Docket: IMM-7628-13
Citation:
2016 FC 437
Ottawa, Ontario, April 20, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
|
HUSSAM HASSAN
SAIF
|
Applicant
|
and
|
THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
[1]
This application for judicial review concerns a
decision by the Immigration Division of the Immigration and Refugee Board
[Board] by which Hussam Hassan Saif was found to be inadmissible under paragraph 37(1)(a)
of the Immigration Refugee and Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27, [IRPA].
In particular, Mr. Saif challenges the Board’s finding that he had been engaged
in activity that is part of a pattern of criminal activity planned and
organized by a number of persons acting in concert in furtherance of the commission
of an indictable offence.
I.
Background
[2]
The underlying circumstances of Mr. Saif’s
immigration difficulties are not in serious dispute. On September 15, 2011, he
pleaded guilty to an offence under paragraph 465(1)(d) of the Criminal Code,
RSC, 1985, c C-46, involving a conspiracy to commit a summary offence. This
was a summary conviction offence for which Mr. Saif received a conditional
sentence of five months. The conspiracy in question involved a scheme
orchestrated by Ahmad El-Akhal whereby more than 300 Canadian permanent residents
were afforded addresses of convenience and other documentation to fraudulently
establish their Canadian residency.
[3]
Mr. Saif’s involvement was secondary to that of
Mr. El-Akhal. Mr. Saif allowed his address to be used as a mail drop and his
name to be used on falsified lease documents. He also carried out errands for
Mr. El-Akhal to facilitate the scheme and for which he received payment. A Royal
Canadian Mounted Police [RCMP] investigation report described Mr. Saif’s role
in the following way:
Hussam SAIF assisted Mr. EL-AKHAL in these
activities, allowing his name to be used as the lessor and his address to be
used as an address of convenience on the forged lease documents that were
created by Mr. EL-AKHAL for two of the addresses of convenience where SAIF
was the actual tenant. Mr. SAIF passed himself off as being employed by Mr.
EL-AKHAL and used a letter of reference from Mr. EL-AKHAL to secure a
residential lease at one of the addresses of convenience, 3934 Bishopstoke
Lane, Mississauga, Ontario. Mr. SAIF admitted in his KGB statement that he
assisted Mr. EL-AKHAL with driving clients around, checking for mail providing
a mailing address for his clients in exchange for money. SAIF also stated that
Mr. EL-AKHAL had promised to teach him the business, but he never did. SAIF
only stopped helping Mr. EL-AKHAL when his own citizenship was placed in
jeopardy by CIC due to the over use of his address by Mr. EL-AKHAL’s clients.
[4]
Testimony provided to the Board by RCMP Corporal Robert Galloway
indicated that no serious consideration had been given to bringing criminal
organization charges against Mr. El-Akhal or Mr. Saif. According to Corporal
Galloway, Mr. Saif was assisting Mr. El-Akhal in an employment
relationship that did not appear to constitute a criminal organization under
the Criminal Code.
[5]
Notwithstanding the above evidence, the Board
found that Mr. Saif’s activities fell within the scope of “organized criminality” as that reference is used in
paragraph 37(1)(a) of the IRPA. The Minister did not contend that Mr. Saif was
a member of a criminal organization but only that he fell within the second
part of the provision dealing with “activity that is
part of a pattern of criminal activity planned and organized by a number of
persons acting in concert”. The Board accepted the Minister’s argument
and gave the following reasons for its decision:
[38] Given the evidence presented by
both the Minister’s Counsel and Counsel, by way of testimony from both Mr. Saif
and the witness Corporal Robert Galloway, I find that Mr. Saif is a person
described under the second part of 37(1)(a) of the Immigration and Refugee
protection Act, as there are reasonable grounds to believe that he is a
person who engaged in activity that is part of such a pattern-this pattern
being: activity that is part of a pattern of criminal activity planned and
organized by a number of persons acting in concert in furtherance of the
commission of an offence punishable under an Act of Parliament by way of
indictment.
[39] It is evident from the information
provided by all parties that there are reasonable grounds to believe that Mr.
El-Akhal was the head of this scheme which defrauded the Canadian government
out of hundreds of thousands of dollars (nearly $500,000). $110,000 US$ and
$40,000 CDN were all or, in part, the proceeds obtained from the commission of
an offence punishable by indictment and were found in Mr. El-Akhal’s
possession.
