Date: 20070518
Docket: DES-2-06
Citation:
2007 FC 533
Ottawa, Ontario, this 18th day of May 2007
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice
Mosley
BETWEEN:
THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
Applicant
and
MOHAMMAD MOMIN
KHAWAJA
Respondent
Let the attached
certified transcript of my Reasons for Judgment delivered orally from the Bench at Ottawa, Ontario on the 30'1'
day of March, 2007, now edited, be filed to comply with
section 51 of the Federal Court Act.
"Richard G. Mosley"
Court File Number: DES-2-06 IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF CANADA
BETWEEN:
The
Attorney General of Canada
Applicant
- and -
Mohammad
Momin Khawaja
Respondent
Transcript
of Proceedings heard at Ottawa, Ontario on
Friday, March 30, 2007, commencing at 10:03
a.m., before Mosley J.
REASONS
APPEARANCES:
L. Wall)
D.
Rasmussen)
L. Greenspon)
E.
Granger)
Court
Registrar Court Stenographer:
for the Applicant
for the Respondent
A. Therrien Marc Bolduc
2 Reasons
for Judgment
--- Upon commencing at Ottawa, Ontario, on Friday, March 30,
2007, at 10:00 a.m.
THE REGISTRAR: This Special Sitting of the Federal Court at Ottawa is now open. Presiding, the
Honourable Mr. Justice Mosley.
File no.
DES-2-06, The Attorney
General of
Canada, Applicant; and Mohammad Momin Khawaja, Respondent.
Ms. Linda
Wall and Mr. Derek Rasmussen appearing on behalf of the Applicant.
Mr. Lawrence Greenspon and Mr. Granger on behalf of the Respondent.
--- Mosley,
J., Presiding:
JUSTICE
MOSLEY: At the outset of this hearing
I propose to deal with a request received by letter from counsel for the Respondent late on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 that I recuse myself from
hearing this application.
This is an
application by the Attorney General of Canada
for the protection of information found
in documents, which the prosecution has disclosed or expects to disclose to the Respondent in
relation to charges pending against
him in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.
A trial of
those charges was set to
3 Reasons
for Judgment
begin on January 2, 2007, was adjourned to April 2 and again to
April 30, 2007.
On October 25, 2006, Crown counsel gave notice to
the Attorney General pursuant to section 38.01(1) of the
Canada Evidence Act that he
is required to disclose or expects to disclose
information that would potentially be injurious
to international relations or national security
or both in connection with the criminal proceedings.
The Attorney General brought this application on November 1,
2006, seeking an Order prohibiting disclosure of the allegedly injurious
information.
The matter
was thereafter case managed by•the
Chief Justice of the Federal Court. Dates for the filing of affidavit
evidence and cross-examinations thereon were fixed by the Chief Justice.
Some 23 volumes of redacted documents were provided to the Respondent.
,Cross-examinations
of six affiants who provided affidavits in support of the application were conducted on January 25 and 29 of this year. An amended application was served and filed by the Applicant
on February 7, 2007.
A fresh
affidavit accompanied by a
4 Reasons
for Judgment
revised 23 volumes of redacted materials was provided to the
Respondent on February 28, 2007.
I was
assigned to hear the matter as a Designated
Judge in mid-February. Counsel for the parties
were informed of this on February 15, 2007, by the Court Registry.
By Order of
the Chief Justice dated February 19, 2007,
dates for the service and filing of. the parties' memoranda of fact and
law were fixed, together with the date of today's hearing for oral submissions
on the merits of the application.
I met with
counsel in conference on March 6, 2007 to confirm the scheduled filing and hearing arrangements. At that time, no objection
was raised to my hearing the application.
On March
15, 2007, counsel for the Respondent served and filed a Notice of
Constitutional Question, indicating the Respondent's intent to challenge the constitution of validity of
subsection 38.11(2) of the Canada Evidence Act as amended
by the Anti-Terrorism Act Statutes of
Canada, 2001, Chapter 41, known before its enactment as Bill C36.
