R. v. Fliss, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 535, 2002
SCC 16
Peter William Fliss Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. Fliss
Neutral citation: 2002 SCC 16.
File No.: 27998.
2001: April 23; 2002: February 21.
Present: L’Heureux‑Dubé, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Constitutional law – Charter of Rights –
Unreasonable search or seizure – Exclusion of evidence -- Accused confessing
murder to undercover police officer – Confession recorded on tape pursuant to
prior judicial authorization -- Trial judge declaring tape and related
transcript inadmissible but admitting officer’s testimony of conversation --
Officer’s viva voce evidence basically recitation of whole of transcript --
Whether officer’s evidence violating constitutional right to be secure against
unreasonable search or seizure -- If so, whether evidence should be excluded --
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 8 , 24(2) .
Criminal law -- Admissibility of evidence –
Evidence obtained by electronic surveillance -- Accused confessing murder to
undercover police officer - Confession recorded on tape pursuant to prior
judicial authorization -- Trial judge declaring tape and related transcript
inadmissible but admitting officer’s testimony of conversation -- Officer’s
viva voce evidence basically recitation of whole of transcript -- Whether
officer's evidence was admissible.
The accused freely confessed to an undercover police
officer that he had killed a woman and provided many details during a
conversation surreptitiously recorded pursuant to a prior judicial
authorization. The next day, the officer reviewed the transcript and made
corrections based on listening to the tape supplemented with his recollection
of parts of those conversations. The trial judge, having concluded that the
authorization ought to have been refused for insufficiency of evidence,
declared the tape and related transcript inadmissible but admitted the
officer’s viva voce evidence of the conversation, which was basically a
recitation of the corrected transcript. The jury convicted the accused of
first degree murder. The majority of the Court of Appeal reduced the conviction
to second degree murder. The dissenting judge would have declared inadmissible
the officer’s viva voce evidence and quashed the conviction. The sole
issue in this appeal concerns the admissibility of the viva voce evidence
of the officer’s conversation with the accused.
Held: The appeal
should be dismissed.
Per Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache and Binnie JJ.: The jury was entitled to hear from the officer
about his conversation with the accused, and the officer was entitled to
refresh his memory by any means, including inadmissible evidence. The trial
judge and the majority of the Court of Appeal erred, however, in concluding
that because the officer had a substantial recollection of parts of the
conversation he was at liberty to provide the jury with a recitation of the
whole of the transcript. First, while the officer clearly remembered the
principal elements of the confession, his evidence went well beyond what he
could recall at the time of the trial. Second, the officer’s testimony did not
qualify for admission as “past recollection recorded”. He did not testify that
the transcript accurately represented his knowledge and recollection at the
time he reviewed it. On the contrary, he testified to having corrected
the transcript based on a recall of “parts” of it. It is those portions of the
conversation that he did not remember, either at trial or at the time he
proofread the transcript, but that were nevertheless put into evidence against
the accused, that violate the s. 8 Charter protection because, as
to those portions, the sole basis of the testimony was the unauthorized tape.
Third, the deficiencies in the officer’s recollection were matters of substance
not form. As a result of the trial judge’s ruling, 34 pages of the detail of
the confession went into evidence sourced not in the officer’s recollection but
in the unauthorized recording. Where there has been a Charter breach
with respect to the collection of evidence, the Crown cannot avoid the
s. 24(2) analysis by going directly to the proviso in s. 686(1) (b)(iii),
which provides that notwithstanding an error of law the appeal may be dismissed
if the Court “is of the opinion that no substantial wrong or miscarriage of
justice has occurred”. The proviso addresses a miscarriage of justice in the
particular case. Section 24(2) deals with the balance between individual
rights and Charter rights and the overall reputation of the
administration of justice. The message of s. 24(2) of the Charter
is that even if admission of such evidence would not create a substantial wrong
or miscarriage of justice to a particular accused, the court must nevertheless
consider whether, “having regard to all the circumstances, the admission of it
in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute”.
Although the officer gave evidence gathered in contravention of s. 8 of
the Charter , on the facts of this case s. 24(2) ought not to be
applied to exclude the testimony. The admission of the evidence did not affect
the fairness of the trial. The evidence put into the record was not
conscripted. The confession was freely volunteered. The Charter breach
neither caused nor contributed to the accused’s statements. The officer heard
nothing that the accused did not intend him to hear. The police applied for
and received prior judicial authorization for the surreptitious recording. The
trial judge disagreed with the authorizing judge about the sufficiency of the
allegations but the police officer had acted in good faith. The exclusion of
the officer’s testimony of his conversation would itself bring the
administration of justice into disrepute. Murder is the most serious of crimes
and this one was particularly brutal and senseless. The accused freely
confessed his guilt, in an act of misguided self-interest. The key elements of
the confession were available at trial from the undercover officer from his own
recollection.
Per L’Heureux-Dubé,
Arbour and LeBel JJ.: The trial judge ruled that an authorization to intercept
a communication, with the consent of the police officer who was a party to it,
was unconstitutional and, under s. 24(2) of the Charter , he ordered
the exclusion of the recording and of the transcript of the recording of that
conversation. There is no reason to disturb that ruling.
The ruling, however, did not extend to the right of
the police officer to testify as to what the accused said in the course of that
conversation, as long as such testimony is otherwise admissible at common law.
In such a case, it neither makes sense, nor would it be feasible, to attempt to
preclude the witness from refreshing his memory from the recording.
When the police officer testified, he independently
recalled most of the salient portions of the confession. The full transcript
itself had been ruled inadmissible by the trial judge as a constitutional
matter, and in any event it would have been inadmissible at common law as
hearsay unless the police officer testified that it constituted his past
recollection recorded. A conversation with an informer, or a police officer,
is not a search and seizure; only its recording is. The intercepted
conversation was not excluded and the witness was entitled to try to put the
fullest possible account of his conversation with the accused before the
court. It was an error to allow the officer to read into the record verbatim,
almost the full content of the transcript. The error was a trivial one curable
by the proviso in s. 686(1) (b)(iii) of the Criminal Code .