[40] RCMP Inspector Art Pittman explained
that this scheme involved 300 people from the Middle East and El-Akhal and the
others invented Ontario addresses for the new citizens, filed fake income tax
returns in their names and received rebates. “It’s alleged that he was
facilitating a significant number of people claiming to be living in Canada
when in fact they were not and by virtue of the fact they claimed to be living
in Canada they were able to claim tax benefits they were not entitled to.” Information
was gathered during a two-and-a-half-year investigation.
[41] The police report states that the
cooperative working relationship between Mr. El-Akhal and Mr. Saif demonstrates
the conspiracy between the two to aid and abet the clients to make false
representations in relation to their citizenship applications contrary to
section 465(l)(d) of the Criminal Code. Although this is a summary conviction,
there were a total of 58 charges, many of which were hybrid in nature, which,
under 36(3)(a), are to be considered indictable. The witness Corporal Robert
Galloway testified that Mr. El-Akhal pleaded guilty to three to four of the
charges and received a three-year sentence. Even though most of the 58 charges
were withdrawn, there were a number of convictions and given the abundance of
documentary evidence in AH-l referred to already in this decision, there are
reasonable grounds to believe that these activities did occur, an indictable
offence was committed, fraud against the Canadian government for example.
[42] There are clearly reasonable
grounds to believe that there exists a pattern of activity, with major and more
minor players (some known, others unknown, some in Canada, others in the Middle
East), some leading, others following orders, whereby the Canadian government
was defrauded of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Planning, scheming and
co-operation were involved including emails, text messages with instructions.
Mr. Saif, through his criminal lawyer, admitted in court to the facts read out:
some of which are the following: Mr. El-Akhal instructed Mr. Saif to continue
to pick up mail, including cheques while Mr. El-Akhal was out of the country,
Mr. Sail picked up the mail at those addresses upon instruction from Mr.
E1-Akhal. Mr. Saif’s role in the scheme was as follows: Mr. El-Akhal was the
main facilitator in this scheme and Mr. Saif assisted him. He collected mail
for him at different addresses, allowing Mr. El-Akhal to use Mr. Saif’s
residential addresses in Mississauga as mailing addresses. He acted as a driver
for the clients. Mr. Sail admitted receiving some financial compensation in
return for the use of his addresses. Eventually, Mr. El,-Akhal disappeared and
did not return phone calls and the clients began calling Mr. Saif. This scheme
went on for years.
…
[45] This pattern of activity went on
for almost a decade. The investigation lasted two-and-a-half years and Mr. Saif
was involved for at least two years. Numerous people were involved (300 plus).
The government of Canada was abused and defrauded out of hundreds of thousands
of dollars. Conspiracy was committed communication and planning took place.
Orders were given and received. The area involved was Middle East, Montreal and
GTA. Based on all of the evidence, I find that Mr. Saif is described in
paragraph 37(1)(a). A Deportation Order is attached.
[Footnotes omitted]
[6]
It is from this decision that the present application
arises.
II.
Issues
A.
What is the appropriate standard of review?
B.
Did the Board err in finding that Mr. Saif
was inadmissible under paragraph 37(1)(a) of the IRPA?
III.
Analysis
A.
Standard of Review
[7]
The determinative issue in this case concerns
the interpretation of paragraph 37(1)(a) of the IRPA and, in particular,
whether the Board erred in concluding that Mr. Saif’s criminal conduct fell
within the scope of that provision. Counsel for Mr. Saif argues that the
decision must be reviewed on the standard of correctness. Counsel for the
Minister contends that the deferential standard of reasonableness applies and
relies on the Federal Court of Appeal decision in B010 v Canada (MCI),
2013 FCA 87 at paras 70-72, [2014] 4 FCR 326 (FCA). When that decision was
appealed, the Supreme Court of Canada found it unnecessary to resolve the
standard of review issue. Nevertheless, it did observe that the presumptive
standard of review on questions of interpretation of the home statue is
deferential: see B010 v Canada (MCI), 2015 SCC 58 at paras 25-26, [2015]
3 SCR 704.
[8]
Ordinarily I would agree with counsel for the
Minister that reasonableness should be applied to issues of the sort raised
here. However, insofar as the Supreme Court of Canada determined the issues of
statutory interpretation that apply to the facts of this case, there remains no
room for a differing view. My task is simply to determine whether the Board’s
interpretation of section 37 of the IRPA conforms to the interpretation
subsequently adopted by the Supreme Court.
