximity to family, school, employment,
and support services;
-
the safety of other
young persons in custody; and
-
the interests of society;
-
the need for the level
of custody to allow for the best possible match of programs to the
young persons needs and behaviour, having regard to the findings
of any assessment of the young person; and
-
the likelihood of escape.
Clause 86 would require
the provincial government to ensure that due process was observed in making
a determination or redetermination under clause 85. Specifically,
the young person would have to be provided with any relevant information
to which the provincial director had access in making the determination;
given the opportunity to be heard; and informed of the right to a review
under clause 87. Clause 85(7) would require the provincial director
to have written notice of a determination or redetermination of the level
of custody, including reasons, sent to the young person and his or her
parent.
Under clause 87, the provincial
government would be required to ensure that procedures were in place for
the review of any determination or redetermination under clause 85 before
an independent board. The above factors and due process requirements
applicable to a determination or redetermination by the provincial director
would apply to a review by the review board, whose decision would be final.
Where a province preferred
to have the level of custody determined judicially rather than administratively,
clause 88 would permit the provincial government to confer on the youth
justice court the authority to make the clause 85 determination.
In such a case, various provisions of the current YOA would apply, with
any necessary modifications.
While the criteria for determining
the level of custody would remain the same as under the YOA (see section
24.1(4)), the bill would, contrary to the YOA, presume an administrative
procedure for the decision. Currently, the YOA provides that the
youth court is to make this determination, unless the province designates
that the provincial director is to do so (see section 21.4). Another
change from the YOA would be that the provinces would have more freedom
in designating the types of youth facilities to which young persons could
be committed. Currently, section 24.1 of the YOA stipulates that
youth custody facilities are either open custody meaning
a community residential centre, group home, child care institution, forest
or wilderness camp, or any like facility or secure custody,
meaning a place or facility of secure containment or restraint.
Bill C-7, in clause 85, would require only that provinces offer more than
one level of restraint.
There would also be some
changes in the procedure itself. In clause 86, the bill would add
specific rights of due process to be observed by the provincial director
in determining the level of custody. Under clause 87, however, a
parent of the young person would no longer have an independent right to
apply for a review of a level of custody determination (see YOA section
28.1(1)), and a decision by a review board would no longer be subject
to a further review by the youth court (see YOA section 31).
3. Persons
Age 20 or over at Time of Sentencing
When a person was aged 20
or older at the time a custodial youth sentence was imposed, clause 89
would require that he or she be committed, at least initially, to a provincial
correctional facility for adults.(25) Once such a person had served
some time in a provincial adult facility, the provincial director could
apply to the youth justice court for an authorization to direct that the
person serve the remainder of the youth sentence in a federal penitentiary,
provided that there were two years or more remaining in the sentence.
The young person, the provincial director, and representatives of the
provincial and federal correctional systems, would all have to be given
an opportunity to be heard on such an application, and the court would
have to be satisfied that transfer to a penitentiary would be in the best
interests of either the person or in the public interest.
A person serving a youth
sentence in an adult facility would be subject to the legislation governing
other prisoners in those facilities (in the case of a provincial correctional
facility, the Prisons and Reformatories Act, and, the case of a
federal penitentiary, the Corrections and Conditional Release Act),
except to the extent that these conflicted with the provisions of Part
6 of the bill (access to youth records, disclosure of information in youth
records, etc.). Corresponding amendments to those Acts are proposed
in clauses 171, 173, 196 and 197 of the bill.
4. Youth
Workers
Clause 90 deals with youth
workers and their role in assisting in the young persons reintegration
into the community. Clause 90(1) would require the provincial director
to designate a youth worker to work with the young person as soon as he
or she was sentenced to custody. During the custodial portion of
the sentence, the youth worker would prepare and implement a plan setting
out the most effective programs for the young persons reintegration
into the community. When the young person was serving part of the
sentence in the community, clause 90(2) (similar to YOA section 37(a.1))
would require the youth worker to supervise the young person, continue
to provide support, and help the young person to respect the conditions
of his or her release and to implement the reintegration plan.
5. Reintegration
Leave
Clause 91 would provide
for the provincial director to grant reintegration leave to
any young person committed to a youth custody facility in the province
in respect of a youth sentence or an adult sentence. Section 35
of the YOA makes similar provision for temporary release from custody.
Reintegration leave would be available on any terms and conditions that
the provincial director considered desirable:
-
for a period of up to
30 days (renewable on reassessment of the case), with or without escort,
for medical, compassionate, or humanitarian reasons, or for the purpose
of rehabilitating the young person or reintegrating him or her into
the community; or
-
on the days and during
the hours specified by the provincial director, in order that the
young person might:
-
obtain or continue
employment, or perform domestic or other family duties;
-
participate in a specified
program that, in the provincial directors opinion, would enhance
the young persons employment, educational, or training potential;
or
-
attend an out-patient
treatment program or other program that addressed the young persons
needs.
The provincial director
could, at any time, revoke any such leave. Where this occurred,
or where the young person failed to comply with any term or condition
of the leave, the young person could be arrested without warrant and returned
to custody.
6. Transfer
/ Placement into Adult Facility
Clauses 92 and 93 deal with
the transfer and placement into adult facilities of certain young persons
subject to custodial youth sentences. Clause 76 of the bill addresses
the placement of young persons who received adult sentences of imprisonment
under the bill. Clause 89 deals with the placement of young persons who
had attained the age of 20 when they were given a custodial youth sentence.
Clauses 92 and 93 deal with situations where young persons who were subject
to custodial youth sentences were to be transferred to, or placed in,
adult facilities because they reached a certain age while in a youth facility,
or because they were also subject to a non-youth sentence of imprisonment
(i.e., an adult sentence under the bill, or a sentence under other legislation).
Under clause 92(1), a young
person who was subject to a custodial youth sentence could be sent to
an adult facility by the youth justice court, on the application of the
provincial director made any time after the young person had attained
the age of 18. The court would first have to give the young person,
the provincial director, and representatives of the provincial correctional
system an opportunity to be heard, and the court would have to be satisfied
that the transfer was in the best interests of the young person or in
the public interest. The transfer would be to a provincial facility for
adults; however, if two years or more remained in the sentence, the provincial
director could, under clause 92(2), make a further application to the
court for the young persons transfer to a federal penitentiary.
The provincial director would have to wait until the young person had
served some time in the provincial adult facility, and the court would
have to allow representatives of the federal correctional service to be
heard, in addition to the parties listed above in respect of the initial
transfer from youth custody.
Clause 92(4) would provide
that a young person would have to serve a custodial youth sentence in
an adult facility where he or she was also subject to another sentence
that had to be served in an adult facility (i.e., an adult sentence of
imprisonment under the bill in respect of which the youth justice court
made an adult placement order under clause 76; or a sentence of imprisonment
under another Act).
Clause 92(5) would give
the provincial director the discretion to order the transfer, to an adult
facility of a young person sentenced to a custodial youth sentence where
he or she was already serving an adult sentence of imprisonment in a youth
facility under clause 76.