If, on the other hand, the police were to deliberately by-pass the need to
obtain a judicial authorization to record a conversation, on the basis that
although they could not use the tape at trial, they could always use the
transcript in the way it was done here, the proper remedy, in such a different
scenario, might well be to exclude the tape, transcript and the evidence being
given in any form about the content of the intercepted communication. There is
no reason, in this case, to turn again to s. 24(2) of the Charter
to revisit the issue of the admissibility of the transcript.
Cases Cited
By Binnie J.
Followed: R. v.
Stillman, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 607; R. v. Duarte,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 30, aff’g (1987), 61 O.R. (2d) 385; referred to: R.
v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC 76; R. v. O.N.E., [2001] 3
S.C.R. 478, 2001 SCC 77; R. v. Wells (1996), 107 C.C.C. (3d) 504, aff’d
[1998] 2 S.C.R. 517; Lopez v. United States, 373 U.S. 427 (1963); R.
v. Meddoui (1990), 61 C.C.C. (3d) 345; R. v. McBride (1999), 133
C.C.C. (3d) 527; R. v. Eisenhauer (1998), 123 C.C.C. (3d) 37; R. v.
Salutin (1979), 11 C.R. (3d) 284; R. v. Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R.
265; R. v. Harrer, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 562; R. v. Wijesinha, [1995] 3
S.C.R. 422; R. v. Belnavis, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 341; R. v. Wiggins,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 62; R. v. Solomon, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 696.
By Arbour J.
Referred to: R. v.
Duarte, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 30; R. v. Khan,
[2001] 3 S.C.R. 823, 2001 SCC 86.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 8 , 24 .
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 686(1) (b)(iii).
Authors Cited
McCormick on Evidence, vol. 2, 5th ed. By John W. Strong, General Editor. St. Paul,
Minn.: West Group, 1999.
McWilliams, Peter K. Canadian
Criminal Evidence, vol. 2, 3rd ed. Aurora, Ont.: Canada Law Book, 1988
(loose-leaf updated April 2001, release 26).
Sopinka, John, Sidney N.
Lederman and Alan W. Bryant. The Law of Evidence in Canada, 2nd
ed. Toronto: Butterworths, 1999.
Wigmore, John Henry. Evidence
in Trials at Common Law, vol. 3. Revised by James H. Chadbourn.
Boston: Little Brown, 1970.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court
of Appeal (2000), 139 B.C.A.C. 89, 227 W.A.C. 89, 145 C.C.C. (3d) 353, [2000]
B.C.J. No. 1126 (QL), 2000 BCCA 347, reducing the accused’s conviction to
second degree murder but otherwise dismissing the appeal from a judgment of the
Supreme Court of British Columbia. Appeal dismissed.
Richard C. C. Peck, Q.C.,
for the appellant.
William F. Ehrcke,
Q.C., for the respondent.
The reasons of L’Heureux‑Dubé, Arbour and LeBel
JJ. were delivered by
Arbour J. –
1
I have read the reasons of my colleague Justice Binnie and although I
agree with his ultimate disposition of this appeal, I come to this conclusion
for different reasons.
2
The trial judge in this case found that an authorization to intercept a
private communication was deficient and he decided to exclude the recording of
it and the transcript of the recording. Since the intercepted conversation was
one that a police officer, acting in an undercover capacity, was party to, the
trial judge permitted the officer to testify as to the content of the
conversation. Although the Crown now seeks a reversal of that ruling and
wishes to argue that the trial judge erred in excluding the tape recording and
the transcript, I agree with Binnie J. that we should decline to proceed on
that basis.
3
This position was not advanced by the Crown in the Court of Appeal and I
agree that we should confine our intervention in this appeal as of right by the
Crown to the issue on which there is a dissent in the Court of Appeal on a
question of law. I say this without suggesting that the exclusionary ruling
made at trial was sound. I agree that we should simply proceed as though it
were, and tackle the procedural issue that derives from that ruling.
4
The legal issue then presents itself as follows: If a police officer
unconstitutionally records a conversation to which he is a party (a Duarte-type
interception; R. v. Duarte, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 30), and both the recording
and the transcript of it are excluded from evidence as a s. 24(2) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms remedy, what use can be made of a transcript
of the recording by the police officer when he or she testifies about the
content of intercepted conversation?
5
As a preliminary observation, I note that this problem did not seem to
have been contemplated in Duarte, supra. In that case, this
Court found that the interception of a private communication lawfully made upon
the consent of one of the parties to the conversation (under the provisions of
the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 , as they then existed) was
nevertheless an infringement of s. 8 of the Charter as un unreasonable
search and seizure. Turning to the remedy for that constitutional violation,
the Court made no distinction between the communication itself and the
recording of it. La Forest J. held that the intercepted communication could be
introduced in evidence since its admission in the proceedings would not bring
the administration of justice into disrepute, within the meaning of s. 24(2) of
the Charter .
6
At the time, the Criminal Code contemplated that a communication
that was unlawfully intercepted was inadmissible in evidence unless one of the
parties to the conversation consented to its admission (s. 178.16 of the then Code).
There was no need to distinguish between the communication itself and the
recording of the communication: both were inadmissible. This section was
subsequently repealed and the current regime is a by-product of the decision in
Duarte requiring a judicial authorization for an interception made with
the consent of only one party to it (a surreptitious intercept as far as the
other is concerned).
7
In the current statutory context, therefore, as was the case here, if
the authorization is held to be invalid as a violation of s. 8 of the Charter ,
the remedies are to be found in the panoply provided by s. 24 of the Charter .
