Close X
Monday, December 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

High court upholds B.C. man's voyeurism conviction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2023 11:38 AM
  • High court upholds B.C. man's voyeurism conviction

OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has overturned a British Columbia court ruling and restored two voyeurism convictions against a former Metro Vancouver minor hockey coach.

Randy Downes had coached minor hockey and children's baseball in Burnaby and Coquitlam for 30 years when he was charged in 2016 after border agents found images on his phone as he returned to Canada from Washington state.

All the images involved youths who were clothed and none were deemed pornographic, but Downes was convicted of two counts of voyeurism in 2019 for separate events where surreptitious cellphone photos were taken of two youths in their underwear in hockey changing rooms.

He was 62-years old when he was handed a suspended sentence in 2020 and placed on six months of probation.

The B.C. Court of Appeal rejected the lower court ruling in a split decision last year, finding that a conviction of voyeurism requires the subject of the photo to be in a place where it "can reasonably be expected" nudity will occur at the time the photo is taken.

In the unanimous Supreme Court of Canada decision, Justice Mahmud Jamal says the Criminal Code section used to convict Downes does not include a "temporal component," so the Crown did not need to prove the photos were taken in a place where nudity is reasonably expected at that time.

Downes violated a law that protects the sexual integrity of persons in specific places, writes Jamal.

"It does not require the person to be actually nude, exposing intimate parts of his or her body, or engaged in sexual activity; it suffices if they are in a place where a person may reasonably be expected to be in such a state, such as a changing room, toilet, shower stall, or bedroom," he writes.

Observation or recording in such "safe places" violates trust, says Jamal, noting that the result can be "emotional and psychological harm, even if the person is not observed or recorded when nude."

Lawyers for Downes also challenged the constitutionality of the voyeurism laws during the case in the B.C. Court of Appeal, but Jamal says questions about the law being "unconstitutionally overbroad" were not addressed by B.C.'s highest court.

The same questions were raised during the appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, but Jamal declined to rule on them, writing that the issue "has not been properly raised in the courts below" and would "require the Court to address an important Charter issue in a factual vacuum."

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada welcomes record 226,450 Indian students in 2022

Canada welcomes record 226,450 Indian students in 2022
India was closely followed by China and the Philippines with 52,165 and 23,380 students, respectively.  In 2021, a total of 444,260 new study permits took effect, an increase from the 400,600 in 2019.

Canada welcomes record 226,450 Indian students in 2022

Liberals mum on Japan's invite to timber treaty

Liberals mum on Japan's invite to timber treaty
The organization currently includes 37 exporters of timber and 38 countries that import it, including all other G7 states. Canada was among the signatories to the 1983 treaty that originally created the organization, but Stephen Harper's Conservative government pulled out of it in 2013.

Liberals mum on Japan's invite to timber treaty

MPs could expand election interference study

MPs could expand election interference study
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said last week that Canadian voters alone decided the last federal election, playing down the suggestion that China tried to unduly sway the outcome. The committee has been studying foreign interference in the 2019 federal election since November.    

MPs could expand election interference study

First Nation to release school grave search info

First Nation to release school grave search info
The Tseshaht First Nation is presenting its search results in Port Alberni, B.C., after 18 months of planning and operations at the former site of the Alberni Indian Residential School. Tseshaht Nation officials say children from at least 100 Indigenous communities attended the school when it operated from 1900 to 1973.

First Nation to release school grave search info

Man charged in downtown Vancouver shooting

Man charged in downtown Vancouver shooting
The Vancouver Police Department says the 32-year-old has been charged with attempted murder and discharging a firearm. In an earlier statement after the Sunday afternoon shooting, the department said officers were working on East Hastings Street around 2:30 p.m. when the 31-year-old victim was repeatedly shot.

Man charged in downtown Vancouver shooting

University of British Columbia midwifery expanded

University of British Columbia midwifery expanded
The expansion from 28 to 48 seats, includes a dozen new spots in the bachelor of midwifery program and eight positions in the midwives bridging program, helping internationally educated midwives to become registered to practise in B.C.

University of British Columbia midwifery expanded