Where a young person turned
20 while serving a custodial youth sentence in a youth facility, clause
93(1) would require his or her transfer to a provincial adult correctional
facility, unless the provincial director ordered otherwise. Where
a young person was so transferred, clause 93(2) would enable the provincial
director to apply, on the same basis and through the same procedure as
clause 92 above, for the young persons further transfer to a federal
penitentiary where two years or more remained in the sentence.
Pursuant to clauses 92(3)
and 93(3), young persons transferred to an adult facility under clauses
92(1), 92(2), 93(1) or 93(2) above would be subject to the legislation
governing other prisoners in those facilities (in the case of a provincial
correctional facility, the Prisons and Reformatories Act, and,
the case of a federal penitentiary, the Corrections and Conditional
Release Act), except to the extent that it conflicted with the provisions
of Part 6 of the bill (access to youth records, disclosure of information
in youth records, etc.). Young persons sent to an adult facility
under clause 92(4) and (5) would already be subject to the Prisons
and Reformatories Act or the Corrections and Conditional Release
Act, as the case might be, as a result of clause 77(2) and the consequential
amendments to those Acts in clauses 171, 173, 196 and 197.
7. Review
of Custodial Youth Sentences and Early Release
a. Introduction
Notwithstanding the imposition
of a youth sentence involving a specified period of custody under clause
42(2)(n), (o), (q), or (r), a custodial youth sentence served in a youth
facility would be subject to review under clauses 94 and 96. Like
sections 28 and 29 of the YOA, clauses 94 and 96 would provide for the
review of such sentences by the youth justice court, after which, the
court could order the young persons release under conditional supervision
where the court decided that his or her continued detention was no longer
necessary.
Unlike persons serving a
sentence in an adult correctional facility, or young persons given an
adult sentence of imprisonment under the bill, young persons serving a
youth sentence in a youth facility are not eligible for parole or remission
of sentence. Unless these young persons were granted early release
through a review under clauses 94 or 96 of the future YCJA (or, currently,
sections 28 and 29 of the YOA), they would have to remain in custody until:
the end of the two-thirds custodial portion of the sentence, in the case
of an order under clause 42(2)(n); or the end of the specified term of
custody, in the case of an order under clause 42(2)(o), (q), or (r).
Sentence reviews under clauses
94 and 96 would be conducted by the youth justice court. The basis
for a clause 94 review would be a change in circumstances justifying a
reappraisal of the sentence. A review under clause 96 would be
triggered by a recommendation from the provincial director.
b. Review of Custodial
Youth Sentences
Clause 94(1) and (2) would
provide for the annual review of custodial youth sentences that exceeded
one year. Clause 94(3) would provide for the optional review of
youth custody sentences at earlier intervals: in the case of a youth sentence
not exceeding one year, it would be after either 30 days from the date
of sentencing or one-third of the youth sentence, whichever was greater;
where the youth sentence was for more than a year, it would be after six
months from the date of the last sentence imposed in respect of the offence.
Review of a custodial youth sentence by the youth justice court at these
intervals would be dependent on an application by the young person, the
young persons parent, the attorney general, or the provincial director,
citing any of the grounds for review (see below). Moreover, clause
94(4) would provide that the young person could be brought before the
youth justice court for a review at any other time, with leave of a youth
justice court judge.
The youth justice court
would review a custodial youth sentence when it was satisfied that this
was justified on any of the following grounds (clauses 94(5) and (6)):
-
that the young person
had made sufficient progress to justify a change in the youth sentence;
-
that the circumstances
that led to the sentence had changed materially;
-
that new services or
programs were available that had not been available at the time of
sentencing;
-
that the opportunities
for rehabilitation were now greater in the community; or
-
on any other ground
that the court considered appropriate.
To assist it in conducting
the review, the court would require the provincial director to have a
progress report prepared assessing the performance of the young person
since the sentence began (clause 94(9)). The court would also have
to give the young person, a parent of the young person, the attorney general,
and the provincial director, an opportunity to be heard (clause 94(19)).
Having conducted a sentence
review, clause 94(19) would provide that the youth justice court could,
having regard to the needs of the young person and the interests of society:
-
confirm the sentence;
-
release the young person
under conditional supervision (see below); or
-
if the provincial director
recommended it, convert a sentence of intensive rehabilitative custody
and supervision under clause 42(2)(r) to a sentence of custody and
supervision under clause 42(2)(n) or (o), or custody and conditional
supervision under clause 42(2)(q), as the case might be.
The conditions applicable
to early release on conditional supervision would be the same as those
applicable to conditional supervision under clause 105 at the end of the
custodial portion of a youth sentence of custody and conditional supervision
(for murder) or of intensive rehabilitative custody and conditional supervision
(for a presumptive offence, where there is a psychological or emotional
disorder) (see below).
A review under clause 96
would be similar to one under clause 94, except that it could only be
triggered through a recommendation from the provincial director and would
not be restricted to any timeframe or require the leave of the court.
There could be no review
of a sentence under either clause 94 or clause 96 if the sentence was
under appeal (clauses 94(7) and 96(4)).
c.
Review of Other Orders
Under clause 95, certain
other decisions could be reviewed as sentences under clause 94: the imposition
of additional conditions of supervision or conditional supervision (see
below, clauses 97(2) and 105(1)); a decision by the youth justice court
to detain the young person beyond the custodial portion of the sentence
(see below, clauses 98(3) and 104(1)); and the cancellation of a young
persons supervision or conditional supervision in the community
as a result of a breach of conditions (see below, clauses 103(2)(b) and
109(2)(b)).
8. Release
on Completion of the Custodial Portion
a.
Conditions for Supervision
In a youth sentence of custody
and supervision under clause 42(2)(n), the last third of the sentence
would be served in the community under supervision with a series of conditions
automatically applied during that period (clause 97(1)). These
conditions would be the same as those in section 26.2(2) of the YOA.
The young person would be required to:
a) keep the peace
and be of good behaviour;
b) report to
the provincial director and be under his or her supervision;
c) inform the provincial
director immediately on being arrested or questioned by police;
d) report to
the police or any named individual, as instructed by the provincial
director;
e) advise the provincial
director of the young persons address of residence, and immediately
report any change
i. in that
address,
ii. in the
young persons occupation, employment, training, education, or
volunteer work,
iii. in the young
persons family or financial situation, and
iv. that was likely
to affect the young persons ability to comply with the conditions
of the sentence; and
f) not own, possess,
or have control over any weapon, ammunition, explosive, etc.
In addition, clause 97(2)
would enable the provincial director to set any additional conditions
that would address the needs of the young person, promote the young persons
reintegration into the community, and adequately protect the public.
In doing so, the provincial director would have to take into account the
needs of the young person, the nature of the offence, and the young persons
ability to comply with the conditions.
b. Conditions for
Conditional Supervision
The application of conditions
to young persons being released on conditional supervision at the end
of the custodial portion of a youth sentence under clause 42(2)(q) (murder)
or clause 42(2)(r) (intensive rehabilitative custody and supervision)
are discussed in clause 105. The young person would be brought before
the youth justice court one month before the end of the custodial portion
of the sentence and the court would, after a hearing, set the conditions
for the young persons conditional supervision. The court would
be assisted in doing so by a report on the case prepared and submitted
by the provincial director.
