Date: 20110714
Docket: IMM-5414-10
IMM-5415-10
Citation: 2011 FC 877
Ottawa, Ontario, July
14, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam
Justice Snider
Docket: IMM-5414-10
BETWEEN:
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THE MINISTER
OF CITIZENSHIP
AND
IMMIGRATION
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Applicant
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and
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B046
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Respondent
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Docket:
IMM-5415-10
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AND BETWEEN:
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THE MINISTER
OF CITIZENSHIP
AND
IMMIGRATION
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Applicant
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and
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B047
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Respondent
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I. Introduction
[1]
In
these Reasons for Judgment, I am addressing two applications for judicial
review involving two foreign nationals who arrived in Canada on board the “MV Sun Sea” in August 2010. These judicial review applications are two
of approximately 61 applications brought by the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration [the Minister], as Applicant, regarding decisions made by members
of the Immigration and Refugee Board, Immigration Division [the ID] in which the
foreign nationals were ordered to be released from detention.
[2]
Court
File No. IMM-5414-10 involves a foreign national known as B046, allegedly a
Tamil male from Sri Lanka. Court File No. IMM-5415-10 relates to a female Tamil
known as B047 who claims to be the spouse of B046. B046 and B047 were held in
detention, through two detention reviews, from August 13 to September 15, 2010,
on the basis that the Minister was unable to establish their identities.
[3]
Following
a detention review on September 15, 2010, a member of the ID [the Member]
issued a “Release or Imposition of Terms and Conditions Order” for each of B046
and B047 [the Orders]. The terms of release were identical and consisted
basically of requirements to provide a security deposit of $1000, to report to
CBSA officials once per week, to surrender any passport or overseas identity
documents obtained subsequent to release and “to continue to cooperate with
CBSA to establish your identity to its satisfaction”. One set of reasons for
the two Orders was provided orally to the parties at the conclusion of the detention
review hearing.
[4]
In
these judicial reviews, the Minister seeks an order quashing the Member’s
decision and the Orders. For the reasons that follow, the application for
judicial review will be allowed.
II. Issues
[5]
The
Respondents raise the threshold issue of whether, in view of the fact that B046
and B047 have been released, the questions before this Court are now moot and
should not be heard.
[6]
The
Minister argues that the matter is not moot and submits the following issues
for determination:
1.
Did
the Member err by failing to limit his review under s. 58(1)(d) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27 [IRPA] to an assessment of
the reasonableness of the Minister’s efforts to establish identity?
2.
Did
the Member fail to provide “clear and compelling reasons” for departing from
the ID’s previous decisions to continue detention?
3.
Did
the Member misconstrue s. 248 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Regulations, SOR/2002-227 [the Regulations]?
[7]
For
the reasons that follow, I have concluded that the matter is not moot and that
the decision and the Orders should be quashed.
III. Background
[8]
The
“MV Sun Sea” arrived in Canadian waters on August 13, 2010 with 492 migrants on
board [the Sun Sea migrants]. The offloading and processing of the persons on board
was, as described by one member of the ID, “a monumental task”.
[9]
One
cannot ignore the unique context of the Sun Sea migrants. The persons on board
were purported to be Tamils from Sri Lanka. There was a serious possibility
that some of the migrants had ties to the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam
[LTTE], a
group designated as a terrorist organization in Canada; such persons would be
inadmissible to Canada. While many of the migrants apparently had no
documentation to support their claimed identity, officials who searched the “MV
Sun Sea” found many unclaimed identity documents that had been partially
destroyed. Significantly, there were a number of children on board; it was
important that the identity of the children and their alleged parents be established
to negate the possibility of child smuggling. These and other factors not
normally present in the arrivals of refugee claimants by other means created a
situation where the Minister placed a high value on establishing the Sun Sea migrants’ identity.
IV. Statutory Scheme
[10]
I
begin with an overview of the statutory scheme as it relates to detention under
the provisions of IRPA and the Regulations. “Detention and
Release” are dealt with in Division 6 of Part 1 of IRPA and in Part 14
of the Regulations.
[11]
The
migrants aboard the “MV Sun Sea” were detained upon their arrival in Canada
pursuant to s. 55(3) of IRPA, which permits detention on entry if
an officer: (a) considers it necessary to do so in order for the examination to
be completed; or (b) has reasonable grounds to suspect that the
permanent resident or the foreign national is inadmissible on grounds of
security or for violating human or international rights.
