Any substantive changes in this Legislative Summary that have been made since the preceding issue are indicated in bold print.
Bill C-39, An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act and to make consequential amendments to other Acts (short title: Ending Early Release for Criminals and Increasing Offender Accountability Act) was introduced and received first reading in the House of Commons on 15 June 2010.1 It was read a second time on 20 October 2010 and referred to the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security for further study. The bill died on the Order Paper when an election was called on 26 March 2011.
On 9 February 2011, the Minister of Public Safety introduced in the House of Commons Bill C-59, An Act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Release Act (accelerated parole review) and to make consequential amendments to other Acts (short title: Abolition of Early Parole Act).2 Bill C-59, like Bill C-39, aims to abolish accelerated parole reviews. Given that Bill C-59 received Royal Assent on 23 March 2011, the associated provisions in Bill C-39 are repealed.3
Bill C-39 is designed to increase offenders’ accountability and tighten the rules governing conditional release (that is, offenders sentenced to two years or more) by:
The bill seeks to increase public safety by:
Finally, the bill also focuses specifically on the interests of victims, by:
A number of the sections in the bill make minor amendments to the Corrections and Conditional Release Act, such as linguistic modifications or reformulations designed to clarify the legislative intent (see for examples changes made by clauses 10, 18, 19 and 23 of the bill). Some sections are also designed to make the administration of sentences more effective, for example, by increasing the maximum number of members that may sit on the Parole Board of Canada.
Finally, it should be noted that many of the bill’s provisions are based on the recommendations formulated in the report entitled A Roadmap to Strengthening Public Safety,4 presented in October 2007 by the Correctional Service of Canada Review Panel in response to the mandate it received from the federal government on 20 April 2007, i.e., to review Correctional Service of Canada operations. Michael Jackson,5 a law professor at the University of British Columbia, and Graham Stewart, former Director General of the John Howard Society of Canada, severely criticized this report in a document entitled A Flawed Compass: A Human Rights Analysis of the Roadmap to Strengthening Public Safety,6 which appeared in September 2009. Generally, the authors argue that the suggested transformation of the correctional system fails to respect human rights. They also feel that it is based not on empirically validated evidence but on ideological myths.
In Canada, responsibility for corrections is divided between the federal and the provincial and territorial governments based on the sentence imposed by the court. Individuals sentenced to two years or more are the responsibility of the Correctional Service of Canada, while those sentenced to less than two years or to a conditional sentence or who are detained while awaiting trial are the responsibility of the provincial and territorial correctional systems.
The federal correctional system consists of the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC), the Parole Board of Canada (PBC) (also known as the National Parole Board) and the Office of the Correctional Investigator (OCI). The Corrections and Conditional Release Act (CCRA), in force since 1992,7 forms the legislative basis of the CSC (Part I), PBC (Part II) and OCI (Part III). It sets out their respective responsibilities and the principles that must guide their actions, and provides the definitions and rules for applying conditions of release, as well as the security requirements for high-risk offenders. It also contains the rules designed to ensure the transparency of the correctional system and the participation of victims. The CCRA is complemented by the Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations (CCRR).8
The CSC is headed by the commissioner of the Correctional Service of Canada, who reports to the minister of Public Safety. The CSC is charged with incarcerating offenders and preparing them for eventual release into the community. In addition to enforcing sentences, the CSC is responsible for supervising offenders on conditional release in the community. To that end, it enters into contracts with numerous private-sector agencies that operate halfway houses.
Created in 1959,9 the PBC is an independent administrative tribunal with the exclusive authority to grant, refuse, cancel or revoke offenders’ parole, that is, day parole and full parole. The PBC also makes decisions on the parole of offenders in the provinces and territories without their own parole boards.10
The Correctional Investigator, whose position was created in 1973 but not formally provided for in legislation before the adoption of the CCRA in 1992, serves as ombudsman for offenders under federal responsibility. The OCI’s primary function is to investigate complaints made by or on behalf of offenders and to follow up on them. The OCI also examines CSC policies and practices to identify systemic problems and their solutions, and makes recommendations to that end.
Under the terms of the CCRA, at any time after their admission to a penitentiary, offenders may be granted escorted temporary absences and, after the applicable eligibility date,11 unescorted temporary absences, work release, day parole, full parole and statutory release.12
A temporary absence is generally the first form of release that an inmate in the federal system may be granted. The purpose of this form of release is to integrate certain inmates temporarily into the community for very specific purposes.13 There are two types of temporary absences: escorted temporary absences (ETAs) and unescorted temporary absences (UTAs), both of which are forms of release into the community that generally last for a maximum of 15 days.