Clause 105(2) sets out a
series of mandatory conditions, while clause 105(3) would provide for
various discretionary conditions that the court could impose. The
conditions would be the same as those currently applicable under section
26.2 of the YOA. The mandatory conditions would include all those set
out in the preceding section as applicable to supervision under clause
97(1) (above). In the case of conditional supervision, however,
a young person would also be automatically required to comply with any
reasonable instructions attached by the provincial director to prevent
a breach of a condition or to protect society (see clause 105(2)(h)).
The additional conditions that the youth justice court could impose under
clause 105(3) would be that the young person
a) on release, go
directly to his or her place of residence or to any other place;
b) make reasonable
efforts to obtain and maintain suitable employment;
c) attend any appropriate
place of learning, training, or recreation, if the court was satisfied
that a suitable program was available there for the young person;
d) reside with
a parent or other appropriate adult who was willing to provide for the
care and maintenance of the young person;
e) reside in any
place that the provincial director might specify;
f) remain in the
territorial jurisdiction of one or more courts named in the order; and
g) comply with any
other condition set out in the order that the court considered appropriate,
including conditions for securing the young persons good conduct
and preventing his or her reoffending.
Under clause 42(2)(p), the
foregoing provisions dealing with conditions applicable to conditional
supervision would be applicable to a deferred custody and supervision
order.
Pursuant to clause 105(8),
the youth justice courts order setting a young persons conditions
for release on conditional supervision could be reviewed by the court
of appeal on an application by the young person or the provincial director.
9. Detention
beyond the Custodial Portion
a. Application by Provincial
Director
Although, according to clause
42(2)(n), (o), or (r) a portion of the term of a youth sentence would
be spent under supervision or conditional supervision in the community,
young persons could in certain cases be detained longer, up to the end
of the full term of their sentences. Similar provisions are available
in the adult system under the Corrections and Conditional Release Act
for the detention of federal prisoners during their statutory release
period.
Under clause 98, the provincial
director could apply to the youth justice court to make such an order,
where the provincial director, the young person, and a parent of the young
person had an opportunity to be heard, and where the court was satisfied
that there were reasonable grounds to believe that:
In making this determination,
the court would have to consider any relevant factor, including:
a) evidence of a
pattern of persistent violent behaviour and, in particular,
i. the number
of offences committed by the young person that caused harm to another
person,
ii. difficulties
in controlling violent impulses to the point of endangering the safety
of others,
iii. the use of
weapons in the commission of any offence,
iv. explicit threats
of violence,
v. brutal
behaviour associated with the commission of an offence, and
vi. a substantial
degree of indifference to the consequences for others of the young
persons behaviour;
b) psychiatric
or psychological evidence that, as a result of a physical or mental
illness or disorder, the young person was likely to commit a serious
violent offence before the expiry of the sentence;
c) reliable information
that satisfied the youth justice court that the young person was planning
to commit a serious violent offence before the end of the sentence;
d) the availability
of adequate supervision programs in the community for the protection
of the public;
e) any increased
likelihood that the young person would reoffend if he or she served
the entire sentence in custody; and
f) evidence of a
pattern of committing offences against the person while on supervision
or conditional supervision in the community.
In making its determination,
the youth justice court would have the benefit of a report that the provincial
director would have to have had prepared and submitted (clause 99).
b. Application by Attorney
General
Under clause 104, a similar
order could be obtained on the application of the attorney general, but
only in the case of youth sentences under clause 42(2)(q) (murder) or
41(2)(r) (intensive rehabilitative custody and supervision). The
applicable provisions are drawn from section 26.1 of the YOA. The
process would be similar to that described above with respect to an application
by the provincial director. However, the test would be that the
young person was likely to commit an offence causing death or serious
harm to another person before the end of the sentence. Moreover,
in a clause 104 application, the court would not need to consider factors
e) and f) above under clause 98 (see above).
c. Review of Order by
Court of Appeal
An order by the youth justice
court under clause 98 or 104, detaining a young person beyond the custodial
portion of his or her youth sentence would be reviewable, on application,
by the court of appeal (clause 101).
10. Breach
of Conditions
Clauses 102, 103, and 106
to 109 deal with situations where young persons released into the community
for a portion of a custodial youth sentence have violated the conditions
of their release. The provisions are similar to those in sections
26.3 to 26.6 of the YOA. Unlike the YOA, however, the provisions
of the bill cover two distinct scenarios: where there was a breach
of a condition of supervision imposed under clause 97; and where there
was a breach of a condition of conditional supervision imposed under clause
105. There is considerable overlap among these provisions.
The provincial director,
where he or she had reasonable grounds to believe that a young person
had breached, or was about to breach, a condition of his or her supervision
imposed under clause 97, could, in writing: (a) permit the young
person to continue to serve the sentence in the community on the same
or different conditions; or (b) if satisfied that the breach was serious
and increased the risk to public safety, order that the young person be
remanded to custody until a review was conducted (clause 102).
Clause 106 would make similar
provision for cases involving a breach, or potential breach, of a condition
of conditional supervision. Here, the provincial director would,
at least initially, have to suspend the conditional supervision and remand
the young person into custody.
Once the young person had
been apprehended and remanded into custody, clauses 102(2) and 108 would
require the provincial director to review the case without delay and,
within 48 hours, either cancel the order remanding the young person to
custody pending a review (in a case of conditional supervision, cancel
the suspension of the supervision), or refer the case to the youth justice
court.
After giving the young person
an opportunity to be heard, the youth justice court, if it was not satisfied
that the young person had breached, or was about to breach, the conditions
of his or her supervision, could order that the young person continue
the supervision portion of the sentence on the same or different conditions
(clause 103(1)(a)). If, however, the court was satisfied that the
young person had breached, or was about to breach, one of his or her conditions,
it would have to: a) vary or replace the young persons supervision
conditions; or, b) if satisfied that the breach was serious, order that
the young person remain in custody for a period not exceeding the remainder
of the sentence (clause 103(1)(b) and (2)). Clause 109 would make
similar provision for cases involving conditional supervision but, unlike
a case of supervision (see clause 103(1)(a)), the court could not vary
the conditions unless it was satisfied that there was, or would have been,
a breach of the conditions (see clause 109(1)).
The foregoing provisions
governing breaches of conditional supervision apply to breaches of deferred
custody and supervision orders under clause 42(2)(p). Where a youth
justice court approves the suspension of supervision in respect of a deferred
custody and supervision order, the order is effectively converted to a
sentence of custody and supervision (clause 109(2)(c) and (3)).
An order made by the youth
justice court as a result of a finding that there had been a breach of
a condition could, on application, be reviewed by the court of appeal
under clause 101.
G. Part
6: Publication, Records and Information
1. Introduction
Part 6 would maintain the
current approach of protecting the identities of young persons involved
with the criminal justice system, while broadening the circumstances in
which their names could be published. At present, the rule of confidentiality
under the Young Offenders Act prevails in most cases, except where
a young person has been transferred to adult court. Youth court
judges can permit short-term publication of the name of a young person
who is at large and a danger to others, where such publication might assist
in his or her apprehension. A young offenders identity can also
be made known to school officials where necessary to protect staff or
students.
