Close X
Tuesday, January 14, 2025
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Lays Out New Framework For Ensuring Right To Timely Criminal Trial

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jul, 2016 01:47 PM
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada, citing a "culture of complacency" in the justice system, has set out a new framework for determining whether a criminal trial has been unreasonably delayed.
     
    In a potentially groundbreaking 5-4 decision Friday, the high court said the old means of determining whether a person's constitutional right to a timely trial had been infringed was too complex and unpredictable.
     
    The Charter of Rights and Freedoms says someone charged with an offence has the right to be tried within a reasonable time.
     
    Under the new framework, an unreasonable delay would be presumed should proceedings — from the criminal charge to conclusion of a trial — exceed 18 months in provincial court, or 30 months in superior court.
     
    However, these benchmarks are not set in stone.
     
    The Crown could challenge the notion that a delay is unreasonable by demonstrating "exceptional circumstances," a majority of the court said in its reasons.
     
    These circumstances could include something unforeseen and beyond the Crown's control, such as a sudden illness, or a case requiring extradition of an accused from another country. They might also arise in "particularly complex" cases that involve disclosure of many documents, a large number of witnesses or a significant need for expert evidence.
     
     
    In addition, a delay may be unreasonable even if it falls below the newly prescribed time limits. However, the defence would have to establish that it took meaningful steps to expedite the proceedings and show the case lasted "markedly longer" than it should have. 
     
    The Supreme Court said that as a transitional measure for cases already in the system, the new framework must be applied "flexibly and contextually."
     
    The court said a key problem with the previous system, which flowed from a 1992 high court ruling, was that long delays were considered reasonable unless the accused could show there was actual harm to his interests — a consideration that will not figure in the new framework.
     
    The right to be tried within a reasonable time is central to the administration of Canada's criminal justice system, wrote Justices Michael Moldaver, Andromache Karakatsanis and Russell Brown on behalf of the majority.
     
    "An unreasonable delay denies justice to the accused, victims and their families, and the public as a whole."
     
    However, unnecessary procedures and adjournments, inefficient practices and inadequate institutional resources have been "accepted as the norm and give rise to ever-increasing delay," the ruling said.
     
    The old framework failed to address this "culture of complacency," and participants in the justice system — police, Crown counsel, defence lawyers, courts, provincial legislatures and Parliament — were not encouraged to "take preventative measures to address inefficient practices and resourcing problems," the court said.
     
     
    The Supreme Court made the decision in ruling that the British Columbia drug convictions of Barrett Richard Jordan must be set aside due to an unreasonable delay.
     
    In a dissenting opinion, a minority of the court agreed the charges against Jordan should be stayed, but called the new framework for gauging delays "unwarranted and unwise," saying it could lead to thousands of prosecutions being tossed out. 
     
    If time limits are to be set out, Parliament — not the court — should do it, wrote Justice Thomas Cromwell on behalf of the minority, which lamented a lack of evidence on which to set the ceilings of 18 and 30 months.
     
    "For the vast majority of cases, the ceilings are so high that they risk being meaningless," Cromwell said. "They are unlikely to address the culture of delay that is said to exist. If anything, such high ceilings are more likely to feed such a culture rather than eliminate it."
     
    In a companion decision Friday, the Supreme Court affirmed that Kenneth Gavin Williamson's sexual assault convictions should be stayed due to delays in his case.
     
    A majority of the court said that at nearly three years, the relatively straightforward case took far longer than it should have, and the delay was unreasonable under either the old or new framework.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Changing Auto Insurance To Allow Lawsuits Against Drunk Drivers

      Don McMorris, the minister responsible for Saskatchewan Government Insurance, brought in the bill on Tuesday.

    Saskatchewan Changing Auto Insurance To Allow Lawsuits Against Drunk Drivers

    Saskatchewan Government Says It Can't Afford To Give Teachers Full Pay Raise

    Saskatchewan Government Says It Can't Afford To Give Teachers Full Pay Raise
    Education Minister Don Morgan says the 1.9 per cent increase that was recently negotiated works out to about $18 million.

    Saskatchewan Government Says It Can't Afford To Give Teachers Full Pay Raise

    Alberta Announces Sweeping Six-year Overhaul Of School Curricula At Cost Of $64 Million

    Alberta Announces Sweeping Six-year Overhaul Of School Curricula At Cost Of $64 Million
    Eggen says his department will work with teachers and administrators to redefine six core subjects simultaneously, with all the work done within six years.

    Alberta Announces Sweeping Six-year Overhaul Of School Curricula At Cost Of $64 Million

    Rates Of Chronic Disease Higher Among Aboriginals: Cancer Care Ontario

    The organization says rates of disease are higher among first nations, Inuit and Metis populations than their non-aboriginal counterparts.

    Rates Of Chronic Disease Higher Among Aboriginals: Cancer Care Ontario

    Wildfire Loss To Oilsands At Least 30 Million Barrels Worth $1.4 Billion

    CALGARY — Analysts say lost oilsands production from the Fort McMurray wildfires could top 30 million barrels and cost the industry upwards of $1.4 billion.

    Wildfire Loss To Oilsands At Least 30 Million Barrels Worth $1.4 Billion

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News
    OTTAWA — Canada's broadcast regulator is forcing English-language TV stations to air at least seven hours a week of local news, and creating a new fund to help the smaller ones pay for it as part of a "rebalancing" of the country's television landscape.

    CRTC Announces New Fund, Minimum Programming Hours, For Local TV News