Vancouver Sun (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 332, 2004 SCC 43
The Vancouver Sun Appellant
v.
Attorney General of Canada,
Attorney General of British Columbia,
“The Named Person”, Ajaib Singh Bagri and
Ripudaman Singh Malik Respondents
and
Attorney General of Ontario Intervener
Indexed as: Vancouver Sun (Re)
Neutral citation: 2004 SCC 43.
File No.: 29878.
2003: December 10; 2004: June 23.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache,
Binnie, Arbour, LeBel, Deschamps and Fish JJ.
on appeal from the supreme court of british columbia
Criminal law — Terrorism — Investigative hearings —
Open court principle — Level of secrecy applicable to judicial investigative
hearing proceedings — Whether Crown’s application for order for investigative
hearing properly heard in camera — Whether existence of order for investigative
hearing ought to have been secret — Whether hearing for determining
constitutional validity of investigative hearing provision and validity of order
for investigative hearing should have been conducted in camera — Whether
investigative hearing must be held in camera — Applicability of
Dagenais/Mentuck test — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 83.28 .
B and M were jointly charged with several offences in
relation to the explosion of Air India Flight 182 and the intended explosion of
Air India Flight 301. Shortly after the beginning of their trial, the Crown
brought an ex parte application seeking an order that a Named Person, a potential
Crown witness at the Air India trial, attend a judicial investigative hearing
for examination pursuant to s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code . The
application judge granted the order and set a number of terms and conditions to
govern the conduct of the investigative hearing, among others, the hearing was
to be conducted in camera and notice of the hearing was not to be given
to the accused in the Air India trial, to the press or to the public. Counsel
for the accused became aware of the proceedings and the application judge held
that they could make submissions on the validity of the initial order to the
judge presiding over the s. 83.28 hearing. The presiding judge began to hear
the accused’s submissions and a challenge to the constitutional validity of s.
83.28 by the Named Person in camera. A reporter of the Vancouver Sun,
who had recognized lawyers from the Air India trial entering a closed
courtroom, was denied access to the proceedings. The Vancouver Sun filed a
notice of motion before the hearing judge seeking an order that the court
proceedings be open to the public and that its counsel and a member of its
editorial board, upon filing an undertaking of confidentiality, be provided
with access to the pleadings and all materials from the proceedings to date.
Prior to hearing the motion, the hearing judge concluded, in camera,
that the initial s. 83.28 order had been validly issued and that s. 83.28 was
constitutionally sound. She varied the initial order to permit counsel for the
accused to attend the investigative hearing and examine the Named Person under
certain conditions. She ordered that her judgment was to be sealed until the
conclusion of the hearing or the making of any contrary order of the court.
When the courtroom was finally opened to the public, the hearing judge
delivered, in open court, a synopsis of her reasons for judgment. The
Vancouver Sun then made its motion, which was dismissed. The Vancouver Sun was
granted leave to appeal to this Court from the order dismissing its motion.
Held (Bastarache and
Deschamps JJ. dissenting in part): The appeal should be allowed in part and
the order made by the hearing judge varied.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
Iacobucci, Major, Binnie, Arbour and Fish JJ.: Section 83.28 of
the Criminal Code must be interpreted consistently with the Preamble to
the Anti-terrorism Act and the fundamental characteristics of a judicial
process, including the open court principle. This principle, a hallmark of
democracy and a cornerstone of the common law, guarantees the integrity of the
judiciary and is inextricably linked to the freedom of expression guaranteed by
s. 2 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms . The open
court principle, which should not be presumptively displaced in favour of an in
camera process, extends to all judicial proceedings, and the Dagenais/Mentuck
test should be applied to all discretionary judicial decisions that limit
freedom of expression by the press.
In the context of s. 83.28 , one must distinguish
between an application for an investigative hearing and the holding of that
hearing. The application for an order that such a hearing be held to gather
information is procedurally similar to the application for a search warrant or
for a wiretap authorization. Section 83.28(2) provides that applications are ex
parte, and by their nature, they must be in camera. There is no
express provision, however, for any part of the investigative hearing to be in
camera. This hearing requires full judicial participation in the conduct
of the hearing itself, and the proper balance between investigative imperatives
and openness will best be achieved through the discretion granted to judges to
impose terms and conditions on the conduct of a hearing under s. 83.28(5)(e).
In exercising that discretion, judges should reject the presumption of secret
hearings. Parliament chose hearings of a judicial nature and they must contain
as many of the guarantees and indicia that come from judicial involvement as is
compatible with the task at hand. The presumption of openness should thus be
displaced only upon proper consideration of the competing interests at every
stage of the process. The existence of an order, and as much of its subject‑matter
as possible, should be made public unless, under the balancing exercise of the Dagenais/Mentuck
test, secrecy becomes necessary.
In this case, the level of secrecy was unnecessary.
While the s. 83.28(2) application was properly heard ex parte and in
camera, there was no reason to keep secret the existence of the order or
its subject-matter. The identity of the Named Person was properly kept
confidential in light of the position taken by the Named Person at that stage,
but that should have been subject to revision by the hearing judge. Since a
potential Crown witness in the Air India trial was the subject of the
investigative order, third party interests ought to have been considered and
notice should have been given promptly to counsel for the accused in the Air
India trial. As much information about the Named Person’s constitutional
challenge as could be revealed without jeopardizing the investigation should
have been made public, subject, if need be, to a total or partial
publication ban. The constitutional challenge should not have been conducted in
camera since much of it could have been properly argued without the details
of the information submitted to the application judge being revealed.
The Named Person now takes the position that the
investigative hearing should be public, and the only factors now favouring
secrecy relate to the protection of an ongoing investigation or other vital but
unstated reasons. In a case in which so much of the information relating to the
offence is already in the public domain, and in which recourse to an
investigative hearing is sought in the midst of an ongoing non‑jury
trial, the case for extensive secrecy is a difficult one to make and was not
made out here. Accordingly, the name of the Named Person should be made public
and the order made by the hearing judge should be varied so that the
investigative hearing is held in public, subject to any order of the hearing
judge that the public be excluded and/or that a publication ban be put in place
regarding aspects of the anticipated evidence to be given by the Named Person.
At the end of the investigative hearing, the hearing judge should review the
need for any secrecy and release publicly any gathered information that can be
made public without unduly jeopardizing the interests of the Named Person,
third parties or the investigation.
Per LeBel J.: Subject
to the comments in Application under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re),
there is agreement with the reasons of the majority and with their proposed
disposition.
Per Bastarache and
Deschamps JJ. (dissenting in part): Although openness of judicial proceedings
is the rule and covertness the exception, where the rights of third parties
would be unduly harmed and the administration of justice rendered unworkable by
the presence of the public, a court may sit in camera. Such is normally
the case for investigative proceedings under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code .
There is a legitimate law enforcement interest in maintaining the
confidentiality of a witness’s identity and testimony, since the premature
disclosure of information about a terrorism offence would compromise and impede
the very investigation of the information gathered at the hearing and would normally
render the s. 83.28 proceedings ineffective as an investigative tool. The
police cannot gather information and act upon it at the same time it is
disseminated to the public and the media. With respect to third parties, the
confidentiality of the investigative hearing will protect the innocent from
unreliable and untruthful testimony, and confidentiality will encourage
witnesses to come forward and be honest. Furthermore, the disclosure of a
witness’s identity may place that person at serious risk of harm from suspects
or their allies. The same can be said for third parties identified by the
witness as having information to provide. Without knowing what information
will be revealed at the investigative hearing, it is not possible to evaluate
the risk to third parties’ rights and to the proper administration of justice.