Under s. 24(2), the trial judge could conceivably hold that the Charter
violation was so egregious that not only should the recording of it not be
admissible in evidence, but that even the viva voce evidence of the
person who was a party to it should not be permitted. This was in fact the
statutory remedy in the pre-Duarte regime. In contrast, when a
conversation is intercepted in a case like the present one on the basis of a
defective authorization, the recording (and any transcript thereof) may be
excluded, but the constitutional violation is held not to affect the right of
the witness to testify to what he or she heard the accused say, as long as that
testimony is otherwise admissible by virtue of the common law (see Duarte,
supra, per La Forest J., at p. 58).
8
This half-way remedy, if I may call it that, is what led to the
procedural difficulty in the present case. It essentially precludes the
admission in evidence not of the product of the intercept (the private
communication), but of the best evidence thereof (the recording). In light of
this, it would neither make sense, nor be feasible to attempt to preclude the
witness from refreshing his or her memory from the recording. This simply
continues to be a matter governed by the common law. A witness may refresh his
or her memory prior to testifying, as long as he or she testifies from present
memory revived by the instrument that refreshed it, whatever that instrument
may be. In some cases, the witness whose memory at trial cannot be revived can
testify as to the accuracy of a past recording of a then existing memory, under
certain conditions that are meant to alleviate the concerns arising from the
hearsay rule. The past recording, or verification of a recording, must have
been made contemporaneously to the event recorded, when the memory of the
witness was still fresh, and the witness must swear that the recording
represented then his or her accurate recollection.
9
This is in my view precisely what happened in this case. The police
officer testified that the day after his conversation with the accused was
surreptitiously recorded, he reviewed a transcript of the recording. Not
surprisingly, most of the salient facts about the accused’s confession to a
murder were still fresh in his mind then, and indeed most of them were still
fresh at the time of trial. Again not surprisingly, on the sole basis of his
then memory of the conversation, the officer could not, the next day, fill in
some of the blanks in the transcript. I explain. As is often the case, the
transcript contained several entries that simply said “inaudible”, which means
that the transcriber could not make out what was said. According to his
evidence, in some of these cases, the officer could supply the missing entries,
from memory, but in many others he could not. These simply remained marked on
the transcript as “inaudible” and they were of course evidence of nothing.
10
In my view, on this record it is fair to say that when the police
officer testified, he independently recalled most of the salient portions of
the confession. The full transcript itself had been ruled inadmissible by the
trial judge as a constitutional matter, and in any event it would have been
inadmissible at common law as hearsay unless the police officer testified that
it constituted his past recollection recorded, as described above. This, in my
view, it was, except for the parts that the officer said he could not remember
the day after the intercept so as to supply to the transcriber the content of
the inaudible parts. Apart from that, which is of no consequence because the
parts marked “inaudible” were therefore not in evidence in any form, nothing
in his evidence suggests that when he reviewed the transcript for accuracy at
the time that his memory of the conversation was fresh, the transcript
contained expressed statements of which he had no recollection.
11
Having said that, in the present circumstances, I think it was an error
on both accounts the constitutional exclusion and the common law rule to
allow the officer to read into the record verbatim, almost the full content of
the transcript. In the face of that error of law, I would not hesitate to
apply the proviso in s. 686(1)(b)(iii) of the Code on the basis,
expressed in R. v. Khan, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 823, 2001 SCC 86, that the
error was trivial.
12
As pointed out by La Forest J. in Duarte, supra, p. 57, a
conversation with an informer, or a police officer, is not a search and
seizure. Only the recording of such conversation is. The intercepted
conversation here was not excluded, and in my view rightly so. The witness was
entitled to try to put the fullest possible account of his conversation with
the accused before the court. There is no doubt that he did the right thing in
obtaining an authorization, in having the recording transcribed and in
verifying immediately the accuracy of the transcript of a conversation to which
he was a party, while it was still fresh in his mind. This was indeed prudent
since the tape could have been lost or could have deteriorated before trial.
There was, in short, nothing sinister about the creation of the transcript.
13
If, on the other hand, the police were to deliberately by-pass the need
to obtain a judicial authorization and wear a body-pack to record a conversation,
on the basis that although they could not use the tape at trial, they could
always use the transcript in the way it was done here, the proper remedy, in
such a different scenario, might well be to exclude not only the tape and the
transcript as was done here, but to exclude evidence being given in any form
about the content of the intercepted communication.
14
This case illustrates the difficulty with “partial exclusions” of
evidence in cases of “consent interceptions” falling under the Duarte ruling.
If the evidence of the intercepted conversation itself is not ruled
inadmissible, all that the exclusion of the tape achieves is to deprive the
trier of fact of the best, most reliable evidence of the intercepted
conversation. The procedure followed in this case sensibly sought to avoid
such a result. All is different of course in third party intercepts, where the
exclusion of the illegally recorded conversation deprives the police of the
substance of the evidence, not just, as here, of the form in which it was
recorded.
15
In light of the above analysis, contrary to my colleague Binnie J., I
see no reason to go to s. 24(2) of the Charter . In fact, I have
difficulty understanding the basis upon which he does. My colleague decided
early on not to revisit the original order excluding the transcript, so I
assume that that order stands. In order for s. 24(2) to be resorted to again,
one would have to conclude that the oral testimony of the officer reading from
the transcript constituted an unreasonable search or seizure, amounting to a
fresh violation of s. 8 . The original violation (the unconstitutional wiretap)
was spent and remedied by the exclusionary order. I can find no subsequent
violation of s. 8 that would call for a new application of s. 24(2) .
16
To the extent that the trial judge should have limited the use of the
transcript by not allowing it to be read in as though it was full original
evidence, the error was a trivial one curable by the proviso.
17
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal.
