Docket: T-1952-13
Citation:
2014 FC 909
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Montréal, Quebec, September 23, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Bédard
BETWEEN:
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
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Plaintiff
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and
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CÉLESTIN HALINDINTWALI
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Defendant
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ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
This is a motion for order of confidentiality
filed by the plaintiff in the action brought under section 18(1)(b) of
the Citizenship Act, RSC, 1985, c C-29 (the Act). The purpose of the action
is to have the Court declare that the person obtained Canadian citizenship by
false representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material
circumstances.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, this motion for
confidentiality is granted.
I.
Background
[3]
The defendant became a permanent resident of
Canada on July 22, 1997, and obtained Canadian citizenship on June 21, 2001.
The plaintiff contends that the defendant made false representations when he
applied for permanent residency in order to hide from Canadian authorities his
participation in the Rwandan genocide in 1994, and that he completely
fabricated his account in order to be admitted in to Canada as a refugee.
[4]
The Act (in force as of June 6, 2013) provides a
procedure that enables the Governor in Council to make an order revoking a
person’s citizenship if he is satisfied that the person obtained citizenship by
false representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material
circumstances. The Governor in Council’s power in this respect is provided in
section 10 of the Act, which reads as follows:
Order in
cases of fraud
10. (1) Subject to section 18 but notwithstanding any other
section of this Act, where the Governor in Council, on a report from the
Minister, is satisfied that any person has obtained, retained, renounced or resumed
citizenship under this Act by false representation or fraud or by knowingly
concealing material circumstances,
(a) the person ceases to be a citizen, or
(b) the renunciation of citizenship by the person shall be deemed
to have had no effect,
as of
such date as may be fixed by order of the Governor in Council with respect
thereto.
Presumption
(2) A person shall be deemed to have obtained citizenship by false
representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances if
the person was lawfully admitted to Canada for permanent residence by false
representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances
and, because of that admission, the person subsequently obtained citizenship.
1974-75-76, c. 108,
s. 9.
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Décret en
cas de fraude
10. (1) Sous réserve du seul article 18, le gouverneur en conseil
peut, lorsqu’il est convaincu, sur rapport du ministre, que l’acquisition, la
conservation ou la répudiation de la citoyenneté, ou la réintégration dans
celle-ci, est intervenue sous le régime de la présente loi par fraude ou au
moyen d’une fausse déclaration ou de la dissimulation intentionnelle de faits
essentiels, prendre un décret aux termes duquel l’intéressé, à compter de la
date qui y est fixée :
a) soit perd sa citoyenneté;
b) soit est réputé ne pas avoir répudié sa citoyenneté.
Présomption
(2) Est réputée avoir acquis la citoyenneté par fraude, fausse
déclaration ou dissimulation intentionnelle de faits essentiels la personne
qui l’a acquise à raison d’une admission légale au Canada à titre de résident
permanent obtenue par l’un de ces trois moyens.
1974-75-76, ch.
108, art. 9.
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[5]
As set out in subsection 10(1), the Governor in
Council acts after receiving a report from the Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration (the Minister). However, under section 18 of the Act, the
Minister must give notice of his intention to submit a report to the Governor
in Council recommending that citizenship be revoked to the person in respect of
whom the report is to be made. That person may then request that the matter be
referred to the Federal Court, which will determine whether there has been
false representation, fraud or knowing concealment of material circumstances.
When the person concerned requests that the matter be referred to the Court,
the Minister must wait for the Court’s decision before submitting his report to
the Governor in Council. If the Court decides that citizenship has been
obtained by false representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material
circumstances, he may then submit his report recommending that the Governor in
Council revoke the person’s citizenship.
[6]
Section 18, which governs this process, reads as
follows:
Notice to
person in respect of revocation
18(1) The Minister shall not make a report under section
10 unless the Minister has given notice of his intention to do so to the
person in respect of whom the report is made and
(a) that person does not, within thirty days after the day on
which the notice is sent, request that the Minister refer the case to the
Court; or
(b) that person does so request and the Court decides that the
person has obtained, retained, renounced or resumed citizenship by false
representation or fraud or by knowingly concealing material circumstances.
Nature of
notice
(2) The notice referred to in subsection (1) shall state that the
person in respect of whom the report is to be made may, within thirty days
after the day on which the notice is sent to him, request that the Minister
refer the case to the Court, and such notice is sufficient if it is sent by
registered mail to the person at his latest known address.