Consequently, the Dagenais/Mentuck test cannot guide a judge’s
discretion under s. 83.28 to order an in camera investigative hearing.
Under that test, a convincing evidentiary basis for denial of access is
generally necessary to rebut the presumption of open courts. This framework is
not appropriate because it is only after the information and evidence has been
gathered by the Crown at the investigative hearing that the presiding judge
will be able to balance the competing interests at stake and release
non-prejudicial information. Since openness is the presumption, the person who
wishes to deny the right of public access after the investigative hearing has
the burden of proof and must satisfy the Dagenais/Mentuck test.
The fact that the investigative hearing was about the
constitutional validity of s. 83.28 did not make the open court principle more
compelling, because the constitutional challenge could not realistically be
separated from the actual investigative hearing. Nor would advance notice to
the media have served any useful purpose.
Cases Cited
By Iacobucci and Arbour JJ.
Referred to: Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42,
aff’g [2003] B.C.J. No. 1749 (QL), 2003 BCSC 1172; Dagenais v. Canadian
Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; R. v. Mentuck, [2001] 3
S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC 76; R. v. Reyat, [1991] B.C.J. No. 2006 (QL); Attorney
General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R.
480; Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R.
1326; Scott v. Scott, [1913] A.C. 417; Ambard v. Attorney-General for
Trinidad and Tobago, [1936] A.C. 322; Ford v. Quebec (Attorney General),
[1988] 2 S.C.R. 712; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Sierra
Club of Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522, 2002
SCC 41; R. v. S.A.B., [2003] 2 S.C.R. 678, 2003 SCC 60; Ruby
v. Canada (Solicitor General), [2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 75.
By LeBel J.
Referred to: Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re), [2004] 2
S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting in part)
Attorney General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp.,
[1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; R. v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC 76; Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R.
480; Southam Inc. v. Coulter (1990), 60 C.C.C. (3d) 267; R. v. A,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 992; Michaud v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1996] 3
S.C.R. 3; R. v. S.A.B., [2003] 2 S.C.R. 678, 2003 SCC 60; Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248,
2004 SCC 42.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Anti-terrorism Act, S.C. 2001, c. 41 , Preamble.
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, ss. 2 (b), 7 .
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, ss. 2 , 83.28 [ad. 2001, c. 41, s. 4], 83.31,
83.32(1), 486(1).
Authors Cited
Burton, John Hill, ed. Benthamiana:
Or, Select Extracts from the Works of Jeremy Bentham, With an Outline of His
Opinions on the Principal Subjects Discussed in His Works. Edinburgh:
William Tait, 1843.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Supreme
Court, [2003] B.C.J. No. 1992 (QL), 2003 BCSC 1330, dismissing an
application for access to the proceedings and for a declaration that
proceedings should not be in camera. Appeal allowed in part, Bastarache
and Deschamps JJ. dissenting in part.
Robert S. Anderson and Ludmila
B. Herbst, for the appellant.
George Dolhai and Bernard
Laprade, for the respondent the Attorney General of Canada.
Dianne Wiedemann and Mary
T. Ainslie, for the respondent the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Kenneth Westlake, Howard
Rubin and Brian A. Crane, Q.C., for the respondent the “Named
Person”.
William B. Smart, Q.C.,
and Brock Martland, for the respondent Ripudaman Singh Malik.
Michael A. Code and Jonathan
Dawe, for the respondent Ajaib Singh Bagri.
Michael Bernstein and Sandy
Tse, for the intervener.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and Iacobucci, Major,
Binnie, Arbour and Fish JJ. was delivered by
2
The judicial investigative hearing provided for in s. 83.28 of the
Code is a procedure with no comparable history in Canadian law. It
provides essentially that a peace officer, with the prior approval of the
Attorney General, may apply ex parte to a judge for an order for “the
gathering of information”. The gathering of information is in relation to a
terrorism offence, which is described in s. 2 of the Code. The
information to be gathered relates both to the circumstances of the offence and
the whereabouts of possible suspects. If satisfied that proper grounds have
been established, the court may order the attendance of a person for
examination under oath before a judge, and the person must remain in attendance
and answer questions put to him or her by the Attorney General or his agent.
Although the person who is the subject of the order cannot refuse to answer a
question on the ground that it may incriminate him or her or subject him or her
to any proceeding or penalty, his or her answers receive full direct and
derivative use immunity. The person has the right to retain and instruct
counsel, and the judge has a wide discretion to impose terms and conditions to
protect the person named in the order, third parties, as well as the integrity
of ongoing investigations.
3
In our view, this unique judicial procedure must be interpreted and
applied in light of the two following principles:
1. The interpretation of s. 83.28 must be guided
by the Preamble to the Anti-terrorism Act , which amended the Criminal
Code to include s. 83.28 . The Preamble stresses the imperatives of an
effective response to terrorism as well as a continued commitment to the values
and constraints of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ;
2. Section 83.28 should be interpreted in a
manner consistent with the fundamental characteristics of a judicial process
insofar as the section contemplates a judicial proceeding.
4
The issue in this appeal deals with the level of secrecy with which the
judicial investigative hearing was conducted. We have concluded that the open
court principle is a fundamental characteristic of judicial proceedings, and
that it should not be presumptively displaced in favour of an in camera
process. The need to close the courtroom doors for the whole or parts of the
judicial investigative hearing is governed by the principles expressed in
Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, and R. v.
Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC 76.
II. The
Facts
5
The judicial investigative hearing relates to two alleged acts of
terrorism that occurred on June 23, 1985. An explosion caused the deaths of
two baggage handlers and injured four others at the Narita Airport in Japan. A
second explosion caused Air India Flight 182 to crash off the west coast of
Ireland, causing the death of all 329 passengers and crew.
6
On February 4, 1988, the first accused, Inderjit Singh Reyat, was
arrested in England where he was living with his family. Mr. Reyat was
extradited to Canada on December 13, 1989, to face a number of charges relating
to the explosion at Narita Airport. On May 10, 1991, he was convicted on seven
counts: R. v. Reyat, [1991] B.C.J. No. 2006 (QL) (S.C.).
7
On October 27, 2000, Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri were
jointly charged with respect to both explosions and the intended explosion of
Air India Flight 301. A few months later, on March 8, 2001, a direct
indictment was filed against the accused, Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri, and on June
5, 2001, a new indictment was filed, adding a third accused, Mr. Reyat. Mr.
Reyat plead guilty on February 10, 2003, to a new indictment that charged him
with aiding or abetting the construction of the explosive device that was
placed on Air India Flight 182. He was sentenced to five years imprisonment in
addition to the time already spent in custody.
8
Following Mr. Reyat’s guilty plea to a charge of manslaughter in
February 2003, Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri re-elected, before Josephson J. of the
Supreme Court of British Columbia, to be tried by a judge alone. The trial of
Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri (the “Air India Trial”) commenced on April 28, 2003 and
continues to this date.
9
On May 6, 2003, the Crown applied to a judge ex parte for a s.
83.28 order to gather information regarding the Air India offences from the
Named Person. Dohm A.C.J. of the British Columbia Supreme Court issued the s.
83.28 order for a judicial investigative hearing on the strength of an
affidavit by a member of the RCMP’s Air India Task Force. He directed the
hearing to be held in camera and no notice was given to the accused in
the Air India Trial, to the press, or to the public. He also prohibited the
Named Person from disclosing any information or evidence obtained at the
hearing.