B.
Did the Board err in finding that Mr. Saif’s
conduct fell within the scope of paragraph 37(1)(a) of the IRPA?
[9]
I am of the view that the Board erred in its
application of paragraph 37(1)(a) of the IRPA to the evidence bearing on
Mr. Saif’s conduct. Although the Board plainly considered some of the
elements of paragraph 37(1)(a) what is notably lacking from its reasons is any
clear consideration of the structural features required for a finding of organized
criminality. This is not altogether surprising because, at the time, the
jurisprudence on point was only broadly applicable. As the Board correctly
noted, the term “organization” in paragraph 37(1)(a)
had been given “a broad and unrestricted” meaning
by the Federal Court of Appeal in Sittampalam v Canada (MCI), 2006 FCA
326 at para 55, [2007] 3 FCR 198 (FCA). That decision provided the following
broad analytical framework for identifying a criminal organization under subsection
37(1) of the IRPA:
37 Paragraph 37(1)(a) appears to be
an attempt to tackle organized crime, in recognition of the fact that
non-citizen members of criminal organizations are as grave a threat as
individuals who are convicted of serious criminal offences. It enables deportation
of members of criminal organizations who avoid convictions as individuals but
may nevertheless be dangerous.
38 Recent jurisprudence supports this
interpretation. In Thanaratnam v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship &
Immigration), [2004] 3 F.C.R. 301 (T.D.), reversed on other grounds, [2006]
1 F.C.R. 474 (C.A.), O’Reilly J. took into account various factors when he
concluded that two Tamil gangs (one of which was the A.K. Kannan gang at issue
here) were “organizations within the meaning of paragraph 37(1)(a) of the IRPA.
In his opinion, the two Tamil groups had “some characteristics of an
organization, namely”, namely “identity, leadership, a loose hierarchy and a
basic organizational structure”. (para.30) The factors listed in Thanaratnam,
supra, as well as other factors, such as an occupied territory or
regular meeting locations, both factors considered by the Board, are helpful
when making a determination under paragraph 37(1)(a), but no one of them is
essential.
39 These criminal organizations do
not usually have formal structures like corporations or associations that have
charters, bylaws or constitutions. They are usually rather loosely and
informally structured, which structures vary dramatically. Looseness and
informality in the structure of a group should not thwart the purpose of IRPA.
It is, therefore, necessary to adopt a rather flexible approach in assessing
whether the attributes of a particular group meet the requirements of the IRPA
given their varied, changing and clandestine character. It is, therefore,
important to evaluate the various factors applied by O’Reilly J. and other
similar factors that may assist to determine whether the essential attributes
of an organization are present in the circumstances. Such an interpretation of “organization”
allows the Board some flexibility in determining whether, in light of the
evidence and facts before it, a group may be properly characterized as such for
the purposes of paragraph 37(1)(a).
[10]
What is noteworthy about the decision in Sittampalam,
above, is the refusal by the Court to consider the Criminal Code definition of “criminal organization” or other similar references in
international instruments. According to the Court, those sources serve other
unrelated purposes to the IRPA and are, therefore, unhelpful.
[11]
After the Board’s decision in this case, the
Supreme Court of Canada addressed subsection 37(1) of the IRPA in the
context of “people smuggling” under paragraph
37(1)(b): see B010, above. Despite the forceful attempts by counsel for
the Minister to distinguish this decision, it is determinative of this
application.
[12]
The Minister contends that the interpretive
analysis carried out in B010, above, should be confined to paragraph
37(1)(b) of the IRPA because only that provision was in issue. According to
this view, the legislative history and purposes served by paragraphs 37(1)(a)
and 37(1)(b) are different and they should, therefore, be considered
independently of one another. The Minister further argued that, to the extent
the Supreme Court commented on the language and intent of paragraph 37(1)(a),
the remarks are merely obiter.