[12]
Section
54 establishes the ID as the “competent Division of the Board with respect to
the review of reasons for detention”. Detention reviews are mandated by s. 57
of IRPA. The first review is to take place within 48 hours of the
detention (s. 57(1)). A second review must take place at least once during the
following seven days and at least once every 30 days thereafter (s. 57(2)).
[13]
In
conducting detention reviews, the ID is bound by s. 58 of IRPA which provides
as follows:
Release — Immigration Division
58. (1) The
Immigration Division shall order the release of a permanent resident or a
foreign national unless it is satisfied, taking into account prescribed
factors, that
(a) they
are a danger to the public;
(b) they
are unlikely to appear for examination, an admissibility hearing, removal
from Canada, or at a proceeding that could lead to the making of a removal
order by the Minister under subsection 44(2);
(c) the Minister is
taking necessary steps to inquire into a reasonable suspicion that they are
inadmissible on grounds of security or for violating human or international
rights; or
(d) the Minister is of the opinion
that the identity of the foreign national has not been, but may be,
established and they have not reasonably cooperated with the Minister by
providing relevant information for the purpose of establishing their identity
or the Minister is making reasonable efforts to establish their identity.
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Mise en liberté par la Section
de l’immigration
58. (1) La
section prononce la mise en liberté du résident permanent ou de l’étranger,
sauf sur preuve, compte tenu des critères réglementaires, de tel des faits
suivants :
a) le résident permanent ou l’étranger constitue un danger pour
la sécurité publique;
b) le résident permanent ou l’étranger se soustraira
vraisemblablement au contrôle, à l’enquête ou au renvoi, ou à la procédure
pouvant mener à la prise par le ministre d’une mesure de renvoi en vertu du
paragraphe 44(2);
c) le ministre prend les mesures voulues pour enquêter sur les
motifs raisonnables de soupçonner que le résident permanent ou l’étranger est
interdit de territoire pour raison de sécurité ou pour atteinte aux droits
humains ou internationaux;
d) dans le cas où
le ministre estime que l’identité de l’étranger n’a pas été prouvée mais peut
l’être, soit l’étranger n’a pas raisonnablement coopéré en fournissant au
ministre des renseignements utiles à cette fin, soit ce dernier fait des
efforts valables pour établir l’identité de l’étranger
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[14]
As we
can see from the words of s. 58(1) of IRPA, in determining whether any
of the grounds for continued detention have been met, the ID must take into
account the factors prescribed by the Regulations. Further direction in
this regard is set out in s. 244(c) of the Regulations, which states
that “the factors set out in this Part [of the Regulations] shall be taken
into consideration when
assessing whether a
person … is a foreign national whose identity has not been established”.
Section 247(1) of the Regulations deals specifically with the factors to
be considered when detention on the grounds of identity is being considered:
Identity not
established
247. (1) For the purposes of paragraph 244(c), the
factors are the following:
(a) the foreign national's cooperation in
providing evidence of their identity, or assisting the Department in
obtaining evidence of their identity, in providing the date and place of
their birth as well as the names of their mother and father or providing
detailed information on the itinerary they followed in travelling to Canada
or in completing an application for a travel document;
(b) in the case of a foreign national who
makes a claim for refugee protection, the possibility of obtaining identity
documents or information without divulging personal information to government
officials of their country of nationality or, if there is no country of
nationality, their country of former habitual residence;
(c) the destruction of identity or travel
documents, or the use of fraudulent documents in order to mislead the
Department, and the circumstances under which the foreign national acted;
(d) the provision of contradictory
information with respect to identity at the time of an application to the
Department; and
(e) the
existence of documents that contradict information provided by the foreign
national with respect to their identity.
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Preuve de
l’identité de l’étranger
247. (1) Pour l’application de l’alinéa 244c), les
critères sont les suivants :
a) la collaboration
de l’intéressé, à savoir s’il a justifié de son identité, s’il a aidé le
ministère à obtenir cette justification, s’il a communiqué des renseignements
détaillés sur son itinéraire, sur ses date et lieu de naissance et sur le nom
de ses parents ou s’il a rempli une demande de titres de voyage;
b) dans le cas du
demandeur d’asile, la possibilité d’obtenir des renseignements sur son
identité sans avoir à divulguer de renseignements personnels aux
représentants du gouvernement du pays dont il a la nationalité ou, s’il n’a
pas de nationalité, du pays de sa résidence habituelle;
c) la destruction,
par l’étranger, de ses pièces d’identité ou de ses titres de voyage, ou
l’utilisation de documents frauduleux afin de tromper le ministère, et les
circonstances dans lesquelles il s’est livré à ces agissements;
d) la communication,
par l’étranger, de renseignements contradictoires quant à son identité
pendant le traitement d’une demande le concernant par le ministère;
e) l’existence
de documents contredisant les renseignements fournis par l’étranger quant à
son identité
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[15]
If there are grounds for
detention, s. 248 of the Regulations sets out additional factors to be
considered:
Other factors
248. If it
is determined that there are grounds for detention, the following factors
shall be considered before a decision is made on detention or release:
(a) the reason for detention;
(b) the length of time in detention;
(c) whether there are any elements that can assist in
determining the length of time that detention is likely to continue and, if
so, that length of time;
(d) any unexplained delays or unexplained lack of
diligence caused by the Department or the person concerned; and
(e) the
existence of alternatives to detention.