Decision final
(3) A decision of the Court made under subsection (1) is final
and, notwithstanding any other Act of Parliament, no appeal lies therefrom.
1974-75-76, c. 108, s. 17.
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Avis
préalable à l’annulation
18. (1) Le ministre ne peut procéder à l’établissement du rapport
mentionné à l’article 10 sans avoir auparavant avisé l’intéressé de son
intention en ce sens et sans que l’une ou l’autre des conditions suivantes ne
se soit réalisée :
a) l’intéressé n’a pas, dans les trente jours suivant la date
d’expédition de l’avis, demandé le renvoi de l’affaire devant la Cour;
b) la Cour, saisie de l’affaire, a décidé qu’il y avait eu fraude,
fausse déclaration ou dissimulation intentionnelle de faits essentiels.
Nature de
l’avis
(2) L’avis prévu at paragraphe (1) doit spécifier la faculté qu’a
l’intéressé, dans les trente jours suivant sa date d’expédition, de demander
au ministre le renvoi de l’affaire devant la Cour. La communication de l’avis
peut se faire par courrier recommandé envoyé à la dernière adresse connue de
l’intéressé.
Caractère
définitif de la décision
(3) La décision
de la Cour visée au paragraphe (1) est définitive et, par dérogation à toute
autre loi fédérale, non susceptible d’appel.
1974-75-76, ch.
108, art. 17.
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[7]
On June 6, 2013, the plaintiff sent a notice to
the defendant informing him of his intention to recommend that the Governor in
Council revoke his citizenship pursuant to section 18 of the Act.
[8]
On June 21, 2013, the defendant, through his
counsel, requested that the matter be referred to the Court.
II.
History of this proceeding and default
proceedings
[9]
The plaintiff filed his statement of claim with
the Registry of the Court on November 27, 2013. The defendant was served with
the statement of claim pursuant to Rule 128(1)(b) of the Federal
Courts Rules SOR/98-106 (the Rules). In accordance with Rule 128(2),
service of the statement of claim on the defendant was effective on December
20, 2013, and the defendant had 30 days to challenge the action by serving
and filing his statement of defence (Rule 204). The 30‑day period, taking
into account the holiday period, ended on February 5, 2014, and the
defendant had not served or filed his statement of defence.
[10]
The plaintiff made many enquiries to ensure that
the defendant had not inadvertently failed to file his statement of defence.
Counsel for the plaintiff tried unsuccessfully to contact counsel for the
defendant by telephone and left him messages that were never returned. On February 28,
2014, counsel for the plaintiff sent a letter by fax to counsel for the
defendant informing him that unless he received some reply by March 10, 2014,
he intended to file a motion for a default judgment. Rule 210 of the Rules
authorizes and provides for default proceedings when a defendant fails to serve
and file a statement of defence within the time set out in Rule 204.
[11]
On June 16, 2014, the Court sent the parties a
Notice of Status Review. On June 27, 2014, the plaintiff filed written
submissions in reply to the Notice of Status Review. In his submissions, the
plaintiff informed the Court that he intended to file a motion for
confidentiality and a motion for default judgment.
[12]
On August 8, 2014, Prothonotary Morneau
ordered that the proceeding continue as a specially managed proceeding.
Moreover, given the importance of the case and although it is not required
under the Rules because the defendant had not filed a statement of defence,
Prothonotary Morneau ordered the plaintiff to serve on the defendant a
copy of the order as well as copies of the motions for confidentiality and
default judgment. In this case, this is a precaution to ensure that the
defendant truly chose to not participate in this hearing.
[13]
The evidence establishes that Mr. Morneau’s
order and the plaintiff’s two motions were served on defendant, in accordance
with Rule 140 of the Rules, on August 12, 2014. I am thus satisfied
that this motion for confidentiality may proceed by default.
III.
The motion for confidentiality
[14]
In this case, the plaintiff alleges that the
defendant made several misrepresentations in the permanent residence
application that he filed in 1995 and knowingly concealed material circumstances.
More specifically, the plaintiff submits that the defendant falsely stated that
he had never committed a crime against humanity, whereas the defendant, he
claims, participated in the perpetration of crimes against humanity against the
Tutsi people during the Rwandan genocide. The plaintiff also submits that the
defendant lied about his country of nationality, place of birth, where he had
studied, his employment history, his marriage and his grounds for his fear of
persecution.
