Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Officials Advise Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale To Rethink Idea Of Public Sex Offender Databas

The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2017 01:18 AM

    OTTAWA — Federal officials have advised Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale to put the brakes on setting up a publicly accessible database of high-risk child sex offenders.

     

    The previous Conservative government ushered in legislation that opened the door to allowing the RCMP to create such a database as part of measures to crack down on child predators.

     

    An internal memo to Goodale from Public Safety officials says "a number of concerns have been raised" — from resource pressures to fears of vigilante-style attacks — that would support dropping the database idea.

     

    The Canadian Press used the Access to Information Act to recently obtain the March 2016 memo and other internal notes on the legislative measures.

     

    The proposed database would provide the public with a national inventory of high-risk child sex offenders in their communities and allow them to take appropriate precautions, the notes say.

     

    They indicate that officials recommended proceeding with elements of the legislation that impose new reporting requirements on registered sex offenders and allow for better information sharing between federal agencies.

     

     

    But officials suggested the department and RCMP would undertake a review and consult interested parties "for a fully informed assessment of the proposed new database and develop options for your consideration in moving forward."

     

    A Public Safety official said this week that "work on this initiative is ongoing."

     

    Conservative justice critic Rob Nicholson said the Liberal government should implement the database.

     

    "If a dangerous sex offender has been released or has moved into your neighbourhood, I think people have a right to know," Nicholson said.

     

     

    "The government should proceed with this. And if they've got issues with it, I think they should let the public know."

     

    The internal Public Safety notes say the database would consolidate information on high-risk offenders currently issued by police forces across the country and provide an additional tool for law enforcement to monitor offenders.

     

    It would also help federal departments carry out their mandates — for instance, providing Passport Canada with information that might result in revocation of a travel document, the notes say. In addition, the database could help foreign officials keep an eye on offenders who travel to their countries.

     

    Still, the Public Safety notes point out that measures already exist to notify the public regarding high-risk offenders.

     

    The federal prison service is required to provide information to local police when it believes an offender about to be released poses a threat. This information is used by police to decide whether public notification is necessary.

     

    Officials noted other concerns, including:

     

    — Possible regional differences in the information available in the database due to varying practices in provinces and territories;

     
     

     

    — Lack of new funding for the RCMP to create and operate the database;

     

    — Fears that many ex-offenders "go underground" to avoid the scrutiny and exposure of family members that comes from publication of their offences, address and other personal information. "This further inhibits effective law enforcement as police do not know the whereabouts of these offenders and are no longer able to monitor them to prevent possible reoffending";

     

    — Use of information in public sex offender registries in the United States to carry out vigilante actions;

     

    — Lack of evidence that such databases have a significant impact on reducing the rate of sex offences, compared with treatment and reintegration programs that have led to reductions in recidivism, often at a lower cost.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'I Think I Dated A Serial Killer': Saskatchewan Woman Dated Serial Senior Killer

    'I Think I Dated A Serial Killer': Saskatchewan Woman Dated Serial Senior Killer
    PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. — A Saskatchewan woman who briefly dated Elizabeth Wettlaufer said she figured the woman was a bit off, but "I didn't know she was that far off."

    'I Think I Dated A Serial Killer': Saskatchewan Woman Dated Serial Senior Killer

    Victim Of Abbotsford Homicide Identified As 41-Yr-Old Nektarios Pardalis

    Victim Of Abbotsford Homicide Identified As 41-Yr-Old Nektarios Pardalis
    Forty-one-year-old Nektarios Pardalis could not be revived when officers responded to what they describe as a suspicious circumstance.

    Victim Of Abbotsford Homicide Identified As 41-Yr-Old Nektarios Pardalis

    Condos, Townhomes Hottest Sellers In Metro Vancouver: Real Estate Board

    Condos, Townhomes Hottest Sellers In Metro Vancouver: Real Estate Board
    First-time buyers and people looking to downsize from their single-family homes are both competing for these two types of housing

    Condos, Townhomes Hottest Sellers In Metro Vancouver: Real Estate Board

    Man Found Guilty In B.C. Love Triangle Murder Handed Youth Sentence

    Man Found Guilty In B.C. Love Triangle Murder Handed Youth Sentence
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A man found guilty of killing a romantic rival in a schoolyard in Salmon Arm, B.C., has been sentenced as a youth.

    Man Found Guilty In B.C. Love Triangle Murder Handed Youth Sentence

    Three Suspects Arrested For Separate Sexual Offences On Transit System

    Three men have been arrested by Metro Vancouver Transit Police for separate sexual offences along the transit system.

    Three Suspects Arrested For Separate Sexual Offences On Transit System

    Accessing Child Porn Not Part Of Possession Offence, Appeal Court Rules

    TORONTO — The criminal charge of possessing child pornography does not include a lesser offence of accessing the lewd images, Ontario's top court ruled on Wednesday.

    Accessing Child Porn Not Part Of Possession Offence, Appeal Court Rules