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Autres critères
248. S’il
est constaté qu’il existe des motifs de détention, les critères ci-après
doivent être pris en compte avant qu’une décision ne soit prise quant à la
détention ou la mise en liberté :
a) le motif de la détention;
b) la durée de la détention;
c) l’existence d’éléments permettant l’évaluation de la durée
probable de la détention et, dans l’affirmative, cette période de temps;
d) les retards inexpliqués ou le manque inexpliqué de diligence
de la part du ministère ou de l’intéressé;
e) l’existence de
solutions de rechange à la détention
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V. Previous detention
reviews
[16]
As
noted, this judicial review concerns B046 and B047 whose final detention reviews
were held jointly on September 15, 2010 before the Member. Prior to the
September 15, 2010 detention review hearing, each had been the subject of
earlier reviews.
•
A
detention review for B047, together with five other women, was held on August 18,
2010 and, along with one other female detainee, a second review was held on
August 25, 2010. In both hearings, an Order of Detention was issued indicating
that detention would be continued for reasons of identity.
•
A
detention review for B046, together with four other migrants, was held on August
18, 2010 and a second review was held on August 24, 2010. In both hearings, the
member of the ID issued an Order of Detention indicating that the detention
would be continued for reasons of identity.
[17]
From
the beginning, the Minister expressed concerns regarding the Sri Lankan
identity documents. The Canada Border Services Agency [CBSA] officials carried
out the difficult task of examining and verifying identity documents. The first
step was to determine whether the documents had been tampered with or altered.
This step was carried out by forensic experts in Canada.
[18]
Once
it was confirmed that a national identity card [NIC], or other relevant
identity document, submitted by a migrant aboard the “MV Sun Sea” had no
evidence of alteration and that the document displayed characteristics and
printing methods generally associated with an authentic document, CBSA
officials moved to the second step. The second step involves establishing the
authenticity of the issued documents.
[19]
The
following description of and reasons for the second part of the document
verification was described by the Minister’s counsel at the detention review
hearing for B047, and one other person, on August 25, 2010 (B047, Certified Tribunal
Record [CTR], p.49, April 12, 2011):
[R]esearch from the Immigration and Refugee Board’s
Research Directorate, which is included with the document that the Minister
disclosed at the outset of the hearing, suggests that there have been [issues]
with documents directly being fraudulently obtained. The research indicates
that there have been Sri Lankan national identity cards issued as a result of
bribery. Reports from 2004, upon which the Research Directorate relied, make
reference to there having been a massive national identity card racket that involved
employees of the Sri Lankan government’s Registration of Persons Department and
that involved the issuance of fraudulent national identity cards for exorbitant
prices.
There is also reference in this research to
documents having been obtained in the names of deceased individuals and there
is reference to documents having been obtained upon the submission of
fraudulent documents. In other words, fraudulent documents were provided to
that department and it was based on those documents that a national ID card was
issued or that national identity cards were issued.
There is evidence in these documents that Sri Lankan
officials began to take action to address this problem but that these actions
did not substantially start until 2006. I note that in the [case of B047],
their documents were issued in 2000 and 2004 respectively. It is not the
Minister’s submission that these documents were fraudulently obtained, it is
our submission that we are currently not satisfied of the identity of the
persons based on these documents alone and that further investigation must take
place prior to the Minister being satisfied of the identities of the persons
concerned.
[20]
It
is important to note that the Minister’s submissions in this regard were
supported by documentary evidence that formed part of the record. In sum, the
Minister’s submission, in the previous detention reviews as well as the one
before the Member, was that, prior to 2006, Sri Lankan identity cards had “some
serious security breaches” (B047, CTR, p.57, April 12, 2011) that warranted
further investigation. The position of the Minister, throughout all of the
detention reviews, was – and continues to be – that the Minister is not
satisfied with the identity of the persons and that he is taking reasonable
steps to determine the identities.