At the same
time, counsel served and filed a Notice of Motion to fix the deadline for
service and filing of the Respondent's memorandum of
5 Reasons
for Judgment
fact and law in relation to the constitutional challenge
as March 22, 2007, and a Motion for an Order extending the time for service and
filing of the Respondent's memorandum factum
of law on the merits of the application until March 27, 2007.
Again, no objection was raised at that time to
my hearing the matter. The motions for extensions to
fix the filing deadlines were granted by order, which I issued on March 20,
2007.
It has come to my attention that my role in these proceedings was the
subject of an article published in the online edition of MacLean's
Magazine,
macleans.ca, on March 23, 2007. This was
brought to my attention only this week.
This was a
follow-up to an earlier report in the magazine, which had highlighted my involvement in the development of Bill C-36, The Anti-Terrorism Act of 2001, and in
these proceedings.
The
follow-up report to this article cites comments from persons not involved in
the proceedings questioning. why counsel for
the Respondent, Mr. Greenspon, had
not brought a motion for recusal in light of my
involvement with. Bill C-36.
In the March 23 article, Mr. Greenspon is quoted as stating, among
other things, in relation
6 Reasons for Judgment
to my role
as a judge in these proceedings, I quote:
"I am
confident that he can do it in a fair and independent manner, irrespective of
any role that he played in drafting,"
-- alluding to my involvement
with Bill
C-36.
While
I thank Mr. Greenspon for this sentiment,
assuming it was accurate, it does not in any way preclude him from raising the
matter, even at this late stage, on behalf of his client.
Even
if counsel were to consent to my continued participation in this matter, the responsibility is mine to determine whether there
is any reason for me to disqualify
myself from hearing this application or the constitutional question.
On
March 26, relying by analogy upon a Supreme
Court rule that obliges counsel for the parties to raise such matters at
the earliest opportunity, .counsel for the
Attorney General wrote to invite the Court to consider whether I should
preside over the determination of the
constitutional question in light of my involvement with C-36.
In his
letter of March 28, Mr.
Greenspon states that he has now had the chance to
7 Reasons
for Judgment
review the proceedings of the Special Senate Committee on the subject
matter of Bill C-36, the evidence before the Standing Committee of the House
of Commons and on Justice and Human Rights in
relation to the Bill; and the Crown Factum in reply to his client's
application, challenging the constitutionality of the definition of "terrorism" and "terrorist
activity", which was filed before Mr. Justice Rutherford of the Ontario Superior Court last
year.
Mr.
Greenspon's letter cites the Chairman of the Special Senate Committee as having
described my role in relation to C-36 as being key in "drafting the. bill". Having reviewed those materials, Mr.
Greenspon states in his letter that:
"in
consideration of the above, the constitutional question now before the Court, the circumstances and focus on this
case"
He must ask that I recuse myself from any further hearing of this
application.
No
distinction was made between the determination of the constitutional question
and determination of the merits of the
application brought by the Attorney General under 38.04 of the Act.
As stated
by the Supreme Court of
8 Reasons
for Judgment
Canada in Wewaykum Indian Band v. Canada, (2003), 2 S.C.R. 259
at paragraph 59, impartiality of the judiciary is key to our judicial process
and must be presumed.
In that
decision, the Supreme Court of Canada
further made it clear that the burden is on the party arguing for
recusal to establish that the circumstances justify finding that the judge must
be disqualified. Actual bias is rarely raised in such circumstances. The question usually being is
whether or not there is a reasonable apprehension to bias.
This, as I
understand it, is the issue raised in the present case.
As was stated by the Supreme Court in Wewaykum at paragraph 60,
one standard has now emerged as the criterion for disqualification in
this regard.
The question to be asked, as expressed by de GrandPre J in Committee
for Justice and Liberty Against the National
Energy Board (1978), 1, S.C.R. 369
at page 394, is "what would
an informed person viewing the matter realistically and
practically -- and having thought the matter through -- conclude."