The judgment of Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache and Binnie JJ. was
delivered by
18
Binnie J. – This
appeal concerns the admissibility of evidence of the appellant’s confession of murder on January 29, 1997 to an undercover police
officer who at the time was “wired” with a recording device. The police had
obtained prior judicial authorization to make the recording, but at trial the
authorization was found to have been improperly granted. The trial judge
therefore excluded the tape and the typed transcript (being secondary evidence
of what was on the tape). He admitted however the viva voce evidence of
the officer who “refreshed” his memory in the witness box from the excluded
transcript. In fact, his testimony was more or less a verbatim rendition of
the excluded transcript. The jury convicted the appellant of first degree
murder. The conviction was reduced to second degree murder by the British
Columbia Court of Appeal, but the appeal was otherwise dismissed. On further
appeal to this Court, the major controversy was the “indirect” reading of the
excluded transcript into evidence by the officer. I agree with the conclusion
of the Court of Appeal that this did not vitiate the conviction, though for
somewhat different reasons. I would dismiss the appeal.
I. Facts
19
It was alleged that the appellant struck the deceased,
Jo Anne Feddema, with his truck while she was riding her bicycle. They
lived in a small village in central British Columbia and were acquaintances.
The impact threw her, apparently injured, on the hood of his truck and she
shouted, “You’re in trouble now.” The appellant told the
undercover officer that he panicked and killed her by striking her on the head
with a blunt instrument. He provided many details of the killing, including
where the killing took place and how he disposed of her body and clothing, and
how he had made it look as though she had been the victim of a sexual assault.
20
The Crown conceded that without evidence of the appellant’s statements to the undercover officer, “the prosecution’s case collapsed”.
21
The alleged confession came about because skillful police work persuaded
the appellant over a period of months that undercover officers were all part of
a very well‑run criminal enterprise which the appellant might care to
join. Early in the operation, the appellant advised one of the officers that
the police did not like him. When asked why, the appellant said, “They think I
did a murder, they think I killed this broad.” He continued to deny his
involvement until towards the end of January 1997. In the interim, he became
ever more entangled in the supposed crime organization.
22
The police officer’s evidence was that on January
29, 1997, in a room at the Landis Hotel in Vancouver, he told the appellant
that through underworld contacts he could find someone suffering a terminal
illness to make a false confession to the murder of Jo Anne Feddema
provided the appellant supplied sufficient detail to make the confession
believable. (This was similar to the police work discussed recently in R.
v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC 76, and R. v. O.N.E.,
[2001] 3 S.C.R. 478, 2001 SCC 77.) At that point the appellant freely
confessed to the murder, and on the following day took him to the various
locations associated with the crime and described the events in detail. The
conversation of January 30th was also recorded but, unlike the tape made in the
hotel room, it was of poor quality.
23
The police had applied for and obtained an authorization under
Part VI of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 . By its
terms, the authorization permitted the police surreptitiously to record the
conversations between the appellant and the officer. The conversations of
January 29 and 30, 1997 were recorded pursuant to the authorization.
Transcripts were prepared. The undercover officer reviewed the transcripts the
day after each conversation took place, and made corrections based on listening
to the tape supplemented with his recollection of those conversations.
A. The
Evidentiary Rulings
24
The trial judge having concluded that the authorization ought to have
been refused for insufficiency of evidence, and the tape therefore having been
obtained in violation of s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms , the tapes and related transcripts were declared inadmissible.
25
The appellant then moved to suppress the evidence of the undercover
police officer because he said it was inextricably bound up with the
transcripts of the tapes that had been ruled inadmissible. The trial judge
ruled that the officer could give evidence “as to his present recollection of
what occurred in that hotel room on January 29th” and, for that purpose, he
could make use of the corrected transcripts (euphemistically described as his
“notes”) to refresh his memory. He had not in fact made notes of the
conversation, believing that the tape itself, having been authorized, would be
admissible.
26
This appeal, and the disputed ruling, relate only to the January 29th
conversation at the Landis Hotel.
B. The
Officer’s Evidence on the Voir Dire
27
In the witness box, the officer’s evidence
followed closely, often word for word, the corrected transcript of the January
29th conversation. When challenged by the defence, he explained in a voir
dire that, within a day of the original conversation, he had received a
typed transcript of the tapes. He took the tape and the transcribed copy of
the tape “and I proofread the transcribed copy with the tape and I made changes
on it. Also adding comments of my own. I then sent that back to be retyped
with my corrections and my comments and I received back the corrected copy”.
The original document showing his handwritten changes and corrections was not
entered in evidence. The retyped “corrected” version is 49 pages in length,
double-spaced. The cross-examination continued:
Q. -- what you did was you
listened to the voices on the tape?
A. Yes.
Q. And you identified certain
of the voices, for example, as your own, as those of Peter William Fliss and as
that of [a third person]?
A. Yes.
Q. And there would be some,
presumably, areas where you felt you could make out words and you wrote those
in?
A. Yes.
Q. And that was from the tape?
A. The tape as well as my
memory of the conversation itself.
28
Later, when it was suggested to him by defence counsel that the
officer’s present recollection of the January 29th
conversation was “inextricably bound” up with his subsequent review of the tape
and the transcript, he responded:
A. No, I have a definite
independent recollection of the meeting between myself and Mr. Fliss on January
29th, ’97.
Q. Do you have any notes of
that independent recollection?
A. Well, no.
. . .
Q. . . . the only
note you have of the content of the conversation is what you have referred to
as your notes which you have been reading from and which are a transcript from
the taped cassette of a wiretap of the conversation, correct?
A. Yes.
29
The trial judge found that the officer created a corrected transcript
that could properly be described as his “notes”. He permitted the officer to
give in testimony what was “basically a recitation” of the corrected
transcript.
C. The
Verdict
30
The jury, apparently accepting some evidence that death was caused while
the appellant was committing or attempting to commit an aggravated sexual
assault, returned with a verdict of first degree murder.
31
On appeal, because of the conflicting evidence of the Crown’s experts with respect to the alleged sexual assault, a verdict of
second degree murder was substituted. The appeal was otherwise dismissed,
Southin J.A. dissenting. In her view, the viva voce evidence of
the officer was inadmissible and the conviction ought to have been quashed.