[21]
The
member of the ID who presided at the detention review for B047 on August 18,
2010 concluded that detention should continue, notwithstanding that the NIC for
B047 had not been altered. The member accepted the Minister’s argument,
concluding that “it is reasonable at this point that the Minister seek
additional documentation, which would hopefully assist in verifying that this
is, in fact, a properly issued identity card” (B047, CTR, p.58, April 12,
2011).
[22]
The
situation for B046 was different. His identity card presented problems at the
first stage of verification. The analysis unit who carried out the examination
of the NIC commented as follows:
The ragged edges of an inner layer of laminate can
be seen protruding from between the front and rear layers around the perimeter
of the card. The ragged edges are an indication that the laminate has been cut.
[23]
This
evidence was presented to the Member of the ID at the detention review hearing
of September 15, 2010 – the subject of this judicial review.
VI. Mootness
[24]
The
Respondents filed their further memoranda of argument on June 2, 2011 – less
than one week before the hearing of this matter. For the first time, the
Respondents raised the argument that the matters of this judicial review are
moot. They argue that the release of B046 and B047, pursuant to the Orders of
the ID, has removed any live controversy between the parties. I do not agree.
[25]
The
Respondents rely on the decision of this Court in B045 v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (May 26, 2011) IMM-1015-11 [B045], where
I stated the following:
This
is because the Court of Appeal, in XXXX [XXXX v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FCA 27 [referred to as “Ocean Lady”],
has already ruled that, once a detainee is released from detention, the
question becomes moot. In that context, the Court of Appeal commented that:
“there are cases pending which raise issues similar to those before us in this
appeal and which will likely come to this Court for determination”. This is not
one of those cases. The only possible resolution of the problems faced by those
lawyers and interested organizations will come from a case involving a “live
controversy” – that is, a situation where a person remains in detention. In
every other case, the matter becomes moot.
[26]
The
problem with the submission of the Respondents on this point is that they have
not recognized that the nature of the dispute between the parties in Ocean
Lady, above, and B045, above, is fundamentally different from the
dispute before me in these two cases. As stated by Justice Nadon, speaking for
the majority of the Court of Appeal in Baron
v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2009 FCA 81, [2010] 2 FCR 311, at
paragraph 29, “the determination of the mootness issue depends on the proper
characterization of the controversy that exists between [the parties]”.
[27]
The decision
in Baron, above, is very helpful. In that case, the decision in dispute
was a decision of an enforcement officer not to defer removal beyond a given
date. By the time the application for judicial review was heard, the date for
removal had passed. While the trial judge (Baron v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 341, 324 FTR 133) had concluded that
the matter was moot, the majority of the Court of Appeal did not agree. The key
consideration was the nature of the dispute. The trial judge concluded that the
proper characterization of the dispute was whether an applicant should be
removed, and is obliged to leave, on the scheduled removal date. Justice Nadon
did not agree. At paragraph 28, he described the situation:
To
begin with, it is important to make clear what the appellants were seeking when
they requested deferral of their removal from Canada on February 15, 2007. As
the enforcement officer says in her decision, the appellants' request was put
forward on the grounds that they had an outstanding H&C application [which
the appellants say they had attempted to file in March 2003] and that it was in
the best interest of their Canadian-born children that removal be deferred
until the H&C application had been dealt with. In other words, the
appellants were not simply asking that they not be removed on February 15,
2007, but that their removal not take place until the determination of their
H&C application.
[Emphasis
added.]
[28]
Justice
Nadon agreed with the parties that the
proper characterization of the dispute was whether the appellants should be
removed prior to the determination of their H&C application. Since there
had been no determination of that issue, the Court found that there was still a
live controversy between the parties and that the trial judge had erred by
concluding that the matter was moot.
[29]
The situation
before me is analogous to that before the Courts in Baron, above. What
was the Minister seeking when he requested the continued detention of the
Respondents? The Minister was seeking the continuation of the detentions until
the identity of B046 and B047 had been established. That is the proper
characterization of the dispute between the parties. In the course of the
hearing, the Minister advised the Court that identity had still not been
established for B046 and B047. On the same reasoning as applied by Justice
Nadon in Baron, above, the matter is not moot, in spite of the release
of the Applicants.
[30]
Moreover,
the context of B045, above, and Ocean Lady, above, was very
different from the facts before me. In each of those cases, the decision under
review was a decision by the ID to detain the affected person. The applicants
in those cases were the individuals who were disputing their continued
detention. The dispute between the detained person and the Minister was simply
whether the individual should be released or the detention continued. The
individuals were not asking the ID to release them until some subsequent event.