Implicit in the Respondent's request is the notion that the informed person would conclude it is more
likely than not that I would not decide this
9 Reasons
for Judgment
matter fairly, whether consciously or unconsciously, by reason of
my former employment.
In accepting the assignment to hear this case, as I have done routinely
since my
appointment to the Bench, I considered whether there was any
reason why I should not hear the matter .and conferred with the Chief Justice
about the issues presented by the application
and how they might relate to my prior involvement with the legislation.
The Chief Justice has authorized me to say that in assigning me to this
application, he was fully aware of my responsibilities with respect to Bill C-36 and my long involvement with criminal justice issues.
For the
record, my role as a senior public servant in
the Department of Justice was never to "draft legislation".
During my tenure, that was and I expect it remains the same today,
the function of legislative counsel, who in addition to their law degrees
receive university-based certification in that specialty.
Legislative counsel draft public bills in accordance with the
instructions issued by Cabinet subject to one proviso. Among the duties of the
Chief
10 Reasons
for Judgment
Legislative Counsel is the responsibility, delegated by the Minister, to
certify that any public bill conforms to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in accordance with the Department of Justice Act.
In
exercising that responsibility, legislative counsel receive the assistance of
departmental counsel who specialize in human rights matters. Neither the Legislation Branch nor the Human Rights Branch were my direct responsibility at any
time during my employment at the Department of Justice.
My role, in relation to the many bills that I was involved with for over
20 years in criminal law policy, was to provide
advice to the Minister in the development of legislative policy options
for consideration by Cabinet.
If a
decision was taken to introduce legislation,
my role was then to support the Minister in presenting the policy to Parliament, and if the bill were
adopted, to support its implementation.
To perform
that role, I attended Cabinet and Parliamentary committee meetings to answer questions about the proposed legislation, acted as
a media spokesperson, attended and
spoke at conferences to explain the bills.
Bill C-36
was no different, except for
11 Reasons
for Judgment
1
|
the scale and intensity of the work.
|
2
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The amendments to the Canada
Evidence
|
3
|
Act, which
were enacted through C-36, were the result
|
4
|
of decisions taken by Ministers and enacted by
|
5
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Parliament. The amendments were drafted by a
team of
|
6
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legislative counsel working with policy
counsel under
|
7
|
my general supervision.
|
8
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My role was to manage the
overall
|
9
|
process, not the minutiae of the drafting
process.
|
10
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While I -was described on occasion by others as
"the
|
11
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architect" or "the drafter of the
legislation", these
|
12
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characterizations are inaccurate and hyperbole at
best
|
13
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and never terms that I employed myself to
describe my
|
14
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role. However, I acknowledge that my involvement
was
|
15
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certainly high-profile and is a matter of public
|
16
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record.
|
17
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In considering this matter I
have had
|
18
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occasion to review my statements to the
Parliamentary
|
19
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committees and my published remarks about Bill
C-36 in
|
20
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general and respecting the Canada Evidence Act
|
21
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amendments in particular.
|
22
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As outlined in the
Respondent's
|
23
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memorandum of fact and law relating to the Notice
of
|
24
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Constitutional Question, the heart of the
|
2.5
|
constitutional challenge brought by the
Respondent is
|
12 Reasons
for Judgment
to the effect of the ex parte hearings provided for under
subsection 38.11(2), upon his ability to make full answer and defence in
the criminal proceedings.
In this regard it is worth noting that the
use of ex parte procedures in the context of section
38 predates Bill C-36. Indeed, as indicated by the references to its
history in the. Applicant's memorandum the procedure predates my tenure with
the Department of Justice, which began in 1982.
Bill C-36
elaborated upon the procedure to be followed, but did not.establish the
principle that hearings to review allegedly injurious information were to be
conducted ex parte and in camera.
I note
further that among the changes made in 2001, C-36 made it possible for any
person entitled to make representations to
the Court in respect of the
application to seek an ex parte hearing. In this case that would,
of course, include the Respondent.