10
Sometime prior to May 20, 2003, when the hearing was to be held, counsel
for Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri fortuitously became aware of the order and advised
Dohm A.C.J. that they wished to make submissions. The Named Person retained
counsel, and on June 16, 2003, Dohm A.C.J. was advised that the Named Person
wished to challenge the constitutional validity of s. 83.28 . Dohm A.C.J.
directed that, seven days later, all submissions be heard by Holmes J. The
constitutional challenge to s. 83.28 and the application to have the hearing
order of Dohm A.C.J. set aside commenced on June 23, 2003. Neither the public
nor the press was informed.
11
On June 27, 2003, the Air India Trial adjourned for the summer. That
same day, Ms. Bolan from the Vancouver Sun recognized lawyers from the Air
India trial and attempted to follow them into a closed courtroom where in
camera proceedings were taking place. The trial list disclosed that “R v.
I.*(conference)” was taking place before Holmes J. in courtroom 33. Ms. Bolan
contacted counsel for the Vancouver Sun who knocked on the door of courtroom
33. Counsel was informed by a sheriff that the judge would not entertain a
motion at that time for the proceedings to be opened to the public.
12
The Vancouver Sun then filed a Notice of Motion and a letter setting out
the background with the Supreme Court of British Columbia and asked for an
early date for its motion to be heard. The motion sought an order that counsel
for the appellant and a member of the Vancouver Sun’s editorial board, upon
filing an undertaking of confidentiality, be provided with access to the
pleadings and all materials from the proceedings to date and for an order that
the court proceedings be open to the public. The Vancouver Sun was informed,
on July 3, 2003, that Holmes J. would hear its application on July 23, 2003.
13
The hearing before Holmes J. continued in camera, and on July 21,
2003, she issued her reasons dismissing the application to set aside the s.
83.28 judicial investigative hearing. She did, however, vary the order of Dohm
A.C.J. to allow counsel for Malik and Bagri to attend the investigative hearing
with the right to cross-examine the Named Person, subject to the restriction
that any information received was to be kept confidential by counsel and was
not to be shared with the two accused. The Named Person immediately applied to
Holmes J., who, on July 22, 2003, stayed the investigative hearing to September
2, 2003, so that the Named Person could seek leave to appeal to this Court.
None of this was known to the public or press.
14
On July 22, 2003, the Vancouver Sun received a call from the registry of
the British Columbia Supreme Court indicating that the hearing of its
application had been delayed to 10 a.m. the following day, apparently to allow
the s. 83.28 proceedings to continue in camera earlier in the morning.
When the courtroom was finally opened to the public, the Vancouver Sun made its
application to be allowed further access to pleadings and proceedings on the
filing of an undertaking of confidentiality and for a declaration that s. 83.28
proceedings should not be in camera. The application was dismissed by
Holmes J. on July 24, 2003: [2003] B.C.J. No. 1992 (QL), 2003 BCSC 1330.
15
Immediately prior to Vancouver Sun’s application, Holmes J. delivered,
in open court, a synopsis of her reasons for judgment dated July 21, 2003 in
which she set out that the hearing before her had involved the constitutional
validity of s. 83.28 and the validity of a s. 83.28 order for a judicial
investigative hearing. Holmes J. gave a synopsis because the reasons for
judgment were sealed. She also revealed that the questioning of the Named
Person had not yet commenced. It was at this point that the appellant learned
that the British Columbia Supreme Court had been involved in the first-ever
application by the Crown under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code for an order
requiring a witness to attend a judicial investigative hearing. The appellant
contends that but for serendipity and their persistence, no “synopsis” would
have been released and the existence of proceedings under s. 83.28 would not
have been made public.
16
The synopsis of reasons for judgment dated July 21, 2003, [2003] B.C.J.
No. 1749 (QL), 2003 BCSC 1172, set out that “[t]he proceedings concerned the
interpretation, application, and constitutionality of the new s. 83.28 of the Criminal
Code , which provides for investigative hearings in relation to terrorism
offences, as now defined in s. 2 of the Code” (para. 1). Holmes J. then
explained that an order had been issued under s. 83.28 for a judicial
investigative hearing as part of the ongoing Air India Investigation but that
the Named Person who was required to attend was neither a suspect nor an
accused. She summarized her findings that the order was validly issued and
constitutionally sound; that counsel for Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri would
participate in the investigative hearing because of the unusual circumstance
that the Air India Trial was underway; the hearing might have an incidental
effect on the Air India Trial but the predominant purpose of the hearing is to
further the ongoing investigation; the hearing is subject to restrictions
protecting the privacy and other rights and interests of the Named Person and
the integrity of the investigation.
17
After delivering her synopsis, Holmes J. stated that the s. 83.28
proceeding had been adjourned so that the Named Person could seek leave to
appeal to this Court. On July 25, 2003, LeBel J. ordered that the Supreme
Court of Canada file be sealed and that the application for leave be
expedited. Leave was granted on August 11, 2003, to appeal the order of Holmes
J. of July 21, 2003.
18
On October 6, 2003, the Vancouver Sun was granted leave to appeal the
July 24, 2003 order of Holmes J. dismissing its application for access to the
materials in the courts below: [2003] 2 S.C.R. xi. The Vancouver Sun, the
National Post, and Global Television Network Inc. were also given intervener
standing in the constitutional appeal, limited to issues of media access.
Submissions were also made at the October 6 hearing on whether all or part of
the constitutional appeal could be opened to the public and the media.
19
At the October 6, 2003 leave hearing, the Named Person indicated the
constitutional appeal could be conducted in public. The Attorney General of
British Columbia took the position that parts of the appeal, constituting
stand-alone issues, could be held in public: the constitutionality of s. 83.28
of the Criminal Code , the role of the judge, and retrospective
application of the provision. Mr. Bagri submitted that grounds of appeal
relating to self-incrimination and privacy under s. 7 of the Charter ,
judicial independence, and retrospectivity could be heard in public.
20
This Court heard the constitutional appeal on December 10 and 11, 2003,
in its entirety in open court subject to a number of restrictions specified at
the start of the oral hearing by the Chief Justice. During the oral arguments,
counsel refrained from mentioning the name and gender of the Named Person, any
facts that could identify this person, and any material supporting the order
for an investigative hearing. In addition, the hearing was not broadcast,
contrary to the usual practice of the Court.
III. Analysis
21
The issue on appeal is the level of secrecy that should apply to the
application for and conduct of a judicial investigative hearing under s. 83.28
of the Criminal Code .
A. The
Parameters of the Open Court Principle
22
Section 83.28 of the Criminal Code , which provides for the
judicial investigative hearing, will cease to apply at the end of the fifteenth
sitting day of Parliament after December 31, 2006, unless its application is
extended by resolution passed by both Houses of Parliament: Criminal Code,
s. 83.32(1) . Until that time, the Attorney General must make accessible to the
public an annual report on its use: Criminal Code, s. 83.31 . The
sunset clause and annual reporting requirements underscore the unusual and
serious nature of the judicial investigative hearing. It is therefore important
to allow the public to scrutinize and discuss the reasoning and deliberations
of a Court when it deals with a challenge to the constitutionality of that
proceeding. It is also important to allow the legal profession and the public
at large to observe how such a procedure is actually used, as long as this can
be done, in full or in part, without undue injury to the administration of
justice or without frustrating the purpose of s. 83.28 .