Once the individuals were released in subsequent detention reviews (and no
judicial review commenced by the Minister), the only issue before the ID –
whether detention should be continued – had completely disappeared. There was
no live controversy.
[31]
Thus,
for the cases at bar, I conclude that the matter is not moot and should be
considered by this Court.
VII. Standard
of Review
[32]
In general,
detention review decisions are fact-based decisions which attract deference;
the standard of review is reasonableness. For questions of law, the standard of
review is correctness (See, for example, Panahi-Dargahlloo v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 1114, 357 FTR 9, at paras 21-22; Walker v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 392, [2010]
FCJ No 474 (QL), at paras 23-26).
[33]
On the
standard of reasonableness, the Member’s decision should stand unless the
reasoning process was flawed and the resulting decision falls outside the range
of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts
and the law (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, at
para 47).
[34]
When applying
the standard of correctness, a reviewing court shows no deference to the
decision-maker’s reasoning process. After undertaking its own analysis of the
question, the Court will either agree or disagree with the conclusion of the ID.
Where it disagrees, the Court will substitute its own view and provide the
correct answer (Dunsmuir, at para 50).
VIII. Analysis of Issues
A. Issue
#1: Did the Member err by failing to limit his review under s. 58(1)(d)
to an assessment of the reasonableness of the Minister’s efforts to establish
identity?
[35]
The Minister
submits that, instead of limiting himself to ensuring that the Minister was
conducting an ongoing investigation in good faith, as required by s. 58(1)(d)
of IRPA, the Member erred by: (a) shifting the onus of establishing
identity onto the Minister; (b) dictating how the Minister should conduct his
investigation; and, (c) making the determination that identity was in fact
established.
[36]
As reflected
in s. 58(1) of IRPA, Parliament has made it clear that there is a
presumption that a detainee is to be released, except in defined situations.
One of those specific exceptions is a lack of identity. From the words of s.
58(1)(d), it is obvious that Parliament has identified a lack of confirmed
identity as a separate ground for detention. More than this, the ID is directed
on how it is to consider the question of identity. It is not the opinion of the
ID that is determinative; rather the focus is on the Minister’s opinion. To
continue detention under this provision, the ID need only be “satisfied” that the
Minister’s “opinion” meets the requirements of s. 58(1)(d) of IRPA.
[37]
Section
58(1)(d) begins with the requirement that the Minister be of the opinion that
identity of the foreign national has not been, but may be, established.
From the words that follow, however, it is evident that a simple opinion based on
lack of proven identity is insufficient to support
continued detention. There are
two different situations where the Minister’s opinion will warrant continued
detention:
1.
if the
foreign national has not reasonably cooperated by providing relevant
information to establish identity; OR
2.
the Minister
is making reasonable efforts to establish identity.
[38]
What then is
the task of the ID when considering whether detention should be continued where
the Minister raises the issue of identity? It appears to me that the first step
of the analysis is simple; all that is required is a statement from the
Minister that identity has not been established but that it may (or could) be.
The second job of the ID will depend on the facts of each case, as put forward
by the Minister. The Minister may present evidence that the foreign national
has not “reasonably cooperated”, in which case the ID will assess whether the
evidence demonstrates that the foreign national has not “reasonably cooperated”
by putting forward relevant information for the purpose of establishing their
identity. In the alternative scenario, the Minister may present evidence to
show that he is making reasonable efforts to establish identity. In this case,
the ID will examine the evidence to see whether the efforts to establish
identity are “reasonable”. It is not for the ID to establish identity; rather,
the role of the ID is to assess whether the Minister is doing his job in
establishing identity. If the ID is satisfied that the efforts are reasonable
or that the foreign national has not “reasonably cooperated”, the grounds for
detention, pursuant to s. 58(1)(d), are established.
[39]
In the cases
of B046 and B047, at the detention review in question, the Minister asserted
that detention should continue because: (a) identity had not been, but may be,
established; and (b) that he was making reasonable efforts to establish their
identity. In this context, the mandate of the Member was to assess the
reasonableness of the Minister’s efforts to establish identity.
[40]
The Member,
at several points in his decision, appears to have agreed that the Minister was
taking reasonable steps to establish their identity. However, when read in its
entirety, it is obvious that the Member does not accept the reasonableness of
the Minister’s efforts. The Member questions the need for many of the actions
of the Minister. For example, the Member states the following:
I
have about 14 years of experience as an immigration adjudicator and I would say
that in this case – in these cases – the Minister has raised the bar on what
will satisfy him with respect to the identity of persons on the MV Sun Sea
… The method of arrival, that is by ship, seems to have struck a nerve and led
to the Minister requiring or setting this higher standard.