The ex parte and in camera aspect of the procedure under section 38 received little attention in the Parliamentary consideration of the Bill,
possibly because there was to be no change in the principle that such hearings
be conducted in private.
13 Reasons
for Judgment
In any
event, I am satisfied from a review of my
comments at the time to the committees and in public fora that they were informative and descriptive in
nature and intended to assist Parliamentarians
and others to understand the scope and effect of the amendments.
It is
perhaps self-evident that any comments I made at that time would not reflect
the evolution of the law since then.
In
considering whether I should recuse myself from hearing this matter, I have
reviewed the
statement of Ethical Principles for
Judges, published
by the Canadian Judicial Council in 1998, and the related commentaries and jurisprudence. There is nothing in the statement of Ethical Principles directly on point .but the discussion is helpful particularly with respect to the guidelines relating to whether judges
should hear cases involving former clients, members
of the judge's former law firm, or lawyers from the government department in
which the judge practiced before appointment.
In that
context, there are three factors to be considered; first, whether there is a
conflict of interest; second, whether the test for reasonable apprehension of
bias would be met; and
14 Reasons
for Judgment
third, that the judge should not withdraw unnecessarily as to do so adds to the burden upon other members of the court
and contributes to delay in the courts.
The
principles recognize that for judges who formerly practiced for government, the
guidelines respecting involvement of former
law firms cannot be strictly applied.
It is recommended that in such circumstances the judge avoid sitting on
any case commenced in the particular local office of the government institution
prior to the judge's
appointment. That does not arise in this instance, as the case against Mr. Khawaja was initiated in 2004, after my
appointment.
I note that this was a consideration in the Weewaykum case to which I have already referred, as Justice Binnie had been
involved, albeit in a supervisory capacity
and many.years earlier with the very controversy which was before the
court on appeal.
There does
not appear to be any suggestion that I have any personal interest in the
outcome of this application or in the criminal proceedings that would
constitute a conflict of interest.
The effect
upon the workload of colleagues is always a concern when a judge is
15 Reasons
for Judgment
considering recusal; but, if necessary, arrangements can be made
for another judge to hear the matter.
The delay that this may occasion with respect to the termination
of this application and the criminal proceedings is also a factor to be taken
into consideration.
I am not
aware of any cases with circumstances directly on point, however I found
several decisions helpful.
In Morgentaler
versus the Queen, which dealt with a
motion before the Supreme Court of Canada on October 2, 1974, which is
unreported but reproduced in the Judicial Council's Commentaries on
Judicial Conduct at page 68, Chief Justice Laskin dismissed an application that Justice de Grandpre be
disqualified from hearing an appeal
because of comments he had made on the subject of abortion prior to his
appointment to the Bench.
Chief
Justice Laskin noted that all members of the
Court have, to varying degree, expressed views on questions which have legal connotations prior to their
appointment and stated that this was never a disqualifying consideration.
In an order issued November 4, 1999, in the matter of Arsenault-Cameron
v. Prince Edward
16 Reasons
for Judgment
Island, 1999, 3 S.C.R.
851, a case involving language rights under the Charter, Justice
Bastarache of the Supreme Court dismissed the
motion that he disqualify himself from participating in the appeal by
reason of a possible apprehension of bias arising from pre-appointment statements he had made as counsel in similar
cases.
At
paragraph 3 of his order, Justice Bastarache
quoted comments by Justice Cory in R.v.S, 1997 3 S.C.R.484 in
relation to the test for reasonable apprehension of bias.
Justice
Cory stated that the
requirement
for neutrality did not require judges to discount the life experiences that may
qualify them to preside over disputes.
In the Arsenault-Cameron
Order
at paragraph 4, Justice Bastarache referred
to a decision of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, delivered on
June 4, 1999, (South Africa (President) v. South African Rugby Football Union, [1999] S.A.J. No. 22 (QL)) in which it was held that no recusal
application could be founded on a
relationship of advocate unless the advocacy was regarding the specific case to
be heard.
Justice
Bastarache concluded that to
17 Reasons
for Judgment
succeed on
the motion, the applicant would have to show wrongful
or inappropriate declarations showing a state of mind that would sway
judgment.