The appellant now appeals as of right to this Court on the question of law
raised by Southin J.A.’s dissent, namely whether
the trial judge erred in admitting the viva voce evidence of the police
officer of his conversation with the appellant on January 29, 1997, having
previously ruled that evidence of the transcript of that same conversation was
inadmissible.
II. Relevant Constitutional Provisions
32
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
8. Everyone has the right to be secure
against unreasonable search or seizure.
24. (1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as
guaranteed by this Charter , have been infringed or denied may apply to a court
of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court considers
appropriate and just in the circumstances.
(2) Where, in proceedings under subsection (1), a
court concludes that evidence was obtained in a manner that infringed or denied
any rights or freedoms guaranteed by this Charter , the evidence shall be
excluded if it is established that, having regard to all the circumstances, the
admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice
into disrepute.
III. Judicial
History
A. British
Columbia Supreme Court
33
Stewart J. held that the police had provided insufficient evidence
to support the surreptitious body-pack recording of the conversations with the
accused and that his rights under s. 8 of the Charter had thereby
been violated. He then rejected the Crown’s submissions that the evidence
should nevertheless be admitted pursuant to s. 24(2) of the Charter .
34
Stewart J. subsequently explained that his ruling excluding the tapes
and transcripts related only to the “form of evidence then proffered in
evidence by the Crown” (emphasis in original). That ruling, he suggested,
would also exclude the viva voce evidence of a witness who, without
being a party to the conversation, was able to overhear it only because of the
unauthorized recording. To admit such evidence would simply be to allow the
Crown to do indirectly what it was prohibited from doing directly.
35
Here, however, the officer had participated in the conversation
with the appellant, and did have a present recollection of at least part of it,
although certainly not all of the verbatim detail. The trial judge commented:
Common sense would say that certain things would remain with the
listener forever, simply from having sat in the hotel room with the accused and
heard his confession of a savage killing. But other things would not now be
available to the witness from his memory, absent his having played the tape and
corrected the transcript, as above. Where an unaided memory would leave [the
officer], 17 months after hearing the confession, no one, including [the
officer], can say.
36
In his view, the officer was entitled to give the evidence of the
conversation to which he had been a party, and for that purpose to rely on the
corrected transcript. This was because the corrections were made on January
30, 1997 on the basis of his then fresh memory of what had passed between him
and the accused on January 29th in the hotel room.
37
The defence then followed up with a request that the officer first be
required to testify entirely from memory, and, only after present memory was
“exhausted”, should he be allowed to refer to the corrected transcript. The
trial judge ruled that there was no such legal principle as “exhaustion of
memory” and that in this case it would be “a bootless journey” to require the
witness to follow such a course of action.
In the result, I am not going to direct the witness
to give his evidence in two parts. It is up to the Crown now to ask the
questions in such a way that appropriate use is made of the notes. If, in the
result, what occurs is basically a recitation to the jury of what is in the
notes, nothing has, as a matter of law, gone wrong. [Emphasis added.]
38
The trial judge ruled that the undercover policemen, being
themselves considered “crooks” by the appellant, were not persons in authority
for purposes of the confessions rule: R. v. Wells (1996), 107 C.C.C.
(3d) 504 (B.C.C.A.), subsequently aff’d [1998] 2 S.C.R. 517.
39
The trial judge accordingly permitted the officer to provide what was
“basically a recitation” of the corrected transcript.
B. British
Columbia Court of Appeal (2000), 145 C.C.C. (3d) 353, 2000 BCCA 347
1. Hall J.A. (Hollinrake J.A., concurring)
40
Hall J.A., for the majority, stated that the confession which the police
obtained from the appellant was not dependent upon the existence of the invalid
authorization. The police had embarked on and would have proceeded with the
undercover operation with or without the recording device.
41
In the view of Hall J.A., the statements made by the
appellant to the undercover police officer were freely given, and would have
been available as evidence irrespective of the wiretap that was later found to
be improperly authorized. Referring to R. v. Stillman, [1997] 1 S.C.R.
607, he concluded that the testimony was not conscripted, was supported by the
officer’s present “substantial recollection” (para. 101)
or “fairly detailed recollection of this conversation” (para. 100), and was
therefore admissible.
2. Southin J.A., dissenting
42
Southin J.A. held that if the trial judge was correct in ruling
that the officer’s evidence of the conversation of January
29th was admissible, then no purpose would be served by a peace officer seeking
an authorization to “wear a wire” when interviewing a suspect. All he would
need to do is to testify, as here, about the conversation from a transcript
which would have been somehow transmuted in the eye of the law from secondary
evidence of an illegal electronic record to a peace officer’s aide-mémoire. She held this to be “legal alchemy”.
Failure to suppress the evidence once the tape itself was ruled inadmissible,
she contended, would make a mockery of the authorization process. She invoked
this Court’s judgment in R. v. Duarte, [1990] 1
S.C.R. 30, and the subsequent enactment of s. 184.2 of the Criminal
Code . She concluded, at para. 80, that
a peace officer who has surreptitiously recorded a
conversation with a suspect, even with a judicial authorization, should make,
without hearing the tape, the best notes he can from his unaided recollection.
He should not listen to the tape unless and until it is clear at the trial that
no attack will be made on the authorization.
In her view, the appeal should be allowed.
IV. Analysis
43
There is no doubt that the jury was entitled to hear from the undercover
police officer about his conversation with the appellant on January 29, 1997.
The officer had at the time a present recollection of the “gist” of all of the
important elements of the conversation.