[41]
The Member
then goes on to describe how, in the past, the Minister has treated individual
Tamil refugee claimants arriving by air and how, in those case, the Minister
has recommended release without the need for a secondary review of identity
documents. The Member also comments directly on the possible explanations for
the lamination problems. In other words, the Member would have been satisfied
with the identity documents of B046 and B047. The Member is saying, in effect,
that he does not believe that the extra steps are reasonable because the
Minister has never done it that way before. By contrasting the investigative
steps in earlier cases, the Member is substituting his own view of what ought
to have satisfied the Minister for the cases at bar. The problem is that this
goes beyond the mandate of the Member, as set out in s. 58(1)(d) of IRPA.
The Member is not assessing whether the steps were reasonable or unreasonable;
rather, he is deciding whether the steps were correct.
[42]
It is
difficult to assess what role this analysis played in the Member’s decision
that B046 and B047 should be released. Had the Member been less critical of the
Minister’s actions on the question of identity, would he have given the lack of
identity more weight in his application of s. 58(1) of the IRPA? I
am unable to answer that question. In the circumstances, I conclude that the
Member’s analysis was so problematic as to constitute a reviewable error.
B. Issue #2: Did the ID
fail to provide “clear and compelling reasons” for departing from the ID’s
previous decision to continue detention?
[43]
The decision
under review was the outcome of the third detention review hearing for each of
B046 and B047. Detention had been continued for B046 on August 18 and August 24
and for B047 on August 18 and August 25.
[44]
If a member
of the ID chooses to depart from prior decisions to detain an individual, the
member must set out “clear and compelling reasons” for doing so and must deal
with those earlier decisions in a meaningful way (Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration) v Thanabalasingham, 2004 FCA 4, [2004] 3 FCR
572 [Thanabalasingham]; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Iyile, 2009 FC 700, 348 FTR 12, at paras 34-37; Sittanpalam
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FC 1352, [2005]
FCJ No 1734 (QL)).
[45]
As pointed
out in the jurisprudence, the record in detention reviews is built up on a
continuous basis from one review to the next. The Court of Appeal provided guidance
on what is required if a member departs from the earlier review, in Thanabalasingham,
above, at paragraphs 11 to 13:
[F]or
example, the admission of relevant new evidence would be a valid basis for
departing from a prior decision to detain. Alternatively, a reassessment of the
prior evidence based on new arguments may also be sufficient reason to depart
from a prior decision.
The
best way for the Member to provide clear and compelling reasons would be to
expressly explain what has given rise to the changed opinion, i.e. explaining
what the former decision stated and why the current Member disagrees.
However,
even if the Member does not explicitly state why he or she has come to a
different conclusion than the previous Member, his or her reasons for doing so
may be implicit in the subsequent decision. What would be unacceptable would be
a cursory decision which does not advert to the prior reasons for detention in
any meaningful way.
[46]
Within this
framework, I turn to the decision in issue. What had changed since the previous
decision? What was the same? What reasons did the Member provide for departing
from the earlier decision?
[47]
The changes
were as follows:
•
another month
had passed; B046 and B047 had now been in detention for 33 days;
•
the Minister
had received the report that the NIC of B046 showed evidence that the document
had been relaminated; and
•
B046 claimed
to have a brother in Canada prepared to post a $1000 bond.
[48]
The facts or
circumstances that had not changed were the following:
•
the evidence
with respect to authenticity of documents from Sri Lanka had not changed;
•
the Minister
had confirmation that the NIC of B047 had not been altered – on its face, it
was a valid NIC;
•
the Minister
had not completed the second phase of the document verification that was
intended to address the question of whether the NICs were fraudulently issued;
and
•
the Minister
continued to take steps to establish identity.
[49]
In the
earlier decisions, the ID had concluded that continued detention was
appropriate. In essence, nothing of substance had changed from the earlier
detention reviews. The need for a secondary analysis of the identity documents
was before the members in those reviews and was before this Member. The process
for such verification was outlined to the Member, and had not changed since the
earlier reviews. The Minister, while unable to provide definitive timelines at
this hearing, clearly outlined the steps that were being taken. As acknowledged
by the Member, the Minister “committed to providing timelines at the next
detention review”. If anything, the discovery of tampering with B046’s NIC
presented a stronger argument for continued detention. An offer of a bond from
a “brother” may not be a changed circumstance when identity has not been
established.