Inmates under federal responsibility may request an ETA at any time during their sentence. The power to grant this type of release lies with the institutional head, except in the case of individuals sentenced to imprisonment for life, where the institutional head must obtain the approval of the PBC.
For UTAs, the eligibility criteria vary depending on the nature and length of the sentence:
Depending on the circumstances under which the request is made, the power to authorize UTAs lies with the PBC, the commissioner of the CSC or the institutional head.
Work release is a program of release that enables inmates to work in the community. The maximum length of a work release is 60 days. Inmates may generally request this type of release after serving six months or one sixth of their sentence, whichever is longer.
This type of release is granted by the institutional head. However, only inmates who do not present an undue risk of reoffending may participate in this kind of program, and only for the purpose of performing community service, such as work in a community centre, a hospital or a home for the aged.
Day parole is a form of parole whose purpose is to prepare the inmate for full parole or statutory release. It is generally granted for a maximum of six months and provides offenders with an opportunity to participate in supervised activities in the community. The power to authorize day parole lies exclusively with the PBC.
This form of parole is more limited than full parole, given that, unless special authorization is given by the PBC, inmates on day parole must return to a correctional institution or halfway house every night.
Eligibility for this type of release also varies, depending on the length and type of sentence:
Full parole allows offenders to serve the rest of their sentence under supervision in the community. Because this is a form of parole, the power to grant it lies exclusively with the PBC. Inmates on full parole must report regularly to a parole supervisor and advise the parole supervisor of any major change in their personal or employment situation. Except for offenders sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, who must serve between 10 and 25 years of their sentence before applying,14 a majority of offenders may apply for full parole after serving one third of their sentence (unless the judge had ordered, in imposing sentence, that a minimum of 10 years or one half of the sentence be served before the inmate might be granted this type of release).
Statutory release is a last resort. Unlike the other forms of conditional release, statutory release is automatically granted to most offenders after they have served two thirds of their sentence. Under statutory release, offenders may finish serving their sentence under supervision in the community, subject to strict conditions, as do inmates on parole.
Under the CCRA, most inmates under federal responsibility must be given statutory release if they have not been granted full parole; however, the Act stipulates that inmates serving a life sentence or an indeterminate sentence cannot be granted statutory release. As well, to protect public safety, the CSC may submit an offender’s file to the PBC for analysis if the CSC considers that the offender is likely to commit an offence causing death or serious harm to another person, a sexual offence involving a child, or a serious drug offence before the expiration of his or her sentence.
Normally, a case is referred to the PBC six months before the planned statutory release date. The PBC can then authorize the inmate’s statutory release, a “one-chance” statutory release (i.e., if the release is revoked for any reason, the offender will automatically serve the rest of the sentence in detention), attach residency requirements to the statutory release or decide, by means of an order, to keep the offender in detention until the end of the sentence. Any such order is reviewed annually, at which time the PBC either confirms or cancels the order. If the order is cancelled, the inmate will receive statutory release, which may be accompanied by a requirement to reside in a community-based residential facility.
Detention is an instrument that serves the correctional system in its role of protecting the public, by making it possible to keep offenders deemed dangerous to society in detention until the end of their sentence.
In all cases and for all types of release, the CSC is responsible for the supervision of offenders in the community. The CSC’s parole officers therefore have the power to return inmates on release to custody if they believe that the inmates present too high a risk to the community. Members of the PBC have the power to revoke an individual’s conditional release if they do not comply with requirements in their release plan.
The following description highlights selected aspects of the bill; it does not review every clause.
Under section 3 of the CCRA, the purpose of the correctional system is to contribute to the maintenance of a just society by carrying out sentences through the safe and humane custody and supervision of offenders. The correctional system must also provide adequate programs in penitentiaries and in the community, since all rehabilitation must promote the reintegration of offenders into the community
as law-abiding citizens.
Section 4 of the CCRA sets out the principles that guide the CSC in achieving its purpose, notably that the protection of society be the paramount consideration in the correctional system.
By proposing amendments to clause 4 of Bill C-39, Parliament wishes to emphasize the protection of society as the paramount consideration, placing this consideration on its own in new section 3.1. However, some people believe that, in order to make communities safer in the longer term, it would instead be better to emphasize rehabilitation and the reintegration of offenders into society.15
Clause 4 of the bill also proposes adding the notions of the “nature and gravity of the offence” and the “degree of responsibility of the offender” to the requirement that the CSC be guided by the principle that the sentence be carried out having regard to all relevant available information.
The bill also proposes removing from current paragraph 4(d) the principle that the CSC “use the least restrictive measures consistent with the protection of the public, staff members and offenders” and replace it with the principle that the measures “are limited to what is necessary and proportionate to the objective for which they are imposed” (new paragraph 4(c)).