The changes proposed in
this Part would adjust the circumstances in which it would be permissible
to publish information about youths involved with the criminal justice
system. The names of all youths who received adult sentences could
be published, as could the names of those given youth sentences for presumptive
offences; in the latter case, judges would have discretion to order that
a young persons name not be made public. Importantly, the provisions
permitting publication would apply to youths who were being sentenced,
thereby extending the prohibition against publication for youths accused
but not convicted of offences. Under the YOA, publication of information
about a young offender is permitted as soon as the trial has been transferred
to adult court.
The changes in the area
of keeping and disclosing records would be consistent with the policy
of treating young persons who commit the most serious offences in the
same way as adult offenders. Under the bill, the records of youth
who received adult sentences would be treated in the same way as are the
records of adult offenders. Youth records, as is the case under
the YOA, would have a limited existence, in keeping with the goal of promoting
the rehabilitation of young persons convicted of youth crime. The
bill would also clarify details of the record-keeping system for youth
records, and set out procedures by which authorized individuals - such
as police officers, victims and school authorities - could access youth
records.
2. Protection
of Privacy of Young Persons
Clause 110(1) of Bill C-7
would, subject to exceptions, prohibit the publication of the name of
or other information about a young person that would identify him or her
as a young person dealt with under the Act. Subsections (2)
to (6) would spell out the circumstances in which the name of such a young
person could be published.
Clause 110(2) would permit
the publication of information about a young person who was subject to
an adult sentence, as section 38(1) of the YOA does with respect to a
young offender who has been transferred to adult court. Unless a
publication ban were ordered under clause 65 or 75, clause 110(2) would
permit the publication of information about a young person subject to
a youth sentence for a presumptive offence. Note that clause 75
of the bill, discussed above, would permit a youth justice court to order
a ban on publication in cases involving presumptive offences. Clause
65 would require the youth justice court to order a publication ban where
the Attorney General decided to seek a youth sentence in the case of a
clause 2(1)(a) presumptive offence (murder, attempted murder, manslaughter
or aggravated sexual assault).
The discretion to allow
publication of the names of youths subject to youth sentences for presumptive
offences would represent a change from the current provisions of the YOA,
under which young offenders names are generally made public only
when their cases are transferred to adult court.
Information about the young
person could also be published under clause 110(2)(c) if it was done in
the course of the administration of justice, and not simply to make the
information known in the community. This limitation is currently
in place under section 38(1.1) of the YOA.
Upon reaching the age of
18, young persons whose privacy had been protected by clause 110(1) and
who were not still in custody could publish information about themselves
(clause 110(3)). This is consistent with the policy aim of the general
prohibition on publication, which is to protect the young offender from
the stigma of publication. Once they reached adulthood, youths dealt
with under the Act could choose to make information about their own lives
public, provided they were not still in custody. This qualification
is intended to prevent young persons from using publication to build up
a criminal reputation while in a youth facility. Young persons (under
18) who would otherwise be protected from publication by clause 110(1)
could apply under clause 110 (6) for an order permitting them to publish
identifying information about themselves. To make such an order,
the court would have to be satisfied that the publication would not be
contrary to the young persons, or the public, interest.
Under clause 110(4), police
officers could apply for orders permitting the publication of identifying
information about young persons when necessary to apprehend a youth who
posed a danger to others. Such orders would be limited to five days
under clause 110(5). This provision would seem consistent with the Standing
Committees recommendation that youth court judges be given discretion
to allow the general publication of the name of a young offender in circumstances
where persons were at risk of serious harm and where, for safety reasons,
the public interest required it (Recommendation 13). A similar power
applies under section 38(1.2) of the YOA, subject to a two-day limitation
period.
Clause 111(1) would continue
the prohibition under the YOA against publication of information that
would identify any child or young person as a victim of an offence by
a young person, or as a witness in connection with such an offence.
The child or young person thus protected could publish the relevant information
after reaching the age of 18 (clause 111(2) (a)). Such information
could also be published by, or with the consent of, the parents of a young
person who is under 18 or deceased (clause 111(2)(b) and (c).
Before age 18, such a child or young person could also apply to the youth
justice court, under clause 111(3), for an order permitting publication
of the information. This request could be granted if the court were
satisfied that this would not be contrary to the child or young persons
interest, or to the public interest.
Clause 112 would provide
that, once information had been published under clause 110 or 111, it
would no longer be subject to a ban on publication under either clause.
This provision is necessary because information that has been published
becomes generally known, so that there is no longer any policy reason
to prohibit its publication. Once a young person had identified
him or herself as a young offender, victim or witness, this provision
would permit others to publish information or commentary about the disclosure.
3. Fingerprints and Photographs
Clause 113 clarifies that
the Identification of Criminals Act applies to young persons, so
that their fingerprints and other measurements could be taken only in
accordance with that Act. This clause is consistent with section
44 of the YOA.
4. Records
That Might Be Kept
Under clause 114(1), the
records of a youth justice court, review board or any court dealing with
proceedings under Bill C-7 would be records subject to Part 6 of the bill.
Any police force involved in the investigation of an offence by a young
person would be permitted to keep records related to the offence under
clause 115(1) (as they currently may under section 42 of the YOA), which
would be subject to this Part (clause 115(1)). Where a young person
was charged with an indictable offence, to which the Identification
of Criminals Act applies, records including fingerprints or other
measurements under that Act could be provided to the RCMP. If the
youth was convicted, such records would have to be provided to the RCMP,
under clause 115(2). The RCMP would be required under clause 115(3)
to keep records received under that clause. Clauses 115(2) and (3)
are consistent with section 41 of the YOA.
Clause 116, dealing with
government and private records, would replace section 43 of the current
legislation, to reflect changes proposed in the bill, such as the replacement
of alternative measures by extrajudicial measures.
The only additional element would be the inclusion of a provision
authorizing government departments or agencies to maintain records obtained
for the purpose of administering orders under the Firearms Act
or sections 810-810.2 of the Criminal Code (which deal with sureties
to keep the peace, or peace bonds). Records subject
to this Part would be all those records relating to offences by young
persons that are kept by government departments or agencies, and those
kept by professionals and organizations for the administration of extrajudicial
measures or a sentence.
5. Access
to Records
Under clause 117, once any
applicable appeal period had expired, records relating to offences resulting
in adult sentences would be dealt with as adult records and the special
protections afforded youth records by clauses 118 to 129 of the bill would
not apply. This is consistent with the YOA, under which records
of youths transferred to adult court are treated like adult records.
Where an adult sentence was imposed, the finding of guilt by the youth
justice court would be deemed to be a conviction for the purposes of the
Criminal Records Act (clause 117). Under the Criminal
Records Act, records are sealed only by the granting of a pardon.
As is the case under the
YOA, clause 118(1) would provide that youth records, meaning all young
persons records except those that had resulted in adult sentences,
would be inaccessible except as permitted under the bill. Records
would be defined under clause 2 of the bill as any thing containing information
that was created or kept for the purposes of the bill or for the investigation
of an offence that was or could be prosecuted under the bill. The
prohibition against providing access to youth records would not apply
as between persons employed in keeping or maintaining such records (clause
118(2)).