[50]
Nowhere in
his decision does the Member acknowledge or discuss these earlier detention
review decisions. By failing to provide “clear and compelling reasons” (or any
reasons) to depart from the ID’s prior decisions, the Member committed a
reviewable error (see Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v Li, 2008 FC 949, 331 FTR 68 at para 99).
C. Issue
#3: Did the Member misconstrue s. 248 of the Regulations?
[51]
The third
issue raised by this judicial review is whether the ID misconstrued s. 248 of
the Regulations. While his decision is not as clear as it could be and
incorporates some language that suggests otherwise, I do not conclude that the
Member erred in his approach to s. 248.
[52]
Section
244(c) of the Regulations requires that the factors set out in Part 14
of the Regulations be taken into consideration when assessing “whether a
person … is a foreign national whose identity has not been established”. The
specific factors in respect of identity are listed in s. 247(1) of the Regulations.
[53]
If – and only
if – it is determined that there are grounds for detention, s. 248 of the Regulations
becomes relevant. The ID is instructed to consider five different factors
before it concludes whether the person should be detained or released.
[54]
The purpose of
s. 248 is to address the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, RSC
1985, App II, No 44, Sched B [the Charter] issues that can arise from an
indeterminate detention. The factors in s. 248 were first articulated in Sahin
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1995] 1 FC 214, 85
FTR 99, [Sahin] at para 30, aff’d 184 NR 354, 97 FTR 80 (note)(FCA). In
that decision, Justice Rothstein (as he was then) commented that detention
decisions must be made with section 7 of the Charter in mind. Justice
Rothstein outlined a list of factors that were to be taken into account.
Justice Rothstein emphasized that the amount of time that is anticipated until
a final decision on whether the affected person would remain in Canada was a consideration that “deserves significant weight” (Sahin, above, at para
31). When the current Regulations came into force on June 28, 2002, Justice
Rothstein’s “list” of considerations formed – almost verbatim – the content of
s. 248.
[55]
Provided that
the ID addresses all of the factors and has regard to the evidence before it in
assessing the factors in s. 248, this Court should be reluctant to intervene in
the ID’s decision to release or detain.
[56]
In this case,
the Minister argues that the Member treated the alternatives to detention,
pursuant to s. 248(e) of the Regulations, as determinative. I do not
agree. The Member clearly directed his mind to all of the factors of s. 248.
Specifically, the Member acknowledges that the reason for detention was
identity, and that “identity is fundamental to immigration processing in Canada”. While observing that the length of detention has been “relatively short”, he notes
that:
[T]he
migration integrity officer investigation is currently without timelines and,
by logic, would likely be a very long process because of the sheer volume of
documents that will need to be assessed. Potentially [B046 and B047] could face
a long period in detention. It’s unpredictable at this time, although I
acknowledge that the Minister is committed to providing timelines at the next
detention review.
[57]
Finally, the
Member reviewed the alternatives to detention, concluding that:
In
the circumstances of these cases, with two young children, solid Canadian
reception, continued detention, despite the opinion of the Minister with
respect to identity and the reasonableness of its efforts, seems unnecessary
and there exists an alternative to detention that I consider will be effective
and appropriate in these circumstances.
[58]
The Member
gave considerable weight to the length of the detention and to the lack of any
reasonable estimate as to how long it would take the Minister to complete the
document verification. He did not err in doing so; Sahin, above, teaches
that this is an important consideration. The Minister’s only response to the
question of “how long” was that he would provide timelines at the next
detention review. The fact that the Minister was taking concrete, reasonable
steps to establish the identities of B046 and B047 does not negate the fact
that the Minister was unable to provide the Member with any timelines. I might
not have given as much weight to this factor; but, that, on its own, does not
make the Member’s decision unreasonable.
[59]
The Minister
posits that it is inconsistent with the scheme of IRPA to assess
alternatives to detention if identity has yet to be determined. The Minister
argues that, once detention is maintained on the ground of identity, the scheme
of IRPA is clear that the ID cannot look at the question of alternatives
to detention.
[60]
I do not agree.
All of the factors of s. 248 are to be weighed. The Minister’s
interpretation of s. 248 would have identity issues trump all other factors in
s. 248. The regulation is not drafted in that manner and the scheme of IRPA
does not require such an interpretation.
[61]
I acknowledge
that identity should be a very important consideration. However, while a lack
of identity is obviously an important consideration for a s. 248 analysis, it
does not mean that the ID may not consider alternatives to detention. Indeed,
s. 58(1) of IRPA requires the ID to take into account the
prescribed factors. “Alternatives to detention” is listed as a factor under s.