[15]
In support of his motion for default judgment,
and to adduce evidence of fraud and concealment of information, the plaintiff
filed the affidavit of Rudy Exantus, a police officer with the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP). Mr. Exantus is currently assigned to the RCMP Sensitive
and International Investigations Unit, but from July 2001 to 2012, he was
assigned to the RCMP War Crimes Unit.
[16]
As part of his work, starting in August 2008,
Mr. Exantus participated in a criminal investigation into the possible
involvement of the defendant in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Since 2011, he has
also completed research and investigation mandates regarding the procedure for
revoking the defendant’s citizenship, on the request of the Crimes Against
Humanity and War Crimes Section of the Department of Justice.
[17]
In his affidavit, Mr. Exantus stated that he had
personally interviewed witnesses as part of the criminal investigation and the
investigation related to the process to revoke the defendant’s citizenship. He
also stated that he was aware of statements obtained by colleagues who had also
participated in the investigations. Mr. Exantus stated that as part of these
investigations many people (the affidavit refers to the testimony of
20 witnesses) were interviewed in Canada, Rwanda, Belgium and Holland.
These people allegedly witnessed, in different respects, the defendant’s participation
in the genocide in the Butare prefecture between April and July 1994.
[18]
Mr. Exantus’ affidavit addresses statements
allegedly made by the people that were interviewed.
[19]
The version of Mr. Exantus’ affidavit filed
in Court identifies the witnesses by pseudonyms and has some portions that are
redacted.
[20]
The plaintiff submits that the safety of the
witnesses interviewed as part of the investigations and whose statements are
reported in Mr. Exantus’ affidavit, could be compromised if their identity
were disclosed publicly. That is the reason why the plaintiff and Mr. Exantus
identified the witnesses by pseudonyms. The plaintiff also submits that the
redacted excerpts of the affidavit contain and are limited to information that
would be likely to identify the people who made the statements.
[21]
Through the motion for confidentiality, the
plaintiff thus seeks to preserve the confidentiality of the identities of the
witnesses who were interviewed and whose statements are recounted or summarized
in Mr. Exantus’ affidavit. The plaintiff is willing to file an unredacted
copy of the affidavit but asks that it be declared confidential and that the
redacted copy be the only copy placed in the Court’s public file.
IV.
Analysis
[22]
It is well known that one of the foundations of our
legal system is the open court principle. In principle, Court proceedings are
public as are Court files, pleadings and evidence entered in the Court record.
These principles are clearly reflected in subsections 26(1) and 29(1) of the
Rules. Nonetheless, there are recognized exceptions to the open court
principle.
[23]
Rule 151of the Rules sets out how motions
for confidentiality are dealt with and reads as follows:
Motion for
order of confidentiality
151. (1) On motion, the Court may order that material to be filed
shall be treated as confidential.
Demonstrated
need for confidentiality
Before making an
order under subsection (1), the Court must be satisfied that the material
should be treated as confidential, notwithstanding the public interest in
open and accessible court proceedings.
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Requête en
confidentialité
151. (1) The Court peut, sur requête, ordonner que des documents
ou éléments matériels qui seront déposés soient considérés comme
confidentiels.
Circonstances
justifiant la confidentialité
(2) Avant de
rendre une ordonnance en application du paragraphe (1), The Court doit être
convaincue de la nécessité de considérer les documents ou éléments matériels
comme confidentiels, étant donné l’intérêt du public à la publicité des
débats judiciaires.
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[24]
Under Rule 151, before making an order of
confidentiality, the Court must be satisfied that the documents at issue should
be treated as confidential, notwithstanding the public interest in open and
accessible court proceedings. It is clear from Rule 151 and the jurisprudence
that confidentiality is an exception to the general open court rule and it must
be applied carefully and after thorough analysis.
[25]
In Sierra Club of Canada v Canada (Minister
of Finance), 2002 SCC 41, [2002] 2 SCR 522 (Sierra Club),
the Supreme Court set out the framework and the test to be applied by a court
hearing a motion for confidentiality. Thus, before making an order of
confidentiality, the Court must be satisfied that the need for preserving the
confidentiality of a document outweighs the public interest in open and
accessible Court proceedings. The Court reiterated and adapted to the context
of the case before it the two-branch test it had previously set out in other
decisions (Dagenais v Canadian Broadcasting Corp, [1994] 3 SCR 835,
1994 CanLII 39 (SCC) (Dagenais); Canadian Broadcasting Corp v
New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 SCR 480, 1996 CanLII
/84 (SCC); R v Mentuck, 2001 SCC 76, [2001] 3 SCR 442) (Mentuck)).