23
This Court has emphasized on many occasions that the “open court
principle” is a hallmark of a democratic society and applies to all judicial
proceedings: Attorney General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1
S.C.R. 175, at p. 187; Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick
(Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 480, at paras. 21-22; Edmonton
Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326. “Indeed a
democracy cannot exist without that freedom to express new ideas and to put
forward opinions about the functioning of public institutions. The concept of
free and uninhibited speech permeates all truly democratic societies and
institutions. The vital importance of the concept cannot be over-emphasized”:
Edmonton Journal, supra, at p. 1336.
24
The open court principle has long been recognized as a cornerstone of
the common law: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney
General), supra, at para. 21. The right of public access to the
courts is “one of principle . . . turning, not on convenience, but on
necessity”: Scott v. Scott, [1913] A.C. 417 (H.L.), per Viscount
Haldane L.C., at p. 438. “Justice is not a cloistered virtue”: Ambard v.
Attorney-General for Trinidad and Tobago, [1936] A.C. 322 (P.C.), per Lord
Atkin, at p. 335. “Publicity is the very soul of justice. It is the keenest
spur to exertion, and the surest of all guards against improbity”: J. H.
Burton, ed., Benthamiana: Or, Select Extracts from the Works of Jeremy
Bentham (1843), p. 115.
25
Public access to the courts guarantees the integrity of judicial
processes by demonstrating “that justice is administered in a non-arbitrary
manner, according to the rule of law”: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New
Brunswick (Attorney General), supra, at para. 22. Openness is
necessary to maintain the independence and impartiality of courts. It is
integral to public confidence in the justice system and the public’s
understanding of the administration of justice. Moreover, openness is a
principal component of the legitimacy of the judicial process and why the
parties and the public at large abide by the decisions of courts.
26
The open court principle is inextricably linked to the freedom of
expression protected by s. 2 (b) of the Charter and advances the
core values therein: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney
General), supra, at para. 17. The freedom of the press to report on
judicial proceedings is a core value. Equally, the right of the public to
receive information is also protected by the constitutional guarantee of
freedom of expression: Ford v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1988] 2
S.C.R. 712; Edmonton Journal, supra, at pp. 1339-40. The press
plays a vital role in being the conduit through which the public receives that
information regarding the operation of public institutions: Edmonton
Journal, at pp. 1339-40. Consequently, the open court principle, to put it
mildly, is not to be lightly interfered with.
27
Furthermore, the principle of openness of judicial proceedings extends
to the pretrial stage of judicial proceedings because the policy
considerations upon which openness is predicated are the same as in the trial
stage: MacIntyre, supra, at p. 183. Dickson J. found “it
difficult to accept the view that a judicial act performed during a trial is
open to public scrutiny but a judicial act performed at the pretrial stage
remains shrouded in secrecy”: MacIntyre, at p. 186.
28
This Court has developed the adaptable Dagenais/Mentuck
test to balance freedom of expression and other important rights and interests,
thereby incorporating the essence of the balancing of the Oakes test: Dagenais,
supra; Mentuck, supra; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R.
103. The rights and interests considered are broader than simply the
administration of justice and include a right to a fair trial: Mentuck,
supra, at para. 33, and may include privacy and security
interests.
29
From Dagenais and Mentuck, this Court has stated that a
publication ban should be ordered only when:
(a) such an order is necessary in order to prevent a serious risk to
the proper administration of justice because reasonably alternative measures
will not prevent the risk; and
(b) the salutary effects of the publication ban outweigh the
deleterious effects on the rights and interests of the parties and the public,
including the effects on the right to free expression, the right of the accused
to a fair and public trial, and the efficacy of the administration of justice.
(Mentuck, supra, at para. 32)
30
The first part of the Dagenais/Mentuck test reflects the minimal
impairment requirement of the Oakes test, and the second part of the Dagenais/Mentuck
test reflects the proportionality requirement. The judge is required to
consider not only “whether reasonable alternatives are available, but also to
restrict the order as far as possible without sacrificing the prevention of the
risk”: Mentuck, supra, at para. 36.
31
While the test was developed in the context of publication bans, it is
equally applicable to all discretionary actions by a trial judge to limit
freedom of expression by the press during judicial proceedings. Discretion
must be exercised in accordance with the Charter , whether it arises
under the common law, as is the case with a publication ban (Dagenais, supra;
Mentuck, supra); is authorized by statute, for example under s.
486(1) of the Criminal Code which allows the exclusion of the public
from judicial proceedings in certain circumstances (Canadian Broadcasting
Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), supra, at para. 69); or
under rules of court, for example, a confidentiality order (Sierra Club of
Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522, 2002 SCC 41).
The burden of displacing the general rule of openness lies on the party making
the application: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney
General), at para. 71.
B. The
Nature of the Judicial Investigative Hearing Under Section 83.28
32
We have reproduced the relevant statutory provisions of the Criminal
Code in the appendix to these reasons. From the perspective of the open
court principle, the proceedings under s. 83.28 can be usefully broken down
into three steps:
(a) the ex parte application under s. 83.28(2) for an order for
the gathering of information;
(b) the hearing itself, under the terms and conditions contemplated in
s. 83.28(5)(e); and
(c) the post‑hearing stage, at which non‑public information
may be released publicly, again subject to the terms and conditions in s.
83.28(5)(e).
Section 83.28
does not expressly provide for any part of the judicial investigative hearing
to be held in camera.
33
Competing views about the proper interpretation of the provision as a
whole are as follows: on the one hand, the appellant argues that the open
court principle applies to the entire process and should only be displaced in
accordance with the Dagenais/Mentuck test. The respondents, on
the other hand, submit that when Parliament enacted the section, it was
entitled to rely on this Court’s jurisprudence to the effect that investigative
processes, even if they involve a judicial officer, are presumptively held in
camera (referring, for example to an application for a search warrant: MacIntyre,
supra).
34
The validity of the respondents’ submission rests on the assumption that
the s. 83.28 hearing is an investigative measure akin to the issuance of a
search warrant. This assumption is only partly accurate because one must
distinguish between an application for a s. 83.28 judicial investigative
hearing and the holding of the judicial investigative hearing. The
application for an order that a judicial investigative hearing be held is
procedurally similar to the application for a search warrant or for a wiretap
authorization. Section 83.28(2) provides that the application, made by a peace
officer with prior consent of the Attorney General (83.28(3)), is ex parte.
By its very nature, this application must be presented to a judge in camera.
35
In that in camera procedure, the judge is directed to determine,
for a past offence under s. 83.28(4)(a), whether (1) there are
reasonable grounds to believe that a terrorism offence has been committed; and
(2) information about the offence, or about a suspect, is likely to be obtained
by the holding of a judicial investigative hearing. The judge may also
determine, for a future offence under s. 83.28(4)(b), whether (1) there
are reasonable grounds to believe that a terrorism offence will be committed;
(2) that the person has information about the offence or a third party who may
commit that offence; and (3) reasonable attempts have already been made to
obtain that information from the person.
36
This first step of the process is akin to the application for the
issuance of a search warrant. Although that application is heard by a judge,
the imperatives of the investigation require that it not be made public: MacIntyre,
supra, at pp. 177-78. The same is true of a wiretap application, and,
in most cases, of an application for a DNA warrant (although, in R. v.
S.A.B., [2003] 2 S.C.R. 678, 2003 SCC 60, we left open the discretion of a
judge to hold a contested hearing on the appropriateness of issuing a DNA
warrant). In any event, since that process must be held ex parte, it
follows that in that context it could not be held in open court: see Ruby v.
Canada (Solicitor General), [2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 75.
37
The real issue is whether, because of the investigative nature of the
judicial hearing, it too must, by necessity, be presumptively held in secret.