Justice Bastarache proceeded to take part in the appeal and indeed
joined in writing the reasons for the Court on the constitutional question.
As stated by Professor Phillip Bryden in an article entitled Legal
Principles Governing the Disqualification of Judges, published
in the December 2003 edition of the Canadian Bar
Review at page 584, the relevant principle with respect to
extra-judicial statements is that we do not
expect judges to be devoid of
opinions, but to be open to persuasion in relation to them.
An analogous decision was rendered by the Privy Council inthe matter of Panton v. the Minister
of Finance of Jamaica, (2001), United Kingdom Privy Counsel Reports 33. In
that case, Justice Rattray, the former A€torney
General of Jamaica, took part in the appeal of a
challenge to the constitutionality of
legislation, which in his capacity as Attorney
General five years earlier, he had certified as constitutional.
Moreover,
he was, at that time, Minister of Justice and Member of the Parliament that
18 Reasons
for Judgment
enacted the
provision.
In
dismissing the ground that the Appellants had lacked an independent and
impartial tribunal, as required by the
Jamaican Constitution, Lord Clyde for the Privy Council, reviewed a
number of Commonwealth authorities on the question of whether an apparent or a
potential bias arises from such earlier association
with the legislation in question. The Privy Council concluded that it
did not.
In reaching
this conclusion, Lord Clyde did however note that the absence of any significant role played by Mr. Rattray in the
passing of the legislation was a point
of some importance. I believe, however, that a distinction must be drawn
between the role of the Minister who takes part in deciding the policy and
advocates for its adoption in Parliament and
that of the departmental counsel who acts in a supporting capacity to
the Minister.
Another
factor to be considered is the passage of
time. In Weewaykum, to which I referred earlier, Justice Binnie's involvement was some 15 years prior. In Panton, it was just 5 years. Both
decisions rely upon a judgment of the English Court of Appeal, Locabail
(U.K.) Limited versus Bayfield Properties Limited (2000), Queen's Bench
451, in which it was
19 Reasons
for Judgment
stated at
page 480, paragraph 25:
"...every
application must be decided on the facts and circumstances of the individual
case. The greater the passage of. time
between the event relied on as showing
a danger of bias and the case in which the objection is raised, the
weaker'(other things being equal), the objection will be."
In Weewaykum
the passage of time was a major factor in
the Court's determination that there could
be no reasonable apprehension of bias. In Panton, 5 years was
considered to be of some
significance
in diminishing the strength of any objection which could be made to the judge's
qualification to hear the case.
In the
present matter, the passage of time is just over 5 years.
I have also
taken into consideration decisions rendered by my Federal Court colleagues in
relation to the recusal motions.
In Charkaoui, 2004 F.C. 624, 2004 FCJ 757, Justice Simon Noel dismissed an application that he
disqualify himself on the ground that he had already disposed of questions
identical to those raised in the
20 Reasons
for Judgment
proceedings.
In arriving at that decision, Justice Noel
cited authorities in support of the proposition that
the mere prior involvement of a judge in an earlier proceeding does not,
without convincing evidence to the contrary, displace the presumption of
judicial integrity and impartiality.
My
colleagues, Justices Gibson and de Montigny
have also dealt with recusal motions arising from their prior public service careers, as have several past and present members of the Court who served
as Ministers of the Crown.
In
dismissing the disqualification motion in Hijos
v. Canada (Attorney General) 2004 FC 1738, Justice Gibson quoted the words of Justice JeanEudes Dube, a former Minister, in Fogel v.
Canada, (1999) FCJ. 129 in which he stated:
"Judges
do not descend from heaven, they come from various fields of activities. Some
of us are former academics, others were in the public service, others practiced
law in small towns or large firms. And some of us were in politics. The variety
of our individual careers is a rich source of
21 Reasons
for Judgment
knowledge and experience
for the courts. Once we took our Oath of office, we divorced ourselves from
our past and
dedicated ourselves to our new
vocation. Our duty is to render justice
without fear or favours." As did Justice Gibson, I adopt
those
words as my
own.