The Court stated, at paragraph 53 (Sierra Club), a confidentiality order
should only be granted when the Court determines that
i. such an order is necessary in order to prevent a serious
risk to an important interest, including a commercial interest, in the context
of litigation because reasonably alternative measures will not prevent the
risk; and
ii. the salutary effects of the confidentiality order,
including the effects on the right of civil litigants to a fair trial, outweigh
its deleterious effects, including the effects on the right to free expression,
which in this context includes the public interest in open and accessible court
proceedings.
[26]
The Court also reiterated that three elements
must be considered under the first branch of the test: (1) the risk in question
must be real and substantial, well grounded in the evidence; (2) the Court
should guard against protecting an excessive number of documents from
disclosure; and (3) the Court must consider whether reasonable alternatives to
a confidentiality order are available and restrict the order as much as is reasonably
possible (Sierra Club, paras 53-56).
[27]
In Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v The Queen,
2011 SCC 3, [2011] 1 SCR 65 at para 13, the Court noted that the
analytical approach developed in Dagenais and Mentuck applies to
all discretionary decisions that affect the openness of proceedings.
[28]
These principles have been applied by our Court
and by the Federal Court of Appeal in motions for confidentiality filed under
Rule 151 (Grace Singer v Canada (Attorney General), 2011 FCA 3,
196 ACWS (3d) 717; Bah v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2014 FC 693; British Columbia Lottery Corporation v
Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 307, [2013] FCJ No 1425 (British
Columbia)). In McCabe v Canada (Attorney General), 2000 CanLII
15987 (FC), [2000] FCJ No 1262, Justice Dawson discussed the applicable test
and the burden that rests on the party seeking a confidentiality order:
[8] The justifiable desire to keep one’s
affairs private is not, as a matter of law, a sufficient ground on which to
seek a confidentiality order. In order to obtain relief under Rule 151, the
Court must be satisfied that both a subjective and an objective test are met.
See: AB Hassle v. Canada (Minister of National Health and Welfare),
[1999] F.C.J. No. 808 (A-289-98, A-315-98, A-316-98, May 11, 1999, F.C.A.)
affirming (1998) 81 C.P.R. (3d) 121. Subjectively, the party seeking
relief must establish that it believes its interest would be harmed by
disclosure. Objectively, the party seeking relief must prove, on a balance of
probabilities, that the information is in fact confidential.
(see also British Columbia at para
36).
[29]
In the present case, the Minister has satisfied
me that the identity of the witnesses whose statements are reported or
summarized in Mr. Exantus’ affidavit should remain confidential.
[30]
The ground raised to support the confidential
nature of the witnesses’ identities is the risk that the safety of these
persons would be compromised if their identities were disclosed publicly.
[31]
The uncontradicted evidence shows that some of
the people interviewed during the RCMP investigation expressed their fear of
reprisals from members of their community if their identity were revealed. The evidence,
specifically the affidavit of Alfred Kewnde, Chief of Investigations at the
Office of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, which
was filed with the Superior Court during the trial of Jacques Mungwarere and
was filed as an exhibit in support of Mr. Exantus’ affidavit, shows that the
fear for personal safety expressed by the people interviewed during the
investigations is serious and genuine.
[32]
Thus, I am satisfied that there are grounds for
preserving the confidentiality of the identity of the people interviewed during
the RCMP investigations about the defendant’s alleged participation in the
Rwandan genocide to avoid compromising their security. The threat to the safety
of witnesses is a serious risk that should be avoided to preserve an important
interest. I am also of the opinion that in order to avoid any risk to their safety
there are no reasonable options other than preventing the public identification
of the witnesses’ identities.
[33]
Furthermore, I am of the view that the salutary
effects of the confidentiality order outweigh its deleterious effects,
including on the right to freedom of expression and the public’s interest in
open and accessible Court proceedings. I would like to point out that steps
were taken to preserve the confidentiality of witnesses also by the superior
courts of Quebec and Ontario in the criminal trials of Désiré Munyaneza (R v
Munyaneza, 2001 QCCS 7113, [2007] JQ 25381) and Jacques Mungwarere, (R
v Mungwarere , 2011 CSON 1247, [2011] OJ No 2593), accused of
participating in the Rwandan genocide.
[34]
I am of the view that the findings sought by the
plaintiff are measures that limit as much as possible the information that will
be declared confidential in this case.