The bill also proposes removing from current paragraph 4(e) the principle that “offenders retain the rights and privileges of all members of society, except those rights and privileges that are necessarily removed or restricted as a consequence of the sentence” and replacing it with the new principle of rights and privileges that are “lawfully” removed or restricted (new paragraph 4(d)). This new concept is not explained in the bill.
According to the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network and Prisoners with HIV/AIDS Support Action Network (PASAN), the proposed amendments to subsections 4(d) and (e) of the CCRA “represent a radical shift in the guiding principles” of the CSC and are “contrary to Canadian and international law and policy concerning the rights of people in prison.”16
Clarifications were also made to other principles that guide the CSC. For example, it is important to note that the concept of mental health has been added to the principles, which means that the CSC, in achieving its purpose, must be responsive in its policies, programs and practices to the special needs of persons requiring mental health care, among others. The CSC is facing an enormous challenge regarding the management of offenders with mental health issues. According to the Correctional Investigator of Canada, Howard Sapers, the incidence of mental health problems among federally sentenced offenders is as much as three times higher than it is in the general population. He also notes that, upon reception at a correctional facility, 10% of male offenders and more than 20% of female offenders suffer from serious mental health problems.17
Clause 5 modifies the CCRA to expressly provide for the concept of a “correctional plan.” This concept is not new; it is already provided for in section 102 of the regulations. The bill provides for the correctional plan to be more specific as regards the characteristics and objectives for offenders, in particular to ensure their rehabilitation and reintegration as law abiding citizens.
To develop a correctional plan, the offender meets a correctional officer as soon as possible after his or her reception at the penitentiary. At that time, the offender is informed of the objectives concerning participation in programs and court-ordered obligations, in particular regarding restitution and compensation for victims and regarding child support.18 The correctional plan is aimed at fostering rehabilitation and reintegration into the community, and it sets out the administration’s expectations. It is expected that the offender will actively participate to fulfil the objectives of his or her correctional plan. To achieve this goal, clause 5 of the bill states that the commissioner of the CSC can “provide offenders with incentives to encourage them to make progress towards meeting the objectives of their correctional plans” and “shall take into account the offender’s progress towards meeting the objectives of their correctional plan.”19
As mentioned previously, the CSC must implement programs that promote the reintegration of offenders. However, problems of access were repeatedly raised by the Correctional Investigator and several witnesses. These problems include insufficient programming, lack of space in the programs and the inability of the CSC to offer programs in a timely fashion (before the parole eligibility date).
Some are concerned about the wording of clause 5 of the bill and its impact on an offender who wanted to participate in these programs but who was unable to do so prior to his or her eligibility dates for day and full parole. In its brief to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights, the Canadian Criminal Justice Association (CCJA) stated that “language which simply mandates ‘at the appropriate time in their sentence’ is insufficient to give inmates the right of access, if there are not adequate safeguards in place to ensure that such programs are available.”20
In order to give greater consideration to the victims of crime, the bill provides for their attendance at parole hearings and seeks to broaden the range of information that CSC and the PBC can disclose to them. While the former federal ombudsman Steve Sullivan considered these new procedures, which were also in the former Bill C-43, a good starting point, he still finds them insufficient. In his report entitled Toward a Greater Respect for Victims in the Corrections and Conditional Release Act, the ombudsman has stated that “While the Office of the Federal Ombudsman for Victims of Crime supported the Bill [C-43] as a step forward in responding to victims’ needs and concerns, there are a number of important issues that continue to remain unaddressed within it.” The ombudsman notes that the recommendations made in his report published in 2010 seek to better address victims’ needs and increase the effectiveness of the CCRA in their regard.21
Subsection 2(1) of the CCRA defines a “victim” as a person to whom harm was done or who suffered physical or emotional damage as a result of the commission of an offence. If the person dies or becomes ill or otherwise incapacitated, any of the following people may be considered a “victim”: the person’s spouse or the person with whom the deceased or incapacitated person was cohabitating for at least one year in a conjugal relationship, a relative or a dependant of the person, or anyone who in law or in fact had custody of or was responsible for the care or support of the person. The bill broadens the definition to include anyone who, in law or in fact, has custody of or who is responsible for the care and support of a dependant of the primary victim, if that person is deceased, ill or otherwise incapacitated.
Subclause 7(1) amends subparagraph 26(1)(b)(ii) of the CCRA, which authorizes the CSC to disclose certain information to a victim. When the interest of a victim clearly outweighs an invasion of the offender’s privacy, the victim now has the right to know not only the location of the penitentiary in which the sentence is being served but also the name of the penitentiary, the reasons for the offender’s transfer to another penitentiary and the name and location of that penitentiary. To the extent possible, the victim is also entitled to be notified ahead of time of the offender’s transfer to a minimum security institution, the name and location of that institution and the reasons for the transfer. In addition, the victim may be notified of the offender’s participation in programs designed to meet his or her needs and to contribute to the reintegration of the offender into the community. The victim may also be informed of any serious disciplinary offences the offender has committed as well as the reasons for any temporary absence.