In that respect, the analogy to the execution of search warrants, as opposed to
their issuance, is not particularly helpful. It is true that search warrants
are not only issued, but executed in secret. On the other hand, they are not
executed by judges. The judicial role consists of ensuring that there are
reasonable grounds to authorize a particular police action. In contrast, the
judicial investigative hearing requires full judicial participation in the
conduct of the hearing itself.
38
The proper balance between the investigative imperatives and the
judicial assumption of openness is best achieved by a proper exercise of the
discretion granted to judges to impose terms and conditions on the conduct of
the hearing under s. 83.28(5)(e). In exercising that discretion,
judicial officers should reject the notion of presumptively secret hearings.
This conclusion is supported by the choice of Parliament to have investigative
hearings of a judicial nature; these hearings must contain as many of the guarantees
and indicia that come from judicial involvement as is compatible with the task
at hand.
39
One such guarantee is a presumption of openness, which should only be
displaced upon proper consideration of the competing interests at every
stage of the process. In that spirit, the existence of an order made
under s. 83.28, and as much of its subject‑matter as possible should be
made public unless, under the balancing exercise of the Dagenais/Mentuck
test, secrecy becomes necessary. Similarly, once a search warrant has been
executed and something has been found, the necessity for secrecy has abated and
continued limits on public accessibility should only be “undertaken with the
greatest reluctance”: MacIntyre, supra, at p. 189.
40
If the existence of the order is made public, the issuing judge, acting
under s. 83.28(5)(e), would determine, still under the guidance of the Dagenais/Mentuck
test, whether any information ought to be withheld from the public. For
example, even though there may be no reason to hide an order for a judicial
investigative hearing in relation to an identified alleged terrorist act, it
may not be appropriate to reveal the reasonable grounds upon which the police
relied to obtain the order. Whether the name of the person who will be heard
at the hearing needs to be kept confidential may largely dictate whether the
time and place of the hearing will also be the subject of a non‑disclosure
order. Of course, should the hearing proceed in a public forum, the Crown
would be expected to request that parts of the hearing proceed in camera in
light of the sensitive nature of the information sought.
41
It may very well be that by necessity large parts of judicial
investigative hearings will be held in secret. It may also very well be that
the very existence of these hearings will at times have to be kept secret. It
is too early to determine, in reality, how many hearings will be resorted to
and what form they will take. This is an entirely novel procedure, and this is
the first case — to our knowledge — in which it has been used.
42
The parties on the present appeal seem to agree that this is a “unique”
case, in the sense that this is not a “typical” set of circumstances in which
such a hearing will be sought. This may be so. We cannot speculate as to what
will be more “typical”. Resort to “reasonable hypotheticals” is fraught with
difficulties in an environment as unprecedented as this one. Applying this
novel legislation to the fact situation before us, it becomes apparent that at
least in this case, the level of secrecy imposed from the outset was
unnecessary. It is therefore prudent to proceed with as little departure as
possible from the basic tenets of judicial proceedings, all the while
developing a discretionary framework that will reflect the unique investigative
role of the judge acting under s. 83.28.
43
In applying the Dagenais/Mentuck approach to the decision to hold
the investigative judicial hearing in camera, judges should expect to be
presented with evidence credible on its face of the anticipated risks that an
open inquiry would present, including evidence of the information expected to
be revealed by the witness. Even though the evidence may reveal little more
than reasonable expectations, this is often all that can be expected at that
stage of the process and the presiding judge, applying the Dagenais/Mentuck
test in a contextual manner, would be entitled to proceed on the basis of
evidence that satisfies him or her that publicity would unduly impair the
proper administration of justice.
C. Application
to This Case
44
At the outset, we must state that this judicial investigative hearing is
the first to our knowledge, and our comments are not to be taken as critical of
the judges below who dealt with these novel matters under great pressure and
time constraints. Properly adapted to the circumstances of this case, the Dagenais/Mentuck
test in our view leads to the following conclusions.
45
The application for the order for the judicial investigative hearing
under s. 83.28(2) before Dohm A.C.J. on May 6, 2003, was properly heard ex
parte and in camera.
46
On the other hand, there was no reason for keeping the existence of the
order secret, nor the fact that the investigative hearing ordered by Dohm
A.C.J. was in relation to the explosion that caused the crash of Air India
Flight 182 in June 1985.
47
In light of the position taken by the Named Person at that stage, the
identity of the person was properly kept confidential. That direction should
have been made subject to revision by the judge presiding at the judicial
investigative hearing.
48
It is apparent on the facts that notice of the hearing should have been
given to counsel for Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri promptly. In the circumstances of
this case where a potential Crown witness in an ongoing trial becomes the
subject of the investigative order, it is obvious that third party interests
have to be considered. Section 83.28(5)(e) specifically contemplates
the imposition of terms and conditions that are “desirable . . . for the
protection of the interests of . . . third parties”. The subsequent
participation of counsel for Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri in the hearings before
Holmes J. merely emphasizes that they should have received notice in the first
instance. Instead, in light of the secrecy surrounding the very existence of
the judicial investigative hearing ordered by Dohm A.C.J., counsel found out
only accidentally of its existence. They then persuaded Holmes J. that the
interests of their clients required their participation in the hearing. A
proper application of the principles in the Dagenais/Mentuck test
reveals that there was no justification for the order that counsel for Mr.
Malik and Mr. Bagri not be given notice of the hearing at the outset. It is
particularly incumbent on the presiding judge to turn his or her mind to the Dagenais/Mentuck
test in ex parte applications because the media is not present to
represent its own rights and interests: Mentuck, supra.
49
It is not necessary in this appeal, given our conclusion that the
hearing should have been held in open court, to decide whether an appropriate condition
under s. 83.28(5)(e) could include an order that counsel be present but
be prohibited from disclosing to their clients the content of the information
revealed in the hearing. It is difficult to anticipate all the difficulties
that such an order may pose. In the same way, we would not endorse the
suggestion made by the Vancouver Sun that some members of its Editorial Board
be allowed to attend the hearings and have access to the materials but be
subject to an undertaking of confidentiality. It is difficult again to
understand how the public good is better served by the qualified participation
of professionals who cannot discharge fully their publicly entrusted mandate.
In any event, these issues can be left for another day, and should be debated
amongst the professional bodies involved so that court-imposed conditions can
properly consider ethical standards and best practices in the professions
involved.
50
Keeping in mind our statements about the novelty of this case, the
present facts clearly illustrate the mischief that flows from a presumption of
secrecy. Secrecy then becomes the norm, is applied across the board, and
sealing orders follow as a matter of course.
51
When the Named Person indicated an intention to challenge the
constitutionality of the order, the imperatives of the open court principle
became even more compelling. The constitutional challenge, and as much of the
information about the case as could be revealed without jeopardizing the
investigation, should have been made public, subject, if need be, to a total or
partial publication ban. When that matter resumed before Holmes J., it became
apparent that the existence of a judicial investigative hearing related to the
Air India case was already known to counsel for Mr. Malik and Mr. Bagri and
later to the Vancouver Sun.
52
The unfolding of events in this case also illustrates how antithetical
to judicial process secret court hearings are. Courthouses are public places.
In the course of a public hearing a judge may order that part of the
proceedings be held in camera, thus excluding the public from
that part of the hearing. But, of course, in such a case, the fact that an in
camera hearing is taking place, as well as the overall context in which it
was ordered, are in the public domain, subject to challenge, inter alia by
the press and to comments by interested parties and by the public. Whether
better notice should be given to the press, or to other possibly interested
parties, of proceedings that are held in camera or that are subject to a
publication ban is beyond the scope of the issues raised on this appeal but we
again suggest serious consideration should be given to this matter by the legal
profession, the media, and the courts.