Clause 119(1) would establish
a list of persons who would be given access to court records and could
be given access to police, government and other records. Access
would be particularly limited with respect to records of warnings, cautions
and referrals, medical or psychological reports, pre-sentence reports
and DNA analysis. Clause 119(2) would specify the period during
which such access could be granted, which would be a function of the verdict,
the severity of the offence and the manner of prosecution, and whether
other offences were committed during the period. If a new offence
were committed during the access period, the period would start running
again, with the record of the first offence being accessible throughout
the period in which the record of any subsequent offence was accessible.
These provisions are substantially similar to sections 44.1 and
45(1) of the YOA.
Further proposed limitations
on access to youth records are set out in clause 119(3) to (10).
Access to records regarding extrajudicial measures would be restricted
under clause 119(4). Further restrictions on access to medical and
psychological assessments, DNA analysis, and pre-sentence reports would
be set out in clause 119(5) and (6). Access to records would not
necessarily make them admissible in evidence (clause 119(7)); this would
reflect section 44.1(3) of the YOA. Records made available for research
purposes could be disclosed in ways that did not identify the young persons
involved (clause 119(8)). If a subsequent offence was committed
after the young person had become an adult, and before the period of accessibility
of the youth record had expired, then the youth record would be treated
as an adult record and would be subject to the Criminal Records Act
(clause 119(9)).
Clause 120 would provide
for the RCMP central registry to retain records for an additional period,
and to allow even more limited access to them than during the access period
under clause 119. There would be a distinction between offences
listed in the Schedule to the bill, including some of the most serious
offences in the Criminal Code, and other offences, with records
relating to offences set out in the Schedule and presumptive offences
being accessible for longer periods of time and to a broader list of persons.
Records relating to presumptive offences could be kept in the RCMP registry
indefinitely.
In relation to the records-keeping
clauses, 119 and 120, clause 121 would provide that if the Crown failed
to make an election in relation to a hybrid offence, that offence would
be deemed to be a summary conviction offence. This would be identical
to the effect of the current section 45(5) of the YOA.
Under clause 123, there
would be access to records after the expiry of the access periods set
out in clauses 119 and 120 for administration or research purposes, on
the order of a youth justice court judge. Clause 124 would clarify
that young persons, and their counsel, would have access to their own
records at any time, so long as the records existed.
The circumstances in which
certain records could be disclosed by specific persons, including police
officers, the Attorney General and youth workers, for a variety of specific
purposes are set out in clause 125. These purposes would include
criminal investigations, disclosure to a co-accused, extradition proceedings,
and the preparation of reports. Clause 125(6) would permit disclosure
to professionals or schools involved in the care or supervision of a young
person where necessary for compliance with a probation or supervision
order, to ensure safety of others, or to facilitate the young persons
rehabilitation. Disclosure under clause 125 could be made only within
the period of access to the records set out under clause 119(2).
A youth justice court could
order the disclosure of information necessary to warn a specified person
or persons about a danger posed by a young person who had been convicted
of an offence involving serious personal injury (clause 127). Unless
the young person could not be located, he or she would be given an opportunity
to be heard on the application. Again, such an order would be subject
to the applicable access period in clause 119(2).
Clause 128 would regulate
access to and disposal of records after the expiration of the access period.
At such time, the records could be destroyed or transmitted to the National
Archivist for Canada or a provincial archivist, at the discretion of the
person who held the record. Records held in Archives could be disclosed
for research or statistical purposes, provided that the method of disclosure
would not identify the young person involved (clause 126). Records
held in the RCMP central registry would have to be destroyed at the end
of the access period under clause 119 or 120, unless they were required
by the National Archivist of Canada.
A recipient of information
disclosed under the bill could only make further disclosure of the information
where authorized under the bill (clause 129).
H. Part 7: General
Provisions
1. Exclusion
from Hearing
While it is a general rule,
indeed a right, that criminal proceedings should be conducted in public
and in the presence of the accused, the criminal law provides for certain
exceptions to these requirements. Section 486 of the Criminal
Code gives courts the power to exclude members of the public in order
to maintain order, protect public morals, or for the proper administration
of justice, including the protection of child and youth witnesses in certain
cases. Moreover, section 650(2) of the Criminal Code provides
that, notwithstanding the general requirement in section 650(1) that the
accused be present during his or her trial, the court may permit the accused
to be absent, or have the accused removed, where he or she is disrupting
the proceedings or where the accuseds mental condition might be
adversely affected while his or her mental fitness is under consideration.
In the context of youth
criminal justice proceedings, section 39 of the YOA incorporates and expands
upon the general power of judges under the Criminal Code to exclude
persons from criminal proceedings. Clause 132 of the bill would
effectively reproduce section 39 of the YOA.
2. Offences
and Punishment
a. Overview
Clauses 136 to 139 of the
bill would create a series of offences in order to enforce various provisions
of the bill and the YOA.
b. Interference with Youth
Sentence
Clause 136 would effectively
reproduce YOA section 50 and make the following offences punishable on
an indictment by up to two years imprisonment or on summary conviction:
a) inducing or assisting
a young person unlawfully to leave a place of custody or other place
in which he or she had been placed in accordance with a youth sentence
under the bill or a YOA disposition;
b) unlawfully
removing a young person from a place described in a);
c) knowingly harbouring
or concealing a young person who had unlawfully left a place described
in a);
d) wilfully
inducing or assisting a young person to breach or disobey a term or
condition of a youth sentence or other order of the court, or of a YOA
disposition; and
e) wilfully preventing
or interfering with the performance of a term or condition of a youth
sentence or other order of the court, or of a YOA disposition.
These offences would be
under the absolute jurisdiction of the provincial court. In other
words, in the prosecution of an adult for such an offence, the summary
trial procedure (i.e., trial by judge alone with no preliminary inquiry)
would apply, even if the Crown elected to proceed by indictment.
c. Failure to Comply
with Youth Sentence
Clause 137 would create
a summary conviction offence for young persons who wilfully failed to
comply with the terms of their youth sentences or YOA dispositions.
This offence would be applicable to a breach of the following sentences:
conditional discharge; fine; payment of damages; restitution of property;
compensation in lieu of restitution; payment in kind or by way of personal
services in lieu of damages or compensation; community service with supervision;
prohibition order;(26) probation;
intensive support and supervision program; attendance at facility offering
program; and an order imposing other conditions. Clause 137 is similar
to YOA section 26; however, clause 137 would extend this breach of sentence
offence to cover conditional discharges and prohibition orders as well
as certain of the new sentences that would be available under clause 42(2)
of the bill.
d.