44
As the officer pointed out, rather convincingly:
Well, it’s not every day that someone comes to you in
a hotel room and sits down and has a one-on-one conversation with you
explaining how they killed someone, disposed of their bike in the bush, hit
them with a crowbar while they were still alive, drove down a road with the
deceased in the truck, dragged her into the bush, took her spandex shorts off
to make it look as though it might be a rape, purposely throw those spandex
shorts across the road behind some logs and then go home. It’s not every day someone will sit down and tell you that.
45
There is also no doubt that the officer was entitled to refresh
his memory by any means that would rekindle his recollection, whether or not
the stimulus itself constituted admissible evidence. This is because it is his
recollection, not the stimulus, that becomes evidence. The stimulus may be
hearsay, it may itself be largely inaccurate, it may be nothing more than the
sight of someone who had been present or hearing some music that had played in
the background. If the recollection here had been stimulated by hearing a tape
of his conversation with the accused, even if the tape was made without valid
authorization, the officer’s recollection – not the tape –
would be admissible.
46
The problem in this case is that what was given in evidence went beyond
what the officer could recall – aided or not – either at the time of trial or
at the time he proofread the transcript on January 30, 1997. The Charter
problem arises with respect to those parts of the testimony that the officer
could not recall either at trial or during the earlier
“proofreading” exercise he undertook on January 30, 1997, but which he was
nevertheless permitted to read into the record verbatim from the excluded
transcript. The result was to allow the prosecution to put into evidence
indirectly what the exclusion order forbade it from doing directly.
A. Inadmissibility
of the Tape and Transcripts
47
In Duarte, supra, the Court established the principle that
the secret recording of a conversation by one of the participants who is an
agent of the state is a violation of s. 8 of the Charter . It intrudes
on a reasonable expectation of privacy and annihilates the very important right
to choose the range of our listeners (pp. 44 and 51). In that case, the
accused and others discussed a cocaine transaction with an undercover officer
and an informer. The conversations were secretly recorded. The officer made
notes of the relevant conversations based on his review of the recordings which
had not been judicially authorized. The Ontario Court of Appeal, per
Cory J.A. (as he then was), held that, because the witness was himself a
participant in the conversations, there was no violation of s. 8 (reported
at (1987), 61 O.R. (2d) 385 (sub nom. R. v. Sanelli)). The agent
of the state had heard nothing that the accused did not intend him to hear. A
similar position had been adopted by the United States Supreme Court in Lopez
v. United States, 373 U.S. 427 (1963).
48
This Court took a different view. The expectation of privacy depended
on whether in the circumstances “it was reasonable for that person to expect
that his or her words would only be heard by the persons he or she was
addressing” (p. 47). The law, observed La Forest J., at
p. 48,
recognizes that we inherently have to bear the risk of the “tattletale”
but draws the line at concluding that we must also bear, as the price of
choosing to speak to another human being, the risk of having a permanent
electronic recording made of our words.
49
Over the lone dissent of Lamer J., as he then was, this Court in Duarte
made it clear, at p. 53, that its disagreement with the Ontario Court of
Appeal was with the “policy implications” of allowing the police to conduct
warrantless surveillance on private citizens. It was no answer that only
criminals have something to hide. In a free country, social discourse should
not be inhibited by a concern that conversations are being secretly recorded
and transcribed without lawful independent prior authorization.
50
The incentive of the police to seek authorization in a Duarte-type
situation would be diminished, of course, if the resulting exclusion order
could be sidestepped by the participant officer simply reading the excluded
transcript verbatim into the record.
B. The
Authorization Order
51
In this Court the Crown sought a reversal of the trial judge’s initial
ruling that the authorization for the body-pack had been granted on the basis
of insufficient evidence. The reasons for that order are perhaps vulnerable
but the Crown declined to raise it before the Court of Appeal as an alternative
support for the admissibility of the evidence. No satisfactory explanation was
given for this omission.
52
This is an appeal as of right and the parties properly joined issue on
the question of law on which Southin J.A. dissented, namely:
Whether the trial judge erred in admitting the viva
voce evidence of Sgt. Haslett of his conversation with the Appellant on
January 29, 1997, having previously ruled that evidence of the intercept of
that same conversation was inadmissible.
53
The Crown’s alternative argument (that the original authorization was
valid) would render moot this issue. While the Court has jurisdiction to
entertain the Crown’s argument, I do not think it is in the interests of the
orderly administration of justice to do so on the facts of this case. The
Crown, having declined to make that argument in the Court of Appeal, should not
be allowed to change its position in an effort to scuttle the appellant’s
appeal as of right. I think that for the purposes of this appeal we should
address the issue raised by Southin J.A. on its merits.
C. Objectionable
Portions of the Officer’s Evidence
54
The officer’s actual evidence of the
conversation at trial covers 34 pages of single-spaced court transcript (as
compared with 49 double-spaced pages of the original corrected transcript). An
individual blessed with a prodigious memory would not likely claim total recall
of such a lengthy discussion and the officer here did not claim a prodigious
memory. In the end, his evidence was, as the trial judge anticipated,
“basically a recitation to the jury” of what was in the corrected transcript.
Much of it purported to be a direct quotation at a level of detail that
suggested encyclopaedic recall, including pauses and punctuation:
I said, “Do you want me to explain
to you exactly how this is going to work or not?” And there was a pause, and
he said, “Yeah, I do.” I said, “Huh?” And he said, “Yeah.”
55
The account of the murder was put into evidence word for word from the
excluded (or “suppressed”) transcript:
He said, “Well, yeah, where we live and where it happened, it’s quite -- it’s quite out of the way.” He
said, “I hate to say anything.” I said, “What’s
that?” And he said, “I hate to say anything.” I said, “Just say it and let’s get the deal with, so we can get on with it.”
He said, “Well, it was -- it was
an accident when it happened.” I said, “Great.” He said, “The lady was riding
a bike and I came around the corner with the truck and she just swerved out and
I ran into the back of her. She fell down on the ground. She started fucking
rambling on about a whole bunch of stuff and I got fucking scared and had a
piece of, I think it was crowbar. And I hit her on the back of the head with
it. I threw her in the back of the truck and I threw the bike off into the
ditch. And I drove about a mile down the road and then I took her down another
side road and threw her into the trees. Took her pants off, just left her
laying there so it would look like somebody raped her or something. But I
never touched her.”