53
In retrospect, the hearing of the constitutional challenge that was held
in open court before us could and should have been held in the same manner
before Holmes J. Although she may have felt bound by the secrecy order issued
by Dohm A.C.J., it is clear under s. 83.28(5)(e) that the terms and
conditions attached to the judicial investigative hearing must be varied and
adjusted to achieve the proper balance between confidentiality and publicity as
the matter progresses.
54
Here, for instance, the Named Person now takes the position that the
proceedings should be held in public and no longer wishes that his or her
identity be protected. Although this is only one factor to consider and
certainly not dispositive of the issue, it removes in part the concerns that
the investigative judge may have had regarding the privacy interests of the
Named Person. The only factors militating in favour of a degree of secrecy in
this case are the factors related to the protection of an ongoing investigation
or for other vital but unstated reasons. In a case in which so much of the
information relating to the offence is already in the public domain, and in
which recourse to a judicial investigative hearing is sought in the midst of an
ongoing non-jury trial, the case for extensive secrecy is a difficult one to
make and was not made out here.
55
We again emphasize that in the difficult circumstances of this unusual
application of a novel criminal procedure, Holmes J. did excellent work in
fleshing out the issues and addressing them as best she could. Any
shortcomings in her decision become much easier to identify with hindsight,
particularly since much of the ordered secrecy in this case has been lifted
causing no apparent damage to the investigation. Furthermore, shortcomings in
the original decision also become apparent when a hearing is truly adversarial,
with all affected interests represented.
56
It is therefore clear that the constitutional challenge here should not
have been conducted in camera. We would add that there would have been
no need to give the Vancouver Sun (through some members of its editorial board
or otherwise) preferential and confidential access to secret information in
this case if much of the constitutional challenge had been conducted in open
court, along the lines of the process followed in this court, with the helpful
cooperation of all parties. Much of the constitutional case can be properly
argued without the details of the information submitted to the application
judge being revealed.
IV. Disposition
57
We would therefore order that:
The appeal be allowed in part and that the order made by Holmes J. be
varied.
That the name of the Named Person be made public.
That the proposed judicial investigative hearing be held in public,
subject to any order of the presiding judge that the public be excluded and/or
that a publication ban be put in place regarding aspects of the anticipated
evidence to be given by the Named Person.
58
In any event, we would also order that the investigative judge review
the continuing need for any secrecy at the end of the investigative hearing and
release publicly any part of the information gathered at the hearing that can
be made public without unduly jeopardizing the interests of the Named Person,
of third parties, or of the investigation: Criminal Code, s. 83.28(5) (e).
Even in cases where the very existence of an investigative hearing would have
been the subject of a sealing order, the investigative judge should put in
place, at the end of the hearing, a mechanism whereby its existence, and as
much as possible of its content, should be publicly released.
The reasons of Bastarache and Deschamps JJ. were delivered by
Bastarache J. (dissenting
in part) —
I. Introduction
59
I agree with Iacobucci and Arbour JJ.’s discussion on the importance of
openness of judicial proceedings, both as a principle of common law and as an
aspect of s. 2 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
guaranteeing freedom of the press (paras. 23-36). However, I respectfully cannot
agree with their analysis or disposition in this appeal.
60
While I do recognize that openness of judicial proceedings is the rule
and covertness the exception, this Court has held that public access to
judicial proceedings can be curtailed “where there is present the need to
protect social values of superordinate importance”: Attorney General of Nova
Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175, at pp. 186-87. In my view,
several considerations of superordinate importance, such as the proper administration
of justice as well as the protection of the interests, rights and safety of
third parties, warrant the curtailment of public access to investigative
proceedings under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 ,
in most instances. As discussed below, I believe that public access to
investigative hearings would normally defeat the purpose of the proceedings by
rendering them ineffective as an investigative tool.
II. Inapplicability
of the Dagenais/Mentuck Framework
61
This Court developed, in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp.,
[1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, and R. v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC
76, a framework to guide the exercise of judicial discretion in restricting
access to judicial proceedings. Nevertheless, with respect, I do not believe
that the Dagenais/Mentuck test can guide a judge’s discretion in
ordering that the investigative proceedings under s. 83.28 should be held in
camera.
62
The first requirement of the Dagenais/Mentuck test is that a
public ban should only be ordered when “such an order is necessary in order to
prevent a serious risk to the proper administration of justice” (Mentuck,
supra, at para. 32). This requirement was explained by our Court in Mentuck,
at para. 34:
One required element is that the risk in question be a serious one, or,
as Lamer C.J. put it at p. 878 in Dagenais, a “real and substantial”
risk. That is, it must be a risk the reality of which is well-grounded in
the evidence. It must also be a risk that poses a serious threat to the
proper administration of justice. In other words, it is a serious danger sought
to be avoided that is required, not a substantial benefit or advantage to the
administration of justice sought to be obtained. [Emphasis added.]
63
Thus, in order to deny access to judicial proceedings, this test
requires, at the outset, the existence of a serious risk that is well grounded
in the evidence. But where the purpose of the investigative proceeding under
review is to gather information and possibly evidence, it would be quite
difficult if not impossible to present an application for denial of access that
is well grounded in the evidence. The presumption of openness cannot operate in
circumstances where it cannot in fact be rebutted. This is the case because
there is no evidence before the hearing actually takes place. The very object
of the hearing is to gather information and evidence.
64
In my opinion, the only evidence on which a judge presiding over an
investigative hearing could assess the risk under the Dagenais/Mentuck
test would be the information, if any, supporting the reasonable grounds
presented by the peace officer to satisfy the judge hearing the application (s.
83.28(3) and (4)). However, I do not think that reasonable grounds to believe
that a person has direct and material information that relates to a past or
future terrorist offence, or that relates to the whereabouts of an individual
suspected of having committed a terrorism offence, is sufficient evidence upon
which a judge can assess the application and upon which he or she may exercise
his or her judicial discretion. It is imperative to bear in mind that the
information sought has not yet been obtained, and that neither the
investigators, the Crown nor the presiding judge is able to predict what the
witness will say during the hearing. Consequently, if the presumption of
openness applies to investigative hearings, an applicant seeking a denial of
public access for the s. 83.28 proceedings could never satisfy the Dagenais/Mentuck
test. It is not possible for the presiding judge to assess, in an evidentiary
vacuum, the degree of risk that would be created if the hearing were open to
the public. In light of this inherent uncertainty with which presiding judges are
confronted, public access to all investigative hearings under s. 83.28
must be very limited.
65
In sum, a convincing evidentiary basis for denial of access to any
judicial proceeding is generally necessary under the Dagenais/Mentuck
test to rebut the presumption of open courts, a highly valued democratic
principle of our society. However, because of the lack of information and
evidence prior to an investigative hearing, this framework is not appropriate
to determine denial of access. This situation is not unique.
66
In Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General),
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 480, La Forest J. found that in situations where judges are
confronted with an uncertain evidentiary record, the evidence should be
received by way of a voir dire, from which the public is excluded (at
para. 72):
There must be a sufficient evidentiary basis from
which the trial judge may assess the application and upon which he or she may
exercise his or her discretion judicially. In some cases in which the facts are
not in dispute the statement of counsel will suffice. If there is insufficient
evidence placed before the trial judge, or there is a dispute as to the
relevant facts, the applicant should seek to have the evidence heard in
camera. This may be done by way of a voir dire, from which the
public is excluded. . . . The decision to hold a voir dire will be a
function of what is necessary in a given case to ensure that the trial judge
has a sufficient evidentiary basis upon which to act judicially. [Emphasis
added.]