Under the CCRA, the PBC is required to hold a hearing in certain cases, such as at first reviews for regular day parole in the case of offenders serving more than two years, first reviews for full parole, reviews for continued detention rather than statutory release, and reviews following the suspension or termination of parole or statutory release.22
Subclause 46(2) of the bill amends the CCRA to allow victims to present statements at PBC hearings. If attending the hearing, a victim may comment on the harm or damage resulting from the offence and its continuing impact, including concerns for his or her safety and the possible release of the offender. Even if the victim does not attend, the PBC may authorize presentation of the statement in an alternative format. In either case, a transcript of the statement must be provided to the PBC prior to the hearing. Also authorized to present a statement are persons described in subsection 142(3) of the CCRA, who were harmed or suffered a loss due to an act of the offender in respect of which a complaint was made to the police or Crown attorney or an information laid under the Criminal Code (Code), citing the continuing impact of the offender’s act, including any safety concerns and concerns regarding the offender’s potential release.
Clause 48 of the bill amends paragraph 142(1)(b) by providing for the notification of the victim if the offender waives the right to a hearing under subsection 140(1) and the offender’s reason for doing so where applicable.
The purpose of administrative segregation is set out in section 31 of the CCRA: to keep an inmate from associating with the general inmate population. The bill amends this provision, making the purpose of administrative segregation to maintain the security of the penitentiary or the safety of any person by not allowing an inmate to associate with other inmates.
Clause 14 adds a provision to the CCRA stating that the CSC may demand that an offender wear a monitoring device to monitor compliance with a condition of a temporary absence, work release, parole, statutory release or long-term supervision that restricts their access to a person or a specific region or requires the offender to remain within a geographical area. The offender is entitled to make representations in relation to the duration of the requirement.
The CCJA feels that this new provision raises several concerns, one of which is the fact that it is “insufficient to allow suitable redress.”23
Clause 15 of the bill amends section 61 of the CCRA to allow an institutional head to authorize, in writing, the search of vehicles at a penitentiary. The institutional head must have reasonable grounds to believe that there is a clear and substantial danger to the life or safety of persons or to the security of the penitentiary because evidence exists that there is contraband at the penitentiary or evidence of the planning or commission of a criminal offence. Authorization may also be given if it is necessary to search the vehicles in order to locate and seize the contraband or other evidence and avert the danger.
It should be noted that section 61 of the CCRA already provides that, in reasonable circumstances for security purposes, a staff member may, without individualized suspicion, conduct routine searches of vehicles at a penitentiary. In circumstances constituting an offence under section 45,24 a staff member who believes on reasonable grounds that contraband25 is located in a vehicle at a penitentiary may, with prior authorization from the institutional head, search the vehicle. Where the delay in obtaining the authorization would result in danger to human life or safety or the loss or destruction of the contraband, the staff member may search the vehicle without that prior authorization.
The CCRA provides that the Governor in Council may make regulations. Clause 19 of the bill modifies section 96 of the CCRA to authorize the following:
As previously mentioned, the PBC is an independent administrative tribunal that has authority to make parole decisions, based on hearings that it conducts or information provided by the CSC, or both.
The principles that guide the PBC (and the provincial parole boards in Ontario and Quebec) in achieving the purpose of conditional release, set out in section 101 of the CCRA, are amended by the bill to reflect the amendments made to the principles guiding the CSC set out in Part I of the Act. The bill amends the CCRA to ensure that, in determining cases, the protection of society is the paramount consideration for the PBC and the provincial boards and to ensure that the nature and gravity of the offence and the degree of responsibility of the offender are taken into consideration.
Clause 22 amends section 103 of the CCRA, increasing from 45 to 60 the maximum number of full-time members on the PBC (the maximum number of part-time members remains indeterminate).
Many federal offenders serve sentences for more than one offence. Some of those not serving a sentence are sentenced to multiple sentences on the same day; others, whose original sentence has not expired, are sentenced to additional sentences. This situation, which is far from unusual, complicates the calculation of sentences and therefore the eligibility dates for the various forms of conditional release.
Subsection 139(1) of the CCRA states that a person who receives an additional sentence before the original sentence has expired is deemed to have been sentenced to one sentence, which commences on the first day of the first of those sentences and ends on the expiration of the last sentence. The way in which the subsection is currently worded does not take into account persons not serving a sentence who are sentenced to multiple sentences on the same day.