248 of the Regulations. There is no exception for an identity question
under s. 58(1)(d).
[62]
The Minister
also argues that, in determining appropriate conditions of release, the Member
placed undue emphasis on the bond given by B046’s alleged brother. The Minister
submits that, in the absence of B046 having established his identity, it was
unreasonable for the Member to rely on a bond from a person whose link to B046
has not been established. I agree that the words used by the Member in this
regard seem to make an assumption of identity for B046 that has not yet been
established. If B046’s identity is not established, how can the Member be
certain that the proposed bondsperson is a brother of B046? However, I do not
see this as a material concern. While the exact relationship between B046 and
the bondsperson may be unproven, the fact is that someone with a connection with
B046 and B047 was prepared to post what the Member described as a “relatively
nominal bond in the form of a guarantee”. As I read the Member’s decision in
this regard, I do not believe that much, if any, weight was placed on the
relationship of B046 to the bondsman.
[63]
In view of
the record before the Member, I am not persuaded that he misconstrued s. 248 of
the Regulations. At times, in the decision, the Member could have been
more careful with his choice of language and could have provided a more
complete analysis. However, when the decision is read as a whole, the Member
addressed and weighed each of the factors outlined in s. 248 of the Regulations,
as required.
[64]
However,
while the Member approached s. 248 properly, the underlying foundation of his
analysis is flawed. Specifically, he did not accept the reasonableness of the
Minister’s efforts to assess identity and he failed to provide “clear and
compelling” reasons for departing from the previous detention review decisions.
Moreover, he appears to have substituted his own views of what was necessary to
establish identity for that of the Minister’s opinion. Accordingly, the
decision ought not to stand. Had the Member understood his role in assessing
the reasonableness of the Minister’s opinion on identity and had he turned his
mind to the earlier detention review decisions, the outcome may have been
different.
IX. Certified
Question
[65]
The Minister
submits the following question for certification:
Can the Immigration Division find
that there exists an alternative to detention and order the release of a
foreign national from detention under paragraph 248(e) of the [Regulations],
notwithstanding that the Immigration Division is satisfied that the Minister is
of the opinion that the identity of a foreign national has not been established
and that the Minister is making reasonable efforts to establish identity under
s. 58(1)(d) of the [IRPA] and other factors under paragraph 248 of the [Regulations]
weigh against release?
[66]
The
Respondents propose the following, somewhat broader question:
To what extent, if any, is the
Immigration Division authorized to release a foreign national whose continued
detention is sought pursuant to s. 58(1)(d) of the IRPA where the
Minister is of the opinion that the identity of the foreign national has not
been but may be established?
[67]
The problem
with the certification of either question is that the answer is not dispositive
of this judicial review. As I have concluded, the Member’s decision is flawed
in two different ways. First, the ID failed to have regard to the earlier
detention decisions for B046 and B047. Secondly, the ID improperly substituted its
view of what was necessary to establish identity for that of the Minister’s
opinion. Thus, any question with respect to the correct meaning and application
of s. 248 of the Regulations would not be determinative.
X. Conclusion
[68]
For these
reasons, the judicial review applications will be allowed, the decisions and
the Orders of the Member with respect to B046 and B047 will be set aside and
the matters sent back to the ID for re-determination. No question of general
importance will be certified.
[69]
On a final note, I wish to direct some comments to the ID.
When leave is granted in an application for judicial review, an order of the
Court is issued pursuant to Rule 14 of the Federal Courts Immigration and
Refugee Protection Rules, SOR/93-22 [the Rules]. A copy of the order
is sent to the Tribunal – in this case, the ID – who is required to send a copy
of the certified tribunal record [CTR] to the Court and the parties (Rule
14(4)). The CTR should include all material that was before the
decision-maker. Without the entire record, the parties and this Court are at
serious disadvantage in ensuring that justice is done. In the case of a detention
review decision, the CTR should include any previous decisions on detention
reviews and the material that relates to those decisions. In the cases of B046
and B047, the CTR initially provided was deficient; this created significant
problems in the judicial review. It would be helpful, I believe, if counsel for
the ID could consult with counsel for the parties to these proceedings to
ensure that, going forward, CTRs are compiled in a manner that is more helpful
and complete.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
the decisions
and the Release
or Imposition of Terms and Conditions Orders of the Member of the ID dated September 15, 2010 in
respect of B046 and B047 are quashed and the matters are referred back to the
ID for re-determination; and
2.
no question
of general importance is certified.
“Judith A. Snider”