I said, “Well, great.” I said, “I
don’t give a fuck if you touched her or not.” I said,
“Great, okay, that’s good.” He said, “My wife -- my
wife never knew I even left the yard. It was just a matter of a couple of
minutes. I went -- just went down to the dump to check on something.” He
said, “She’ll swear on a stack of bibles that I never
left the yard because she didn’t know I left.”
56
In my view, with respect, the courts in British Columbia erred in the
conclusion that because the officer had a substantial recollection of parts
of the conversation of January 29th, therefore he was at liberty to provide the
jury with what was “basically a recitation” of the whole of the corrected
transcript.
57
I reach this conclusion for the following reasons.
58
Firstly, the officer’s evidence went well beyond
his current recollection at the time of the trial. He clearly remembered the
principal elements of the confession, but the wealth of detail recounted in the
34-page recital of his exchanges with the appellant was itself adduced to
persuade the jury of the truth of the confession. The police had set aside
some of the details of the crime as “hold back” evidence that only the actual
killer could be expected to know. As the trial judge noted in his ruling on voir
dire:
The evidence in question has potential probative
value, ranging from significant to overwhelming, depending on what the trier of
fact makes of the relationship, if any, between the detail of what the accused
had to say as he confessed and evidence tending to reveal, perhaps, what was
known only to the killer. [Emphasis deleted.]
59
Understandably enough, the officer’s present
recollection could not provide that level of detail:
A. . . . I can say
here today that I have an independent recollection of what Mr. Fliss told me in
that hotel room on January 29th regarding the situation I was there to
investigate.
Q. Without any mental reference
to any of the transcripts?
A. Yes.
Q. Completely without it? You
can give us a pure, individual memory without reference to this thing?
A. Not the exact wording, no.
But I could give you the gist of what transpired and what was said to
me. I may naturally leave some out, however, I can give you the general
situation. [Emphasis added.]
60
The prosecution obviously wanted more than “the gist of what transpired”
on January 29th or “the general situation”. The officer was quite entitled to
attempt to “refresh” his memory by an out-of-court review of the corrected
transcript, but in the witness box his testimony had to be sourced in his
“refreshed” memory, not the excluded transcript.
61
In short, the problem with the corrected transcript as a stimulus to
memory is not that it was itself inadmissible but that it failed to stimulate.
62
Much of the desired detail would not have been available to the
prosecution but for the officer’s recitation verbatim of the bulk of the
excluded transcript of the unauthorized recording.
63
Secondly, the officer’s testimony does not
qualify for admission as “past recollection recorded”. This doctrine would
apply only if the prosecutor could satisfy the four Wigmore criteria,
usefully summarized by the Alberta Court of Appeal in R. v. Meddoui
(1990), 61 C.C.C. (3d) 345, per Kerans J.A., at p. 352:
The basic rule in Wigmore on Evidence
(Chadbourn rev. 1970), vol. 3, c. 28, §744 et seq. provided:
1. The past recollection, must have been recorded
in some reliable way.
2. At the time, it must have been sufficiently
fresh and vivid to be probably accurate.
3. The witness must be able now to assert that the
record accurately represented his knowledge and recollection at the time. The
usual phrase requires the witness to affirm that he “knew it to be true at the
time”.
4. The original record itself must be used, if it
is procurable.
To the same effect see R. v. McBride (1999), 133 C.C.C. (3d)
527 (Ont. C.A.), at p. 530; R. v. Eisenhauer (1998), 123 C.C.C.
(3d) 37 (N.S.C.A.), at p. 74; R. v. Salutin (1979), 11 C.R. (3d) 284
(Ont. C.A.); J. Sopinka, S. N. Lederman and A. W. Bryant, The
Law of Evidence in Canada (2nd ed. 1999), at p. 928; McCormick on
Evidence (5th ed. 1999), vol. 2, § 279; and P. K. McWilliams, Canadian
Criminal Evidence (3rd ed. (loose‑leaf)), vol. 2, at para.
36:20221.
64
Here, the third of Wigmore’s requirements was not met. The
undercover officer read the transcript the day after the recording, and one
would anticipate that at that time he would have had a good recollection of
it. Perhaps he did, but the appellant was entitled to hear him swear to it.
The result, after all, was that the appellant was confronted with very damaging
evidence the detail of which, due to the officer’s lack of present recall,
could not be effectively cross-examined upon. Wigmore gives an example
of the sort of explicitness with which his third requirement should be met.
If the witness can say, “I distinctly remember that when I made or saw
this memorandum, about the time of the events, I was then conscious of its
correctness,” his verification is satisfactory.
(J. H. Wigmore, Evidence in Trials at Common Law, vol. 3
(Chadbourn rev. 1970), p. 98)
McCormick
states “the witness must acknowledge at trial the accuracy of the
statement” (p. 246 (emphasis added)). Obviously no particular form of words is
required, but the court should not be left to speculate that because the
witness ought to have remembered whether the record was accurate,
therefore the witness did so remember, despite his silence as to whether
he did so or not. The admission of past recollection recorded but no longer
remembered is an exceptional procedure and the conditions precedent to its
reception should be clearly satisfied.
65
While the officer clearly recalled more on January 30th than he did at
trial 17 months later, his evidence was that on January 30th he “corrected” the
transcript based only on partial recall:
I could recall parts of it and put corrections in it that may
have been inaudible on the tape. [Emphasis added.]
Counsel for
the appellant argues that the reference to only “parts” is confirmed by his
analysis of the excluded transcript:
[T]here are 89 places throughout the 50 page transcript where the word
“inaudible” appears, none of which were filled in. Throughout the transcript,
there are 20 editing revisions, 16 of which relate to actions, and 4 of which
relate to statements. Of those 4 revisions, none relate to a specific
statement by either party.