Clause 44 of the bill replaces the heading “Multiple Sentences” with “Merged Sentences.” Clause 45 therefore amends subsection 139(1) by eliminating the notion of “additional sentences” so that the law clearly establishes that offenders who are not serving a sentence and who are sentenced on the same day to multiple sentences, like those who are subject to a sentence that has not expired and who receive an additional sentence, are deemed to have been sentenced to one sentence.
Section 120.1 of the CCRA sets out the time at which offenders who receive an additional sentence before their original sentence has expired are eligible for full parole.
Clause 25 of the bill amends section 120.1 by adding to subsection 120.1(1) rules governing full parole eligibility for offenders not serving a sentence who receive more than one sentence on the same day. Under this subsection, offenders are not eligible for full parole until the day on which they have served a period equal to the total of the following: the period of ineligibility in respect of any portion of the sentence constituted under subsection 139(1) that is subject to an order under section 743.6 of the Code or the similar section of the National Defence Act (section 140.4),26 and the period of ineligibility in respect of any other portion of the sentence. The new subsection takes into account current practice in the federal correctional system in determining the full parole ineligibility period for such offenders.
Clauses 27 and 28 increase the waiting time for new parole applications (day parole and full parole). When an application for day parole is denied or when parole is cancelled or terminated, no new application for day parole may be made until one year after the date of the PBC’s decision, or until any earlier time that the regulations prescribe or the PBC determines.
Under subclause 28(2) of the bill, if the PBC refuses to direct or grant full parole to the offender or cancels or terminates their parole, the offender must wait for one year after the date of refusal, cancellation or termination or for another shorter period prescribed by regulation or determined by the PBC.
The bill also provides that, for applications for day or full parole, an offender may not withdraw an application within 14 days before the beginning of the review unless the withdrawal is necessary and it was not possible to do so earlier due to circumstances beyond the offender’s control.27
Subject to a contrary order following a detention review, there is a presumption that all offenders not serving life or indeterminate sentences are entitled, after serving two thirds of their sentence, to be released and remain at large until the expiration of their sentence, sometimes referred to as “warrant expiry” (section 127 of the CCRA). Clause 31 clarifies when an offender whose parole or statutory release has been revoked becomes eligible for statutory release. It is the day on which the offender has served either two thirds of the sentence remaining on the day the offender is recommitted to custody or, if an additional prison sentence is imposed after the offender is recommitted to custody, two thirds of the sentence starting on the date of recommitment and ending on expiration of the sentence, including the additional sentence.
Clause 31 also adds a subsection establishing the new statutory release date for offenders who receive an additional sentence while on release, and whose parole or statutory release is suspended rather than revoked. They are required to serve from the earlier of the day on which they are recommitted to custody as a result of suspension of their parole or statutory release and the day on which they are recommitted to custody as a result of the additional sentence:
a) any time remaining before the statutory release date in respect of the sentence they are serving when the additional sentence is imposed; and
b) two thirds of the period equal to the difference between the length of the sentence that includes the additional sentence and the length of the sentence that they are serving when the additional sentence is imposed.
Clause 32 adds a section regarding statutory release provisions for young people who are convicted under paragraphs 42(2)(n), (o), (q) or (r) of the Youth Criminal Justice Act and who are transferred to a penitentiary under subsections 89(2), 92(2) or 93(2) of that Act. The new provision provides that these young people are entitled to statutory release on the day on which the custodial portion of their youth sentence would have expired.
Subclause 34(1) requires that, more than six months before the day on which an offender serving two years or more that includes a sentence for a Schedule I or II offence is entitled to be released on statutory release, the CSC refer the case for detention to the PBC and provide the PBC with all relevant information in its possession if it deems that:
Under the current Act, offenders for whom the PBC has prohibited release before their sentence expires may be granted an escorted temporary absence for medical reasons only. Clause 35 of the bill adds the possibility of such an absence for administrative reasons, including, for example, the transfer of the offender to another penitentiary.
The PBC may impose special conditions on statutory release to protect society or facilitate the successful reintegration of the offender, including a residency condition by which the offender must live in a community-based residential or psychiatric facility.28 Subsection 133(4.1) of the CCRA currently allows a residency condition only if it is believed that an offender may commit a Schedule I offence before the expiration of his or her sentence and so may present an undue risk to society. Clause 36 amends subsection 133(4.1) to allow a residency condition on the basis that the offender is likely to commit a criminal organization offence.29
Clause 39 of the bill amends section 135 of the CCRA, governing the possible suspension, termination or revocation of an offender’s parole or statutory release, if he or she breaches a condition of parole, or commits another offence and receives an additional sentence. Subclause 39(1) now provides for an automatic suspension where the offender receives an additional sentence, other than an intermittent sentence (under section 732 of the Code) or a conditional sentence being served in the community (under section 742.1 of the Code), which suspension takes effect the day the new sentence is imposed. The PBC, commissioner of the CSC or designate may issue a warrant to apprehend the offender whose parole or statutory release has been suspended and recommit him or her to incarceration until the suspension is cancelled, parole or statutory release is terminated or revoked, or the sentence expires. A warrant for the transfer of the offender to a federal penitentiary may also be issued, if the offender has been committed to another facility.