Breach of Publication, Records and Information Provisions
Clause 138 would replicate
YOA section 46, making it an offence punishable by imprisonment for up
to two years on an indictment, or by summary conviction, to violate the
various prohibitions in Part 6 of the bill (and under the YOA) with respect
to publication, access to, and disclosure of, information relating to
proceedings against young persons. As with the offences under clause
136 (see above), offences under clause 138 would be under the absolute
jurisdiction of the provincial court.
e. Breach of
Pre-Sentencing Detention Provisions
Clause 139(1) would make
it an offence punishable on an indictment by up to two years imprisonment,
or on summary conviction: for anyone who wilfully violated the rules in
clause 30 regarding pre-sentencing detention of young persons; or for
a young person or a responsible person who wilfully failed
to comply with an undertaking under clause 31(3) (placement with responsible
person as alternative to pre-sentencing detention). Violation of
the corresponding YOA provisions (sections 7 and 7.1(2)) would be prohibited
under clause 139(2), but only as a summary conviction offence; this is
consistent with YOA section 7.2.
f. Use of Prohibited
Employment Application Form
Clause 139(3) would maintain
the offence, currently found in YOA section 36(4), of using, or authorizing
the use, contrary to clause 82(3), of an employment application form in
the federal public sector, or a federally regulated business, that requires
the disclosure of a finding of guilt under the future YCJA or the YOA
where the sentence or disposition has been completed.
3. Application of the
Criminal Code
a. General
Applicability of Criminal Code Provisions
Like YOA section 51, clause
140 would provide that, except as inconsistent with the bill, the provisions
of the Criminal Code would apply with respect to offences alleged
against young persons, with any necessary modifications.
b.
Mental Disorder
Clause 141 would effectively
re-enact YOA section 13.2 with respect to the application of the Criminal
Code provisions on mental disorder. Section 16 of the Code provides
for a defence of mental disorder, while Part XX.1 deals with mental assessment
procedures and dispositions for persons found unfit to stand trial or
not criminally responsible by reason of mental disorder.
Clause 141 would provide
for the general application of those provisions, though it would adapt
certain of them to the particular circumstances of young persons.
For instance, clause 141(2) would provide that any requirements in Part
XX.1 (Mental Disorder) of the Criminal Code for the giving of notices
would be read as also requiring copies of such notices to go to a young
persons counsel and parents. Clause 141(6) would provide that,
before making a disposition in respect of a young person under Part XX.1,
a youth justice court or Review Board would have to consider his or her
age and special needs and any representations by a parent. Section 672.64
of the Criminal Code provides for the capping of dispositions under
Part XX.1 to ensure that persons found unfit to stand trial or not criminally
responsible on account of mental disorder are not subject to lengthier
restrictions on their liberty than persons who are actually convicted
of the offence. Clause 141(7) would adjust these caps to the maximum
length of the youth sentence to which the young person would be subject
if found guilty of the offence. Clauses 141(8) and (9) provide for the
increase of that youth cap, however, on the application of the Attorney
General, where a young person was found unfit to stand trial for a presumptive
offence, or for an offence where notice had been given of an intention
to seek an adult sentence. Where a young person was found unfit to stand
trial, a prima facie case in respect of the offence charged would
have to be made against him or her every year, rather than every two years,
in order for the court to retain jurisdiction to try the young person,
should he or she become fit (clause 141(10)). Finally, clause 141(11)
would provide that references in Part XX.1 of the Criminal Code
to hospitals would have to be construed as references to hospitals designated
by the provincial Minister of Health for the custody, treatment, or assessment
of young persons.
c. Summary Conviction Procedures
Clause 142 would, similar
to YOA section 52, provide that the Criminal Code provisions on
summary conviction proceedings (Part XXVII) would apply to proceedings
under the bill, whether in respect of summary conviction offences or indictable
offences, except where this would be inconsistent with any other provision
of the bill (for example, where the young person faced an adult sentence
or was being tried for murder, the bill provides for an election of mode
of trial, as in an adult case prosecuted by indictment). However,
clause 142(3) would provide that the requirement under section 650 of
the Criminal Code, that persons charged with an indictable offence
be present throughout the proceedings (and not just appear through counsel
or an agent, as is permitted in summary conviction proceedings) would
apply in all youth justice cases, regardless of the offence. Moreover,
clause 142(4) stipulates that, notwithstanding the general applicability
of the Criminal Code summary conviction provisions, the general
six-month limitation period for the prosecution of summary conviction
offences in section 786(2) of the Criminal Code would not apply
in indictable youth cases.
4. Evidence
a.
Admissibility of Statements
i. Statements to
Persons in Authority
Clause 146(1) would, like
YOA section 56(1), provide that the general law on the admissibility of
statements by accused persons would apply with respect to young persons.
Basically, the common law requires that, while a statement made by a suspect
to a person in authority, such as a police officer, may be used in evidence
against that suspect, the prosecution must first establish that the statement
was voluntary; that is, that the statement was made without fear of prejudice
or hope of advantage, and was the product of an operating mind
capable of understanding what was being said and appreciating the consequences
of the statement.
However, clause 146(2),
which is similar to YOA section 56(2), would go beyond the common law
to both codify and enhance the protection available to young persons in
this area. The clause would, however, clarify that these special
protections would apply only to young persons who were under 18 at the
time of the statement; they are not intended for the benefit of adults
who might happen to be subject to the youth justice legislation because
of their age at the time of the offence.
First of all, under clause
146(2)(a), the statement by the young person would have to have been voluntary
as required by the common law.
Second, pursuant to clause
146(2)(b), the peace officer or other person in authority to whom the
statement was made would first have to clearly explain to the young person,
in language appropriate to his or her age and understanding, that:
-
the young person was
under no obligation to make a statement;
-
any statement made by
the young person could be used in evidence against him or her;
-
the young person had
the right to consult with counsel and a parent or other appropriate
adult chosen by the young person; and
-
unless the young person
desired otherwise, any statement he or she made would have to be made
in the presence of counsel and/or the parent or other adult consulted
by the young person before making the statement.
Third, before the statement
was made, the young person would have to be given a reasonable opportunity
to consult with counsel and with a parent or other appropriate adult (clause
146(2)(c)).
Finally, a young person
who consulted with counsel and/or a parent or other adult would have to
be given a reasonable opportunity to make the statement in the presence
of the person or persons so consulted (clause 146(2)(d)).
However, like YOA section
56(3), clause 146(3) would provide that the foregoing requirements under
clause 146(2)(b), (c), and (d) would not apply where the young person
made a spontaneous statement to a peace officer or other person in authority
before there was a reasonable opportunity to comply with those requirements.
A new provision, clause
146(6), would provide that a technical irregularity in complying
with the requirements in clause 146(2)(b), (c), and (d) would not necessarily
render a young persons statement inadmissible where the court was
satisfied that the admission of the statement would not bring into
disrepute the principle that young persons are entitled to enhanced
procedural protection to ensure fair treatment and the protection of their
rights. This test is borrowed from the test for the admissibility
of evidence obtained through a breach of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms (see section 24(2)). Providing judicial discretion
to admit statements obtained in violation of the requirements set out
in clause 145(2)(b) through (d) is intended to prevent the loss of otherwise
legal evidence through technical or minor violations of these procedures;
this is in accordance with a recommendation of the House of Common Standing
Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs.(27)
Like adults, young persons
can waive their right to consult counsel before making a statement to
police. They can also waive their unique right to consult with a
parent or other appropriate adult and to make their statement in the presence
of any such persons consulted. For the waiver of such rights to
be effective, however, YOA section 56(4) requires that the waiver be videotaped,
or be in writing and contain a statement signed by the young person that
he or she has been informed of the right being waived. Clause 146(4)
of the bill would maintain the YOA section 56(4) procedure for waiver
of these rights, but would add the option of audiotaping. A new
provision, clause 146(5), would, however, permit courts to admit statements
obtained without following the waiver procedure specified in clause 146(4),
provided they were satisfied that the young persons had been informed
of their rights and had, in fact, waived them.