67
Thus, it is only after the information and evidence has been gathered by
the Crown that the presiding judge will be able to exercise his or her
discretion judicially. To act otherwise would present great risks to the proper
administration of justice and to the safety, interests and rights of third
parties.
III. Risk
to the Safety, Interests and Rights of Witnesses and Third Parties
68
The importance of protecting the innocent was considered by Dickson J.
in MacIntyre, supra, at p. 187:
Many search warrants are issued and executed, and
nothing is found. In these circumstances, does the interest served by giving
access to the public outweigh that served in protecting those persons whose
premises have been searched and nothing has been found? Must they endure the
stigmatization to name and reputation which would follow publication of the
search? Protection of the innocent from unnecessary harm is a valid and
important policy consideration. In my view that consideration overrides the
public access interest in those cases where a search is made and nothing is
found. The public right to know must yield to the protection of the innocent.
If the warrant is executed and something is seized, other considerations come
to bear. [Emphasis added.]
69
In s. 83.28 proceedings, which deal with acts of terrorism, the
possibility that information may be disclosed which unfairly prejudices or
tarnishes the reputation of innocent people clearly exists. Such proceedings
run the risk that “unfounded, even outrageous, allegations of misconduct may be
made against the absent target of the information”: Southam Inc. v. Coulter
(1990), 60 C.C.C. (3d) 267 (Ont. C.A.), at p. 275. This unreliable and
possibly untruthful testimony could severely damage the reputation of innocent
people, who may themselves lack adequate means to counter the effect of
information they know to be erroneous or false. This consideration therefore
warrants confidentiality in investigative proceedings.
70
With regard to safety, the disclosure of a witness’s identity may place
that person at serious risk of harm from suspects or their allies. The same can
be said for third parties identified by the witness as having information to
provide during the investigative hearing. This Court has acknowledged the
potential jeopardy to the safety of the witness should it become known that he
or she is about to be questioned: R. v. A, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 992.
71
As noted by the respondent Attorney General of Canada, for some
witnesses, the likelihood that the persons against whom they can provide
information will discover their identity or the content of their testimony may
cause them to commit perjury or refuse to comply with the order. This would go
against society’s interest in encouraging the reporting of offences and the
participation of witnesses in the investigative process. Given the nature of
the threat posed by terrorism and terrorist organizations, confidentiality will
likely encourage witnesses to come forward and be honest in their recollection
of facts, because they would not fear for their safety.
IV. Risk
to the Proper Administration of Justice
72
This Court has held that “the open court principle itself must yield to
circumstances that would render the proper administration of justice
unworkable”: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General),
at para. 29. This confirmed the findings of our Court in MacIntyre, supra,
at pp. 187-88:
The point taken here is that the effective administration of justice
would be frustrated if individuals were permitted to be present when the
warrants were issued. Therefore, the proceeding must be conducted in camera,
as an exception to the open court principle. I agree. The effective
administration of justice does justify the exclusion of the public from the
proceedings attending the actual issuance of the warrant. The Attorneys General
have established, at least to my satisfaction, that if the application for
the warrant were made in open court the search for the instrumentalities of
crime would, at best, be severely hampered and, at worst, rendered entirely
fruitless. In a process in which surprise and secrecy may play a decisive
role the occupier of the premises to be searched would be alerted, before the
execution of the warrant, with the probable consequence of destruction or
removal of evidence. I agree with counsel for the Attorney General of Ontario
that the presence in an open courtroom of members of the public, media
personnel, and, potentially, contacts of suspected accused in respect of whom
the search is to be made, would render the mechanism of a search warrant
utterly useless. [Emphasis added.]
73
Although the investigative hearings under s. 83.28 are a new form of
proceeding, the question of public access raises essentially the same issues
that this Court has considered in the context of other investigative tools. The
necessity of clandestine proceedings in relation to the application for and
execution of investigative tools has been accepted by this Court in situations
concerning search warrant applications and wiretap authorization proceedings.
74
For example, this Court recognized at para. 51 of Michaud v. Quebec
(Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 3, that “[t]he reality of modern law
enforcement is that police authorities must frequently act under the cloak of
secrecy to effectively counteract the activities of sophisticated criminal
enterprises.” Speaking about electronic surveillance, Lamer C.J. went on to
state at para. 52:
The effectiveness of such surveillance would be
dramatically undermined if the state was routinely required to disclose the
application and affidavits filed in support of a surveillance authorization to
every non-accused surveillance target. The wiretap application will often
provide a crucial insight into the modus operandi of electronic
surveillance, and regular disclosure would permit criminal organizations to
adjust their activities accordingly.
75
Secrecy has therefore been recognized as paramount in the context of
wiretaps, and public access has been limited to ensure the effectiveness of
electronic surveillance as an investigative device. The same could be said of
terrorist groups or organizations: if the police cannot investigate and collect
information in a confidential environment, their investigation or attempt to
prevent the terrorist offence would be undermined because suspects could be
“tipped off”.
76
The confidentiality of investigative tools was recently confirmed by
this Court in R. v. S.A.B., [2003] 2 S.C.R. 678, 2003 SCC 60. In her
discussion of the constitutionality of DNA warrants, Arbour J. stated that “as
with most investigative techniques, the ex parte nature of the
proceedings is constitutionally acceptable as a norm because of the risk that
the suspect would take steps to frustrate the proper execution of the warrant”
(para. 56).
77
I agree with the respondent Attorney General of British Columbia that
police cannot gather information and act upon it at the same time it is
disseminated to the public and the media. Information gathered may lead to
other avenues of investigation and other potential witnesses. Moreover, the
information obtained at a s. 83.28 hearing could be used in connection with
subsequent applications for search warrants, wiretaps and further s. 83.28
orders against other witnesses. The efficacy of these investigative tools would
be seriously compromised if the details of the s. 83.28 proceedings were open
to the public. Corruption of witnesses’ recollections, the potential fleeing of
suspects and the risk of pressure being put on future witnesses to give false
testimony are but a few examples.
78
Unlike other investigative proceedings, such as search warrants, where
the evidence found and things seized are material, a witness’s version of
events may vary substantially, especially in response to threats or
intimidation. This person could also flee. Thus, there is a legitimate law
enforcement interest in maintaining the confidentiality of a witness’s identity
and testimony, because the premature disclosure of information about a
terrorism offence would compromise and impede the very investigation of this
gathered information. This would frustrate effective law enforcement, which is
meant to benefit society as a whole: S.A.B., supra, at
para. 51.
79
The predominant purpose of the investigative hearing, like the execution
of a search warrant, is to gather information. While the purposes of these
investigative tools are similar, this should not be taken as saying that the
role of the judge in investigatory proceedings is like that of an agent of the
state charged with executing a search warrant. Rather, the companion reasons
clearly state that the judge’s role in investigative proceedings under s. 83.28
is limited to ensuring that information is gathered in a proper manner and
protecting the integrity of the investigation and interests of the witness (Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248,
2004 SCC 42, at paras. 86-87). However, the evidentiary uncertainty
preceding both procedures is the same. Without knowing what information will be
revealed, it is not possible, in my view, to evaluate the seriousness of the
risk to third parties’ rights and to the proper administration of justice.
Judges simply do not have sufficient evidence on which to make an informed
assessment. Thus, in the case of investigative hearings, the presumption of
openness must yield to other serious considerations so as to preserve the rights
of third parties and ensure the proper administration of justice.