Clause 39 provides that a suspension due to an additional sentence be referred to the PBC within the prescribed period.30 Subclause 39(4) provides that the PBC, on referral to it, may, at the request of an offender serving a sentence of two years or more, grant an adjournment. A member of the PBC or the person designated may also postpone the review if satisfied that the offender will, by reoffending before the expiration of their sentence, present an undue risk to society. The PBC can then terminate the release when the risk is due to circumstances beyond the offender’s control and revoke it in any other case. If the Board is not satisfied that the risk to reoffend would present an undue risk to society, it may cancel the suspension. If the offender is no longer eligible for parole or statutory release, the PBC cancels the suspension or terminates or revokes the parole or statutory release.
As already occurs under the CCRA, the PBC may decide to cancel the suspension if it considers it necessary and reasonable and it can reprimand the offender, issue alternate release conditions or delay the cancellation for up to 30 days.
Subclause 39(5) provides that if the PBC cancels the offender’s suspension of parole, the date of eligibility for parole is determined under sections 119 to 120.3 of the CCRA. If that date is later than the cancellation date, the offender is granted day parole or full parole on the eligibility date, where applicable and subject to the new subsection 135(6.3). This subsection provides that the PBC may review the file before parole resumes and on the basis of new information, and may cancel or terminate parole. Under the new subsection 135(6.4), if the decision to cancel or terminate parole is made without a hearing, the PBC shall within the period prescribed by the regulations review and either confirm or cancel its decision.
Clause 42 adds the new section 137.1 to the CCRA to allow any peace officer to arrest an offender without warrant for a breach of a condition of their parole, statutory release or unescorted temporary absence. However, officers may not arrest an offender without warrant if they believe on reasonable grounds that the public interest may be satisfied without arresting the person, having regard to all the circumstances, including the need to establish the identity of the person or prevent the continuation or repetition of the breach, or if they have no reason to believe on reasonable grounds that, if they do not arrest the person, the person will fail to report to their parole supervisor.
Clause 50 makes an amendment to allow a number of part-time members and not more than six full-time members to be appointed to the Appeal Division of the PBC. The members are designated by the Governor in Council, on the recommendation of the Minister, from among the members appointed under section 103 of the CCRA.
Clause 51 adds section 154.1 to the CCRA, stating that members of the PBC are not competent or compellable witnesses in any civil proceeding relating to any matter coming to their knowledge in the course of their functions under the CCRA or any other federal Act. The objective is to allow board members to consider and comment on the relevance and reliability of information from witnesses without being concerned that they may later have to testify in proceedings between parties.
The CCRA required a parliamentary review of its operation and provisions five years after its coming into force,31 and in November 1998 the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights tasked a subcommittee with this review. In May 2000, the subcommittee released its report, containing 53 recommendations.32 The government responded in November that same year.33 The government also conducted its own public consultation in 1998,34 culminating in a separate report on possible changes.35 As was mentioned previously, bills have been introduced to implement some of the recommendations in these reports, but all died on the Order Paper. As a result, the CCRA has been amended in only a few respects since its enactment in 1992.36
In 2007, the government also tasked a special committee with reviewing the CSC’s operational priorities, strategies and business plans. This committee, the CSC Review Panel, released its report, A Roadmap to Strengthening Public Safety, in October 2007.
Many of the clauses in the bill aim to implement the recommendations of the CSC Review Panel (2007) that was heavily criticized by Jackson and Stewart in their 2009 document, A Flawed Compass: A Human Rights Analysis of the Roadmap to Strengthening Public Safety, which we discussed earlier.