[13]
The fundamental weakness in the Minister’s
position is that, paragraphs 37(1)(a) and (b) are both subject to the opening
language of subsection 37(1) which refers to inadmissibility “on grounds of organized criminality”. When read
contextually and harmoniously “organized criminality”
infuses all of the language that follows. No plausible interpretation of subsection 37(1)
would allow for a different meaning of “organized
criminality” as between paragraphs (a) and (b). Accordingly, the Supreme
Court’s interpretation of those words in the context of paragraph 37(1)(b) must
also apply to paragraph 37(1)(a). The Supreme Court makes this point very
clearly at para 37:
37 The first contextual consideration
is the relationship between s. 37(1)(b) and the rest of s. 37(1).
Subsection (1) introduces the concept of inadmissibility on grounds of
organized criminality. Paragraphs (a) and (b) are instances of
organized criminality.
Section 37(l)(a) makes membership in
criminal organizations one ground of inadmissibility, while s. 37(1)(b)
makes “engaging, in the context of transnational crime, in activities such as
people smuggling, trafficking in persons or money laundering” another. Read in
the context of s. 37(1) as a whole, it is clear that the focus of s. 37(l)(b),
like that of s. 37(l)(a), is organized criminal activity.
[14]
The same point is made by the Supreme Court
where it frames one of the issues before it as “what
limits may be inferred from s. 37(1), which provides that a person is declared
inadmissible on the grounds of ‘organized criminality’”. The Court’s
views on this issue are, therefore, decidedly not obiter.
[15]
It necessarily follows that the Court’s views
about the meaning and range of “organized criminality”
apply equally to paragraphs 37(1)(a) and 37(1)(b), including its interpretive
importation of the Criminal Code definition of “criminal
organization” requiring a group of three or more persons. I would add to
this that the Criminal Code numerical requirement for a criminal organization
of at least three persons is more consistent with the language of paragraph 37(1)(a),
which requires “a number of persons”. If
Parliament intended that an organization made up of “a
number of persons” could consist of a pair of persons, presumably it
would have used that or similar language: see, for example, section 465 of the
Criminal Code.
[16]
Counsel for the Minister argued that the 300 or
so persons who benefited from the fraudulent conduct of Mr. El-Akhal and
Mr. Saif should be taken to be part of their criminal organization. I take
the point that many, if not all, of these beneficiaries were engaged in
unlawful conduct when they retained Mr. El-Akhal to misrepresent their
Canadian residency. That fact is not, however, sufficient to include them
within the definition of organized criminality found in subsection 37(1).
[17]
Although an unrestricted and broad
interpretation is to be given to the word “organization”
as it is used in subsection 37(1), the provision still requires the existence
of common organizational characteristics such as “identity,
leadership, a loose hierarchy and a basic organizational structure”: see
Sittampalam, at paras 38-39, above. Third parties who individually transact
with a criminal organization cannot reasonably be seen to be “members” nor can they be considered to be “engaged in activity that is part of a pattern of criminal
activity planned and organized by a number of persons acting in concert in
furtherance of the commission of an indictable offence”. By way of
analogy, no one would consider a purchaser of narcotics, without further
involvement, to be either a member of, or acting in concert with, a criminal
organization established to sell the narcotics, even though both are engaged in
common in a criminal transaction.
[18]
The reviewable error made by the Board in the
decision under review arises from the failure to apply the above-noted
principles to the essentially undisputed facts of Mr. Saif’s conduct. The
Board apparently concluded that a long-standing criminal conspiracy between
Mr. Saif and Mr. El-Akhal also involved “numerous
people” and therefore fell within that part of paragraph 37(1)(a)
concerned with a “pattern of activity”. As I
have noted above, the requirement of “organized
criminality” is not established where the pattern of criminal conduct is
carried out by only two persons. This requirement is not overcome by the
peripheral involvement of third parties whose participation falls outside of the
underlying criminal conspiracy. That is so because, under any reasonable
interpretation of paragraph 37(1)(a), those persons cannot be said to have
engaged in activity that is part of a pattern of criminal activity planned and
organized in concert with Mr. Saif and Mr. El-Akhal in furtherance of the
commission of an indictable offence.
[19]
For the foregoing reasons, the decision under
review is set aside. The matter must be re-determined on the merits by a
different decision-maker and in accordance with these reasons.
[20]
Counsel for Mr. Saif proposed two certified
questions, but in light of these reasons, the questions are moot. The
Respondent has proposed no question for certification and, accordingly, no
question is certified.