Taking all
of these factors into consideration, I am not
satisfied that an informed person viewing the matter realistically and
practically and having thought the matter through would conclude that a
reasonable apprehension of bias arises from my involvement with Bill C-36.
For that
reason, I would not recuse myself in
considering the constitutional issue presented by the Respondent, or the
merits of the application on the basis of my
prior association with the legislative process and involvement with Bill
C-36.
That being said, an alternative basis for considering
recusal occurred to me as I reviewed the
Respondent's memorandum of fact and law in relation to the
constitutional question.
Counsel for the Respondent notes that I have already heard ex parte•evidence
and
22 Reasons
for Judgment
representations
from the Attorney General in these proceedings with respect to the merits of
the application. Indeed, a considerable
amount of the Court's time has been devoted already to hearing the
testimony of ex parte affiants and in reviewing .
unredacted copies of the documents in question.
Counsel
suggests that the Court's consideration of the constitutional issue may be tainted by the evidence that has been heard thus
far, ex parte and in camera.
I am not
convinced that I would be unable to decide the constitutional question fairly
and impartially in the present
circumstances. Nor do I want to suggest that in any other case in which
a constitutional challenge is raised late in the proceedings, that the
presiding judge should not determine the issue.
Indeed in
most cases it makes sense that the judge seized of the matter deal with any constitutional issues in the course of the
proceedings, even where evidence may
already have been heard ex parte
on
the merits.
This situation arises in part because of the timing of the filing of the Respondent's Notice of
constitutional question. Had it been brought
23 Reasons
for Judgment
earlier,
the constitutional issue could have been determined prior to the scheduling of
any evidentiary hearings. Such hearings may
not, in any event, have proved
necessary had the question been decided fully in the Respondent's
favour.
However,
that is not the case that I must deal with.
In this
instance, there is a practical solution and that the issue is severable from
the application, the factums have been served
and filed by the parties and oral submissions could be heard next week by another judge who is available to hear the
matter.
This does not mean, however, that I will disqualify
myself from continuing to determine the merits of the section 38
application. I will hear argument on the merits but reserve my decision until a
decision on the constitutional question has been determined by another judge.
In my Order
of March 20, I specified that the hearing of
oral submissions on the constitutional
issue would proceed before arguments on the merits, but that both would
be heard today.
The Court subsequently inquired into the availability of counsel if it
had proved necessary
24 Reasons
for Judgment
to continue
the hearing on both matters, and was advised that counsel were available on
April 4.
In the interests of judicial economy, I will
hear oral argument on the merits at this time; oral
representations on the constitutional question will be heard before another
judge of this Court, commencing at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, April 4.
Counsel for the Attorney General, are you ready to proceed with your
submissions on the merits of the application?
,MS. WALL:
Yes, we are.
JUSTICE
MOSLEY: Mr. Greenspon?
MR. GREENSPON: Your Honour, I wonder if I might,
before we start, if I might have a few minutes
to consider our position on proceeding today with the merits of the
application.
JUSTICE MOSLEY: Certainly. We will take 10
minutes.
--- The
hearing recessed at 10:30 a.m.
Certified Correct:
Marc
Bolduc, C.S.R.
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD
DOCKET: DES-2-06
STYLE
OF CAUSE: THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA and
MOHAMMAD MOMIN KHAWAJA
PLACE OF HEARING: Ottawa,
Ontario
DATE OF HEARING: March 30, 2007 REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: MOSLEY J.
DATED: May 7, 2007
APPEARANCES:
Linda J. Wall
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Derek Rasmussen
|
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Lawrence Greenspon
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
Eric Granger
|
|
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
JOHN H. SIMS, Q.C.
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Deputy Attorney General of Canada
|
|
Ottawa, Ontario
|
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Lawrence Greenspon
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
Greenspon, Brown & Associates
|
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Ottawa, Ontario
|
|