Close X
Sunday, November 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Sep, 2015 12:50 PM
    OTTAWA — The Ontario Provincial Police have dropped an investigation into the RCMP's destruction of gun registry data, saying the alleged offences no longer exist under a back-dated, retroactive Conservative law passed last spring.
     
    Documents filed in court by the federal information commissioner's office include a letter from the OPP that lays out four potential offences by the RCMP when the national police force destroyed long gun registry records in 2012.
     
    The OPP letter, dated Sept. 22, details at length how Conservative changes buried in a highly controversial omnibus budget bill last spring close off every avenue for investigation of the alleged RCMP offences.
     
    "After giving the provisions described above detailed consideration, I am of the view that the retrospective aspect of the Bill C-59 amendments completely remove any criminal liability in relation to deletion of long-gun registry data by the RCMP," writes OPP Det. Supt. Dave Truax.
     
    The bill was passed just prior to the House of Commons rising for the summer.
     
    Parliament was subsequently dissolved in early August when Prime Minister Stephen Harper triggered the current election campaign.
     
    Information commissioner Suzanne Legault has launched a constitutional challenge of the government's retroactive changes to the legislation, called the Ending the Long-gun Registry Act, or ELRA.
     
    Legault issued a special report to Parliament last spring laying out how the RCMP knowingly destroyed registry files, even though it knew those records were part of an active investigation under the Access to Information Act, and even though the federal public safety minister had assured Legault's office that the Mounties would abide by the access law and preserve the data.
     
    Legault recommended charges be laid and Justice Minister Peter MacKay referred the matter to the public prosecutors' office on May 6, but the following day the government tabled an omnibus bill that retroactively wiped the offences from the legal code.
     
    The government also back-dated the changes to when the original bill to kill the gun registry was tabled in Parliament, months before it actually passed into law, wiping out "any request, complaint, investigation, application, judicial review appeal or other proceeding" related to the final six months of the registry's legal existence.
     
    The OPP letter states that it was looking into three possible offences under the Access to Information Act and one criminal offence, mischief to computer data.
     
    Word of the dropped police investigation came Tuesday as a large group of Canadian academics published an open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper saying the retroactive legal change "will be judged in the court of public opinion: citizens will be justifiably alarmed that their government has taken actions that have profound, negative implications for the practice of Canadian democracy."
     
    The letter, signed by some 80 academics, states that "a government should not decriminalize its own actions if they were illegal at the time they were committed. This requirement precludes laws that are retroactive as they would re-write history."
     
    Legault has said the back-dated legal changes — coming in the face of an active investigation and a finding of wrongdoing by her office — set a "perilous precedent" that could allow future governments to retroactively rewrite laws on everything from spending scandals to electoral fraud.
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair at the time called the changes "banana-republic behaviour" but parliamentary procedure experts said the retroactive law, while unorthodox, could not be stopped, and it received royal assent on June 23.
     
    Expert affidavits filed in Ontario Superior Court by Legault's office question Parliament's power to enact laws that retrospectively infringe on Canadians' quasi-constitutional right to government information.
     
    "Virtually all formulations of the rule of law principle — in Canada and elsewhere in peer common law jurisdictions — include the idea that laws should be prospective rather than retrospective or retroactive," says the 87-page affidavit by law professor Lorne Sossin of York University's Osgoode Hall.
     
    "The reasons for this are obvious. Imagine if a government that had acted corruptly could simply have legislation passed retrospectively altering the consequences of rules by which it operated so as to make illegitimate actions legitimate."
     
    The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that criminal punishments cannot be changed retroactively, but hasn't looked at the notion of retroactively absolving an act that was criminal at the time of the offence.
     
    Law professor Jamie Cameron of the University of Toronto notes in his affidavit that the Supreme Court made access to government information a quasi-constitutional right in 2010.
     
    "In doing so, the Court stated its commitment to 'open government,' declaring that 'access to information in the hands of public institutions can increase transparency in government, contribute to an informed public, and enhance an open and democratic society.'"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court
    Was Mike Duffy railroaded by a group of Stephen Harper's aides into telling the public he would repay his Senate expenses, or was Duffy the one shaking down the PMO?

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

    WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations

    WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations
    Dr. Ophira Ginsburg, a clinician and researcher at Women's College Hospital in Toronto, takes on the new role in Geneva on Oct. 1.

    WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations

    Indian Man Gets $3,000 And A Second Chance To Migrate To Canada

    Indian Man Gets $3,000 And A Second Chance To Migrate To Canada
    Dharmendrakumar Chandrakantbhai Patel's immigration application was rejected in 2014 on the grounds that he "had not supplied any of the documents allegedly requested

    Indian Man Gets $3,000 And A Second Chance To Migrate To Canada

    Watch: After Three Months, Ontario Woman Caught On Video Swiping Blooms From Grave

    Watch: After Three Months, Ontario Woman Caught On Video Swiping Blooms From Grave
    LONDON, Ont. — An unknown woman in London, Ont., has been caught on video repeatedly stealing flowers from a gravestone.

    Watch: After Three Months, Ontario Woman Caught On Video Swiping Blooms From Grave

    PQ Leader Peladeau Weds Longtime Love Julie Snyder In Grand Quebec City Wedding

    PQ Leader Peladeau Weds Longtime Love Julie Snyder In Grand Quebec City Wedding
    Parti Quebecois Leader Pierre Karl Peladeau had to wait for his bride, but the province's most publicized couple tied the knot at 7:45 pm Saturday at the historic Musee de l'Amerique francophone

    PQ Leader Peladeau Weds Longtime Love Julie Snyder In Grand Quebec City Wedding

    Quebec Premier Couillard open to legalizing UberX-style modes of transportation

    Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard is showing himself open to legalizing UberX-style means of transportation, despite opposition from the taxi industry.

    Quebec Premier Couillard open to legalizing UberX-style modes of transportation