Clause 146(7) would, like
YOA section 56(5), provide that a youth justice court could rule a statement
inadmissible where the young person satisfied the court that it had been
made under duress applied by someone other than a person in authority.
Clause 146(8) would, like
YOA section 56(5.1), prevent a young person from benefiting from a violation
of the special procedures described above where the young person had induced
the violation by misrepresenting himself or herself to be an adult.
However, the person in authority to whom the statement or waiver was made
would have to have made reasonable inquiries as to the young persons
age and have had reasonable grounds for believing that he or she was 18
or older. Moreover, the statement or waiver would, in all other
circumstances, have to be admissible (i.e., it would have to comply with
the legal requirements applicable to such statements or waivers generally
under the common law and the Charter).
Under clause 146(9), a person
consulted by a young person under clause 146(2)(c) would be deemed not
to be a person in authority in the absence of evidence to the contrary.
In other words, provided that they did not amount to duress (see clause
145(7) above), threats or inducements coming from the young persons
counsel, parent or other chosen adult would generally not render the young
persons statement or confession involuntary under the law.
ii. Statements
during Pre-Sentence Assessments
Clause 147 would reproduce
YOA section 13.1 on the use of statements made by young persons during
the course of pre-sentence assessments ordered under clause 34. Clause
147(1) would provide for the general inadmissibility of such statements
in proceedings without the consent of the young person. Clause 147(2),
however, would provide that such statements could be admitted into evidence
for certain specific purposes, such as determining mental fitness; determining
whether the young person had been suffering from a mental disorder at
the time of the offence; dealing with subsequent inconsistent testimony
by the young person by challenging his or her credibility, or by establishing
perjury; or in making certain decisions relating to the young persons
conditional release from custody (i.e., conditional supervision).
b. Establishing the Age
of the Accused
Establishing the age of
an accused person is particularly important in youth justice proceedings
because it directly affects the application of the youth justice legislation
and the jurisdiction of the youth justice courts. Thus, clause 148
would, like YOA section 57, provide particular rules for establishing
the age of a person, such as the use of parents testimony, certain
records, and any inferences that the court is able to draw from the persons
appearance or statements made in giving evidence.
5. Creation and Funding
of Programs
Clauses 156 and 157 of the
bill would provide for arrangements between different levels of government
for the funding and establishment of programs and services to be provided
under the bill.
Clause 156 would effectively
re-enact YOA section 70 which provides for payments by the federal government
to provinces or municipalities for costs incurred in the provision of
services to young persons dealt with under the bill. Such payments
could be made pursuant to an inter-governmental agreement entered into
by any federal minister with the approval of the Governor in Council.
Clause 157 would provide
that the Attorney General of Canada or a minister designated by the provincial
government could establish the following types of community-based programs:
-
alternatives to judicial
proceedings, such as victim-offender reconciliation, mediation and
restitution programs;
-
alternatives to pre-sentencing
detention, such as bail supervision programs; and
-
alternatives to custody,
such as intensive support and supervision programs (see clause 42(2)(l)),
and programs in respect of which attendance orders (see clause 42(2)(m))
could be made.
6. Miscellaneous
Clauses 130 and 131 would
provide for the disqualification of youth justice court judges from sitting
in certain cases, and for the substitution of youth justice court judges
where the original judge was unable to continue with the case.
These provisions would replicate YOA sections 15 and 64.
Clause 133 would reproduce
YOA section 18 providing for the transfer of charges between provinces.
Clauses 134 and 135 would
reproduce YOA sections 48 and 49 on the forfeiture of recognizances in
youth justice court cases.
Clauses 143 to 145 would
provide for the application of special rules for process issued in the
youth justice court: summary conviction and indictable offences could
be charged in the same information and tried jointly; and youth justice
court subpoenas and warrants would be effective throughout Canada.
The same provisions are found in YOA sections 53 to 55.
Clauses 149 to 153 would
essentially reproduce the provisions in YOA sections 58 to 63 concerning
various evidentiary matters of a procedural or technical nature.
Clauses 154 and 155 would
effectively re-enact YOA sections 66 and 67 to provide for the prescription
of forms for youth justice court proceedings and for the making of regulations
by the Governor in Council for prescribing forms, establishing uniform
rules of court, and, generally, for carrying out the purposes of the bill.
COMMENTARY
This bill, as was the case
with the Young Offenders Act, has been the object of widely divergent
opinion. One of the goals of this legislative initiative was to
restore confidence in the youth criminal justice system by repealing and
replacing, it in its entirety, the present law, which has been largely
discredited in the eyes of many opinion-makers.
Sharp criticism of the bill
comes both from those who find it is too punitive, and those who believe
it is not tough enough in dealing with cases of serious youth offending.
There is also a body of opinion that supports the bill because it contains
new elements that are considered an improvement on the present legislation.
Those who believe the bill
is too punitive argue that it focuses on the offence committed by the
young person, to the exclusion of the context in which the offending took
place. They argue that the bill adopts protection of the public
as its primary guiding principle at the expense of the rehabilitation
and reintegration of young offenders. It is also suggested that
the bill would introduce many elements of the adult criminal justice system
into the youth criminal justice system, to the detriment of the young
offenders to be processed by it.
Those who believe the bill
is not tough enough argue that the penalties available for the most serious
cases of youth offending are not sufficient and that such cases should
be automatically processed through the adult criminal justice system.
It is suggested that deterrence and denunciation of youth criminal offending
are not given sufficient importance in the bill.
According to some critics,
the minimum age for youth criminal justice system processing should be
reduced in some circumstances to age 10, in order to deal with youth offending
where education, mental health, and child welfare/protection approaches
are inadequate. Some propose that the upper age for youth criminal
justice processing should be set at 16, with adult consequences for adult
offending.
Many of those who support
the bill like many of the new elements that it would add to the youth
criminal justice system. They argue that the statements of philosophy
set out in different parts of the bill provide guidance to those who would
have to implement, and be subject to, this legislation. They suggest
that the extrajudicial measures, conferencing, and youth justice committee
measures in the bill would provide opportunities for early intervention
outside of the youth justice system to address youth offending.
They also argue that many of the sentencing and other options proposed
should reduce the now too-high rate of youth incarceration.
Many commentators from Quebec
have claimed that that province has adopted a unique, integrated, diversion-based
approach to implementing the Young Offenders Act which has resulted
in fewer young people being processed by the courts and incarcerated.
It is said that this legislation works well, rendering Bill C-7 unnecessary.
Other jurisdictions are urged to adopt an approach to youth offending
similar to that of Quebec.
