Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court To Hear If Sex-Offender Registries Unfair To Mentally Ill

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2019 07:30 PM
  • Supreme Court To Hear If Sex-Offender Registries Unfair To Mentally Ill

TORONTO - The Supreme Court of Canada will have final say on the validity of laws requiring sex offenders to register when an accused is granted an absolute discharge after being found not criminally responsible.

 

In a decision on Thursday, the high court said it would hear the government's appeal of a ruling that declared the provisions unconstitutional for discriminating against the mentally ill.

 

The case involves a man charged with sexually assaulting his wife while in a manic state. He was found not criminally responsible in June 2002. The Ontario Review Board granted him an absolute discharge a year later and he has since led a "law-abiding and productive life," according to court records.

 

Nevertheless, under Christopher's Law enacted in Ontario in 2001, the man — identified only as G — was required to register as a sex offender for life. Among other things, he has to provide personal information to police, and report once a year to them.

 

Similar federal legislation, enacted in 2004, imposes the same requirements but allows termination of the obligation 20 years after the not criminally responsible finding.

 

G, 57, challenged the constitutionality of the registries as they apply to those found not criminally responsible and who have received an absolute discharge from a review board. Both Ottawa and Ontario argued the laws are in line with the charter, or are otherwise justified in a democratic society.

 

In November 2017, Superior Court Justice Thomas Lederer rejected G's challenge but the Ontario Court of Appeal sided with him in April.

 

The appellate court noted that people found guilty of sexual offences — but who then receive a discharge — are deemed by the Criminal Code not to have been convicted. As a result, they don't have to register as sex offenders.

 

However, those found not criminally responsible on mental health grounds are deemed to be not guilty and therefore can't use the same provisions. The Appeal Court said this amounts to discrimination against the mentally ill.

 

"The absence of any 'exit ramp' from the sex offender registries — apart from a termination order after 20 years in the case of (the federal registry) — reflects an assumption that persons who committed criminal acts while (mentally ill) do not change, but rather pose the same ongoing and indeterminate risk they posed at the time of the offence," the Appeal Court said. "This assumption feeds into the stereotypical notion that persons found (not criminally responsible) are inherently and indefinitely dangerous."

 

The court ordered G's information deleted immediately from the registries but gave governments 12 months to fix the offending legislation out of public safety concerns.

 

It's not clear when the Supreme Court will hear the case.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian Filmmakers Explore Female Bonds, Mother-daughter Relationships At TIFF

For Nicole Dorsey, director and writer of stylistic, psychological drama "Black Conflux," creating of the film's main character, Jackie, was about relaying her own experiences as a teenager.    

Canadian Filmmakers Explore Female Bonds, Mother-daughter Relationships At TIFF

Seven Times More Opioid Prescriptions Filled In Canada, U.S., Than Sweden: Study

Seven Times More Opioid Prescriptions Filled In Canada, U.S., Than Sweden: Study
Patients in Canada and the United States filled opioid prescriptions after minor surgery at a rate that was seven times higher than those in Sweden, reveals a new study that suggests the addictive pain drugs could be used more judiciously in North America.    

Seven Times More Opioid Prescriptions Filled In Canada, U.S., Than Sweden: Study

Ex-Pastor Convicted In Wife's Death Secretly Drugged Her, Crown Argues

TORONTO - Prosecutors are asking an Ontario judge to rule that a former pastor convicted in the death of his pregnant wife was the one who gave her a sedative before she drowned.

Ex-Pastor Convicted In Wife's Death Secretly Drugged Her, Crown Argues

Investigators Unable To Determine Cause Of Halifax Fire That Killed 7 Children

Investigators Unable To Determine Cause Of Halifax Fire That Killed 7 Children
HALIFAX - Fire officials in Halifax say investigators have been unable to identify the cause of a fire that killed seven children in their family home in February.    

Investigators Unable To Determine Cause Of Halifax Fire That Killed 7 Children

Federal Government Commits Cash For National Strategy To Fight Human Trafficking

Federal Government Commits Cash For National Strategy To Fight Human Trafficking
REGINA - The federal government is putting up tens of millions of dollars to fight human trafficking.    

Federal Government Commits Cash For National Strategy To Fight Human Trafficking

Ontario Man Charged With Conspiracy To Murder Couple Living In Jamaica

AJAX, Ont. - Police say a man from southern Ontario has been arrested after he allegedly plotted to murder a couple living in Jamaica.

Ontario Man Charged With Conspiracy To Murder Couple Living In Jamaica