Moreover, in its brief to the committee, the CCJA said it was “somewhat disappointed” with Bill C-39, saying it offers “a more punitive approach with greater restrictions on parole grants, longer periods of incarceration and less effort to reduce imprisonment rates.”37
Unescorted Temporary Absenceb (CCRA, s. 115; Code, s. 746.1) |
Day Parole (CCRA, 119; Code, s. 746.1) |
Full Parole (CCRA, s. 120) |
Statutory Release (CCRA, s. 127) |
|
---|---|---|---|---|
1st degree murder | 22 years | 22 years | 25 years (Code, s. 745)c | N/A |
2nd degree murder | 7 to 22 years | 7 to 22 years | 10 to 25 years (Code, s. 745)c | N/A |
Other life sentence | 4 years | Full parole – 6 months | 7 yearsd | N/A |
Dangerous offenders | 4 yearse | 4 years | 7 years (Code, s. 761) |
N/A |
Sentence of 2 years or more |
1/6 of sentence (max.: 3.5 years) (min.: 6 months) |
Full parole – 6 months (min.: 6 months) |
1/3 of sentence (max.: 7 years) |
2/3 of sentence |
Exceptions (e.g., illness) |
(CCRA, s. 115(2)) | (CCRA, s. 121) | (CCRA, s. 121) | Detention (CCRA, s. 129 et seq.) |
Delayed parolef | 1/2 of sentence (max.: 10 years) (Code, s. 743.6) |
|||
Notes: | ||||
a. In this table, CCRA means Corrections and Conditional Release Act, and Code means Criminal Code. | ||||
b. Eligibility for work release is identical (CCRA, subsection 18(2)). | ||||
c. Application for reduction of parole eligibility after 15 years served (Code, s. 745.6). | ||||
d. Less time in pre-trial detention (between arrest and conviction). | ||||
e. “Maximum security” offenders are not eligible for unescorted temporary absences (CCRA, subsection 115(3)). | ||||
f. This procedure covers offences set out in Schedule I (offences involving violence) and Schedule II (serious drug-related offences) of the CCRA and organized crime offences (Code, s. 743.6). |
SCHEDULE I
(Subsections 107(1), 129(1) and (2), 130(3) and (4), 133(4.1) and (4.3), and 156(3))
1. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Criminal Code, that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 75 (piratical acts);
(a.1) section 76 (hijacking);
(a.2) section 77 (endangering safety of aircraft or airport);
(a.3) section 78.1 (seizing control of ship or fixed platform);
(a.4) paragraph 81(1)(a), (b) or (d) (use of explosives);
(a.5) paragraph 81(2)(a) (causing injury with intent);
(b) subsection 85(1) (using firearm in commission of offence);
(b.1) subsection 85(2) (using imitation firearm in commission of offence);
(c) subsection 86(1) (pointing a firearm);
(d) section 144 (prison breach);
(e) section 151 (sexual interference);
(f) section 152 (invitation to sexual touching);
(g) section 153 (sexual exploitation);
(h) section 155 (incest);
(i) section 159 (anal intercourse);
(j) section 160 (bestiality, compelling, in presence of or by child);
(k) section 170 (parent or guardian procuring sexual activity by child);
(l) section 171 (householder permitting sexual activity by or in presence of child);
(m) section 172 (corrupting children);
(n) subsection 212(2) (living off the avails of prostitution by a child);
(o) subsection 212(4) (obtaining sexual services of a child);
(o.1) section 220 (causing death by criminal negligence);
(o.2) section 221 (causing bodily harm by criminal negligence);
(p) section 236 (manslaughter);
(q) section 239 (attempt to commit murder);
(r) section 244 (discharging firearm with intent);
(s) section 246 (overcoming resistance to commission of offence);
(s.1) subsections 249(3) and (4) (dangerous operation causing bodily harm and dangerous operation causing death);
(s.2) subsections 255(2) and (3) (impaired driving causing bodily harm and impaired driving causing death);
(s.3) section 264 (criminal harassment);
(t) section 266 (assault);
(u) section 267 (assault with a weapon or causing bodily harm);
(v) section 268 (aggravated assault);
(w) section 269 (unlawfully causing bodily harm);
(x) section 270 (assaulting a peace officer);
(y) section 271 (sexual assault);
(z) section 272 (sexual assault with a weapon, threats to a third party or causing bodily harm);
(z.1) section 273 (aggravated sexual assault);
(z.2) section 279 (kidnapping);
(z.21) section 279.1 (hostage taking);
(z.3) section 344 (robbery);
(z.31) subsection 430(2) (mischief that causes actual danger to life);
(z.32) section 431 (attack on premises, residence or transport of internationally protected person);
(z.33) section 431.1 (attack on premises, accommodation or transport of United Nations or associated personnel);
(z.34) subsection 431.2(2) (explosive or other lethal device);
(z.4) section 433 (arson – disregard for human life);
(z.5) section 434.1 (arson – own property);
(z.6) section 436 (arson by negligence); and
(z.7) paragraph 465(1)(a) (conspiracy to commit murder).
2. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Criminal Code, as they read immediately before July 1, 1990, that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 433 (arson);
(b) section 434 (setting fire to other substance); and
(c) section 436 (setting fire by negligence).
3. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Criminal Code, chapter C-34 of the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1970, as they read immediately before January 4, 1983, that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 144 (rape);
(b) section 145 (attempt to commit rape);
(c) section 149 (indecent assault on female);
(d) section 156 (indecent assault on male);
(e) section 245 (common assault); and
(f) section 246 (assault with intent).
4. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Criminal Code, chapter C-34 of the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1970, as they read immediately before January 1, 1988, that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 146 (sexual intercourse with a female under 14);
(b) section 151 (seduction of a female between 16 and 18);
(c) section 153 (sexual intercourse with step-daughter);
(d) section 155 (buggery or bestiality);
(e) section 157 (gross indecency);
(f) section 166 (parent or guardian procuring defilement); and
(g) section 167 (householder permitting defilement).
5. The offence of breaking and entering a place and committing an indictable offence therein, as provided for by paragraph 348(1)(b) of the Criminal Code, where the indictable offence is an offence set out in sections 1 to 4 of this Schedule and its commission:
(a) is specified in the warrant of committal;
(b) is specified in the Summons, Information or Indictment on which the conviction has been registered;
(c) is found in the reasons for judgment of the trial judge; or
(d) is found in a statement of facts admitted into evidence pursuant to section 655 of the Criminal Code.
6. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act:
(a) section 4 (genocide, etc., committed in Canada);
(b) section 5 (breach of responsibility committed in Canada by military commanders or other superiors);
(c) section 6 (genocide, etc., committed outside Canada); and
(d) section 7 (breach of responsibility committed outside Canada by military commanders or other superiors).
SCHEDULE II
(Subsections 107(1), 129(1), (2) and (9), 130(3) and (4), and 156(3))
1. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Narcotic Control Act, as it read immediately before the day on which section 64 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act came into force, that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 4 (trafficking);
(b) section 5 (importing and exporting);
(c) section 6 (cultivation);
(d) section 19.1 (possession of property obtained by certain offences); and
(e) section 19.2 (laundering proceeds of certain offences).
2. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Food and Drugs Act, as it read immediately before the day on which section 64 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act came into force, that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 39 (trafficking in controlled drugs);
(b) section 44.2 (possession of property obtained by trafficking in controlled drugs);
(c) section 44.3 (laundering proceeds of trafficking in controlled drugs);
(d) section 48 (trafficking in restricted drugs);
(e) section 50.2 (possession of property obtained by trafficking in restricted drugs); and
(f) section 50.3 (laundering proceeds of trafficking in restricted drugs).
3. An offence under any of the following provisions of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act that was prosecuted by way of indictment:
(a) section 5 (trafficking);
(b) section 6 (importing and exporting);
(c) section 7 (production); and
(d) (e) [Repealed, 2001, c. 32, s. 57].
4. The offence of conspiring, as provided by paragraph 465(1)(c) of the Criminal Code, to commit any of the offences referred to in items 1 to 3 of this schedule.
* Notice: For clarity of exposition, the legislative proposals set out in the bill described in this Legislative Summary are stated as if they had already been adopted or were in force. It is important to note, however, that bills may be amended during their consideration by the House of Commons and Senate, and have no force or effect unless and until they are passed by both houses of Parliament, receive Royal Assent, and come into force. [ Return to text ]
That’s really important, I think, because some judges look at restitution and say, “Well, this guy is going to jail. He doesn’t have any money.” We know that offenders make some money when they’re in prison. We also know that victims actually appreciate, even if the total restitution isn’t paid, that efforts are made by the offender. I think it actually has a benefit for the offender as well. It makes the crime real.House of Commons, Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security, Evidence, 20 April 2010, 1610 [Steve Sullivan, Federal Ombudsman for Victims of Crime]. [ Return to text ]
Every person commits a summary conviction offence who (a) is in possession of contraband beyond the visitor control point in a penitentiary; (b) is in possession of anything referred to in paragraph (b) or (c) of the definition “contraband” in section 2 before the visitor control point at a penitentiary; (c) delivers contraband to, or receives contraband from, an inmate; (d) without prior authorization, delivers jewellery to, or receives jewellery from, an inmate; or (e) trespasses at a penitentiary. [ Return to text ]
(a) an intoxicant, (b) a weapon or a component thereof, ammunition for a weapon, and anything that is designed to kill, injure or disable a person or that is altered so as to be capable of killing, injuring or disabling a person, when possessed without prior authorization, (c) an explosive or a bomb or a component thereof, (d) currency over any applicable prescribed limit, when possessed without prior authorization, and (e) any item not described in paragraphs (a) to (d) that could jeopardize the security of a penitentiary or the safety of persons, when that item is possessed without prior authorization. [ Return to text ]
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