Many commentators have said
that legislative change is only part of an effective strategy to renew
youth justice. It must be accompanied by a commitment to ensuring
an adequate level of resources and the development of appropriate facilities
and programs to implement it effectively.
Some have suggested that
most, if not all, of the new elements in the bill could have been put
into place by a moderate number of amendments to the present legislation.
Many have complained about
the length and complexity of the bill. They argue that those who
have to implement the bill will require much training and that it will
be difficult to educate the public and young people about its content.
They suggest that the Young Offenders Act is a model of brevity
and clarity by comparison.
(1)
For a more detailed review of the Young Offenders Act and its evolution,
see: Philip Rosen, The Young Offenders Act, Current Issue Review
86-13, Parliamentary Research Branch, Library of Parliament.
(2)
House of Commons, Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs, Thirteenth
Report, Renewing Youth Justice, 2nd Session, 35th Parliament, April
1997, p. 12 and 15.
(3)
Department of Justice, Fact Sheet: Youth Justice Statistics,
Ottawa, March 1999; Department of Justice, A Strategy for the Renewal
of Youth Justice: Legislative and Supporting Program Components, Ottawa,
12 May 1998; and Renewing Youth Justice, Chapter 6.
(4)
Renewing Youth Justice, p. 55 (Recommendation 7).
(5)
Ibid., p. 45.
(6)
In Quebec, the provincially appointed Court of Quebec tries such cases
when the accused has elected to be tried by a judge without a jury.
As in the rest of Canada, however, jury trials in Quebec are presided
over by federally appointed superior court judges.
(7)
Renewing Youth Justice, p. 55-57.
(8)
Ibid., p. 49-55 and recommendation 7.
(9)
Article 37(c) of the Convention obliges States Parties to ensure that:
Every child deprived of
liberty shall be treated with humanity and respect for the inherent
dignity of the human person, and in a manner which takes into account
the needs of persons of his or her age. In particular, every child
deprived of liberty shall be separated from adults unless it is considered
in the childs best interest not to do so
Canada has made the following
reservation to this provision of the Convention: The Government
of Canada accepts the general principles of article 37(c) of the Convention,
but reserves the right not to detain children separately from adults where
this is not appropriate or feasible.
(10)
This interpretation has been confirmed by the Supreme Court itself in:
R. v. C. (T.L.), [1994] 2 S.C.R. 1012, 92 C.C.C. (3d) 444.
Since the issue had been raised in response to a motion, and there
had not been adequate argument or the required notice to the various Attorneys
General, the Court declined to address the argument that the deprivation
of this avenue of appeal in youth cases amounted to unconstitutional discrimination
on the basis of age contrary to section 15(1) of the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms.
(11)
For preparing a pre-sentence report, access to records of previous findings
of guilt against a young person under the bill in respect of which a youth
sentence was imposed, would be subject to the access periods set out in
clause 119(2) of the bill (see Part 6). Clause 119(2) would restrict
access to such records, depending on the offence and the sentence imposed,
to periods ranging from two months from the finding of guilt, where a
reprimand was imposed (see Youth Sentences below), to five
years from the completion of the sentence, in the case of indictable offence
where a sentence other than a reprimand or a discharge was imposed.
(12)
Where an extrajudicial sanction was used, clause 119(2) would limit access
to the record to a period of two years from the date that the young person
consented to the sanction.
(13)
In addition to any other youth sentences that might obviously be incompatible,
clause 42(11) stipulates that the following youth sentences could
not be combined with a conditional discharge: a probation order under
clause 42(2)(k), an intensive support and supervision order under clause
42(2)(l), and a program attendance order under clause 42(2)(m).
(14)
Clause 54(1) would require youth justice courts, in deciding to sentence
the young person to pay a fine under clause 42(2)(d), to consider the
young persons ability to pay. Clause 54(2) would permit a
young person to pay off all or part of a fine under this clause by performing
work in a program established by the province for that purpose.
(15)
Clause 54(1) would require youth justice courts to consider the young
persons ability to pay in deciding to sentence the young person
to pay compensation under clause 42(2)(e). Where a youth justice
court was contemplating such an order, clause 53(4) would permit the court
to receive representations from the person to be compensated.
(16)
Where a youth justice court was contemplating such an order, clause 54(4)
would permit the court to receive representations from the person to whom
restitution would be made.
(17)
Clause 54(1) would require youth justice courts, in deciding to sentence
the young person to compensate an innocent purchaser under clause 42(2)(g),
to consider the young persons ability to pay. Where a youth
justice court was contemplating such an order, clause 54(4) would permit
the court to receive representations from the innocent purchaser.
(18)
Where a youth justice court was contemplating such an order, clause 54(4)
would permit the court to receive representations from the person to be
so compensated, and, pursuant to clause 54(6), the persons consent
would be required before such an order could be made. Moreover,
pursuant to clause 54(7), before making such an order, the court would
have to be satisfied that the young person was a suitable candidate for
it, and that it would not interfere with his or her normal hours of work
or education. Clause 54(8) would limit the scope of such an order
to those personal services that could be performed within 240 hours over
a period of not more than one year.
(19)
Before making such an order, clause 54(7) would require that the court
be satisfied that the young person was a suitable candidate for it, and
that it would not interfere with his or her normal hours of work or education.
Clause 54(8) would limit the scope of such an order to those services
which could be performed within 240 hours over a period of not more than
one year. Pursuant to clause 54(9), such an order could only be
imposed where the services were part of a program approved by the provincial
director, or where the court was satisfied that the recipient of the services
agreed to their performance by the young person.
(20)
Section 161 of the Criminal Code provides for the making of an
order prohibiting persons convicted of certain offences from attending
near public places where persons under 14 are likely to be present, or
from obtaining employment in which the person would be in a position of
trust or authority towards persons under 14.
(21)
Before making such an order, clause 54(7) would require the court to be
satisfied that the young person was a suitable candidate for the program,
and that it would not interfere with his or her normal hours of work or
education.
(22)
Clause 42(5) would preclude the availability of this sentence in the case
of a serious violent offence (see clause 2). Curiously,
however, the bill says nothing about the possibility of imposing lesser
youth sentences (such as a reprimand or a discharge), or even using extrajudicial
measures (see Part 1 of the bill), in respect of serious violent offences.
(23)
The terms and conditions applicable to release on conditional supervision
(clauses 105(2) and 105(3)) in Part 5 of the bill would apply to deferred
custody and supervision, as would the provisions governing suspension
and cancellation of conditional supervision for breach of conditions (see
clauses 106-109 in Part 5 of the bill).
(24)
Renewing Youth Justice, p. 65.
(25)
Ironically, if such a person was sentenced as an adult, there would still
be some discretion to place him or her in a youth facility, although there
would be a strong presumption against it (see clause 76(9)).
(26)
This new offence would, however, apply only to a breach of prohibition
order imposed under the future YCJA (clause 42(2)(j)). In the case
of a prohibition order imposed under section 20(1)(h) of the YOA, the
legislation which provides for the particular prohibition in question
would remain the basis for a charge of breaching the order.
(27)
Renewing Youth Justice, p. 71 (recommendation 14).
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