80
In my opinion, the fact that an investigative hearing takes place during
an ongoing investigation further supports the confidentiality of the
proceedings. For example, the respondent Bagri argues that the premature
disclosure of investigative information from a s. 83.28 hearing could
compromise the integrity of the ongoing investigations, which could in turn
hamper his ability to make full answer and defence in the Air India trial.
81
Likewise, the fact that the hearing was in part about the constitutional
validity of s. 83.28 did not make the imperatives of the open court principle
more compelling in this case. To the contrary, the public disclosure of this
challenge to the provision would ignore the fact that the Named Person’s
identity and any information that person may disclose should be kept
confidential until the completion of the proceeding. An examination of the
record shows that the constitutional challenge could not realistically be
separated from the actual investigative hearing — in fact, public disclosure of
such a challenge would normally have the effect of publicizing the fact that an
application has been made under s. 83.28 and that an investigative hearing may
be taking place, though I would not rule out the possibility of isolating these
proceedings and holding them in open court under the appropriate circumstances.
In my view, the protection of the judicial system’s integrity does not depend
on the public’s knowledge of potentially harmful information, especially in
light of the fact that any information which is found to be non-prejudicial
will be publicly disclosed after the end of the proceeding.
82
For the same reasons, like Holmes J. (Vancouver Sun (Re), [2003]
B.C.J. No. 1992 (QL), 2003 BCSC 1330), I see no merit in alerting the media to
the fact that an in camera hearing is to take place. Advance notice of
the s. 83.28 hearing would serve no useful purpose. The media’s pursuit of a newsworthy
event at that point would only undermine the proper administration of justice
and could potentially damage third parties’ rights and interests. The trouble
is that until the witness testifies, is it inherently uncertain whether or not
public access to the hearing will jeopardize the countervailing interests at
stake.
V. Completion
of the Investigative Hearing
83
I agree with Holmes J. that different considerations apply after the
completion of investigative procedures (para. 27). Much like the execution of a
search warrant, the evidentiary uncertainty surrounding investigative
proceedings under s. 83.28 is dispelled upon completion of the hearing and
“the purposes of the policy of secrecy are largely, if not entirely,
accomplished”: MacIntyre, supra, at p. 188. The information
gathered by the Crown at the s. 83.28 proceeding will provide a basis upon
which the presiding judge can balance the competing interests at stake and more
accurately assess the risk presented by the disclosure of information to third
parties and to the proper administration of justice. Consequently, all
information which is deemed non-prejudicial can be released shortly after the
hearing. Because openness is the presumption, the person who wishes to deny the
right of public access has the burden of proof and must satisfy the Dagenais/Mentuck
test.
VI. Conclusion
84
Although the rule is that of openness, where the rights of third parties
would be unduly harmed and the administration of justice rendered unworkable by
the presence of the public, the court may sit in camera. Such is
normally the case for investigative proceedings under s. 83.28.
85
Courts reviewing a trial judge’s decision to deny public access must
remember that a trial judge is usually in the best position to assess the
demands of a given situation: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick
(Attorney General), supra, at para. 77. A reviewing court may look
at the facts of this case in hindsight and conclude that the level of secrecy
imposed from the outset was unnecessary. Nonetheless, there is no way of
knowing this prior to the investigative hearing, because until the witness has
testified, judges cannot assess with any degree of accuracy the extent to which
the proper administration of justice and third parties’ rights could be
jeopardized. Accordingly, I find that Holmes J. properly exercised her
discretion and did not err by ordering that the s. 83.28 hearing be held in
camera. For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal.
The following are the reasons delivered by
86
LeBel J. — Subject to my
comments in the companion case of Application under s. 83.28 of the
Criminal Code (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42, I agree with
the reasons of Iacobucci and Arbour JJ. and with their proposed disposition in
this appeal.
APPENDIX
Statutory
Provisions
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 , as amended by S.C. 2001, c. 41
investigative hearing
83.28 (1) In this section and section 83.29,
“judge” means a provincial court judge or a judge of a superior court of
criminal jurisdiction.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), a peace officer may,
for the purposes of an investigation of a terrorism offence, apply ex parte
to a judge for an order for the gathering of information.
(3) A peace officer may make an application under
subsection (2) only if the prior consent of the Attorney General was obtained.
(4) A judge to whom an application is made under
subsection (2) may make an order for the gathering of information if the judge
is satisfied that the consent of the Attorney General was obtained as required
by subsection (3) and
(a) that there are reasonable grounds to believe that
(i) a terrorism offence has been committed, and
(ii) information concerning the offence, or information that may reveal
the whereabouts of a person suspected by the peace officer of having committed
the offence, is likely to be obtained as a result of the order; or
(b) that
(i) there are reasonable grounds to believe that a terrorism offence
will be committed,
(ii) there are reasonable grounds to believe that a person has direct
and material information that relates to a terrorism offence referred to in
subparagraph (I), or that may reveal the whereabouts of an individual who the
peace officer suspects may commit a terrorism offence referred to in that
subparagraph, and
(iii) reasonable attempts have been made to obtain the information
referred to in subparagraph (ii) from the person referred to in that
subparagraph.
(5) An order made under subsection (4) may
(a) order the examination, on oath or not, of a person named in
the order;
(b) order the person to attend at the place fixed by the judge,
or by the judge designated under paragraph (d), as the case may be, for
the examination and to remain in attendance until excused by the presiding
judge;
(c) order the person to bring to the examination any thing in
their possession or control, and produce it to the presiding judge;
(d) designate another judge as the judge before whom the
examination is to take place; and
(e) include any other terms or conditions that the judge
considers desirable, including terms or conditions for the protection of the
interests of the person named in the order and of third parties or for the
protection of any ongoing investigation.
(6) An order made under subsection (4) may be
executed anywhere in Canada.
(7) The judge who made the order under subsection
(4), or another judge of the same court, may vary its terms and conditions.
(8) A person named in an order made under subsection
(4) shall answer questions put to the person by the Attorney General or the
Attorney General’s agent, and shall produce to the presiding judge things that
the person was ordered to bring, but may refuse if answering a question or
producing a thing would disclose information that is protected by any law
relating to non‑disclosure of information or to privilege.
(9) The presiding judge shall rule on any objection
or other issue relating to a refusal to answer a question or to produce a
thing.
(10) No person shall be excused from answering a
question or producing a thing under subsection (8) on the ground that the
answer or thing may tend to incriminate the person or subject the person to any
proceeding or penalty, but
(a) no answer given or thing produced under subsection (8) shall
be used or received against the person in any criminal proceedings against that
person, other than a prosecution under section 132 or 136; and
(b) no evidence derived from the evidence obtained from the
person shall be used or received against the person in any criminal proceedings
against that person, other than a prosecution under section 132 or 136.
(11) A person has the right to retain and instruct
counsel at any stage of the proceedings.
(12) The presiding judge, if satisfied that any
thing produced during the course of the examination will likely be relevant to
the investigation of any terrorism offence, shall order that the thing be given
into the custody of the peace officer or someone acting on the peace officer’s
behalf.
Appeal allowed in part, Bastarache
and Deschamps JJ. dissenting
in part.
Solicitors for the appellant: Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy,
Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent the Attorney General of Canada:
Attorney General of Canada, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent the Attorney General of British
Columbia: Attorney General of British Columbia, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent the “Named Person”: Howard Rubin,
North Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondent Ripudaman Singh Malik: Smart &
Williams, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondent Ajaib Singh Bagri: Sack Goldblatt
Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.