66
It is those parts of the conversation that he did not remember on
January 30, 1997 but that were nevertheless put into evidence against the
appellant that violate the Charter protection because, as to those
parts, the sole basis of the officer’s testimony was the unauthorized tape and
excluded transcript.
67
In the third place, I do not agree, with respect, that the issue here is
one of “form”. It is true that in his initial ruling the trial judge excluded
evidence about the confession in the “form” of a tape or transcript, and this
ruling did not preclude the Crown from establishing the same facts by another
route. However, the only other route suggested was the recollection of the
officer. The deficiencies in that recollection, which the officer conceded
with candour and forthrightness, precluded him from reading into the record 34
pages of damaging detail from the excluded transcript. These were matters of
substance, not form.
68
Accordingly, on the facts of this particular case, a significant portion
of the detail that was recited by the officer into the record cannot be
considered to be his recollection (either refreshed, revived or recorded) but
the corrected transcript of the January 29th conversation that, for the reasons
given in Duarte, supra, was obtained in breach of s. 8 of
the Charter .
D. Can the Wrongful Admission of the Evidence
Be Cured by Application of the s. 686(1) (b)(iii) Proviso?
69
In Duarte the Court proceeded directly from a finding of the
s. 8 breach to a consideration under s. 24(2) of the Charter
of whether the evidence ought nevertheless to be admitted.
70
The Crown on the other hand raises the proviso in s. 686(1) (b)(iii)
of the Criminal Code “if necessary”. I do not think that where there
has been a Charter breach with respect to the collection of evidence,
the Crown can avoid the s. 24(2) analysis by going directly to the proviso
which provides that notwithstanding an error of law the appeal may be dismissed
if the Court “is of the opinion that no substantial wrong or miscarriage of
justice has occurred”. The proviso addresses a miscarriage of justice in the
particular case. Section 24(2) deals with the balance between individual
rights and Charter rights and the overall reputation of the
administration of justice.
71
My colleague Arbour J. contends that this was a “trivial” error
(para. 11) in an evidentiary ruling by the trial judge. In my view, the
issue is not whether the error was trivial or colossal. The issue is that in
the result the jury heard details of a confession that covered 34 pages of
damaging transcript sourced not in the officer’s memory but in the excluded
tape recording.
72
While I would not revisit the trial judge’s decision to set aside the
authorization order, for the reasons already mentioned, I do not feel any such
inhibition about revisiting his subsequent s. 24(2) exclusion order with
respect to the transcript because the exclusion of the evidence, as distinguished
from the validity of the authorization order, was the subject matter of
Southin J.A.’s dissent.
73
The message of s. 24(2) of the Charter is that, even if admission
of evidence obtained in breach of the Charter would not create a
substantial wrong or miscarriage of justice to a particular accused, the court
must nevertheless consider whether, “having regard to all the circumstances,
the admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of
justice into disrepute”. The appellant says the disrepute arises because the
officer did indirectly what the Charter says he could not do directly,
and thereby rendered both the Charter protection meaningless and prior
judicial authorizations superfluous.
74
Following the path laid out in the Charter and in Duarte
(p. 59), I think we are obliged to consider under s. 24(2) whether
the detailed rendition of the body-pack evidence ought to have been excluded on
Charter grounds. If so, the conviction would have to be quashed as
urged in Southin J.A.’s dissent.
E. Application
of Section 24(2)
75
The conclusion that the officer’s evidence
contravened s. 8 of the Charter does not, of course, render it
inadmissible: Duarte, supra; R. v. Collins, [1987] 1
S.C.R. 265; Stillman, supra. Section 24(2) provides that
evidence obtained in violation of the Charter “shall be excluded if it
is established that, having regard to all the circumstances, the admission of
it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice into
disrepute”. While the constitutional direction is to balance all of the
circumstances, these circumstances are generally grouped around three primary
considerations:
1. Does the admission of the
evidence affect the fairness of the trial?
2. How serious was the Charter
breach?
3. What would be the effect of
excluding the evidence on the repute of the administration of justice?
76
On the first question, the Court has held that “[a] fair trial is one
which satisfies the public interest in getting at the truth, while preserving
basic procedural fairness to the accused”: R. v. Harrer, [1995] 3
S.C.R. 562, per McLachlin J., as she then was, at para. 45. The
proper balance in respect of the first question was further analysed in Stillman,
supra, which set out a two-stage approach. The first stage requires
courts to classify the evidence as either conscriptive or non-conscriptive. If
the evidence is classified as conscriptive, the second stage then requires the
party seeking to admit the evidence to prove on a balance of probabilities that
the evidence could have been discovered by alternative, non-conscriptive
means. In explaining how to differentiate between conscriptive and non-conscriptive
evidence, Cory J. rejected the importance earlier attached by some judges to
the difference between real evidence and viva voce evidence. He
stated, at para. 77:
The crucial element which distinguishes
non-conscriptive evidence from conscriptive evidence is not whether the
evidence may be characterized as “real” or not. Rather, it is whether the
accused was compelled to make a statement or provide a bodily substance in
violation of the Charter .
77
Stillman established that the key issue on the first branch of
the test is “the manner in which the evidence was obtained” (para. 119).
Evidence will be conscriptive when an accused, in
violation of his Charter rights, is compelled to incriminate himself at
the behest of the state by means of a statement, the use of the body or the
production of bodily samples. [Stillman, para. 80]
78
The proper focus at this stage is therefore on the actions involved in
obtaining the evidence rather than on the form in which the evidence exists.
79
Applying the above principles to this case, it is clear that the
appellant was not detained nor was he compelled to confess to the murder.
Instead, the confession was freely volunteered to someone the appellant thought
was just another influential crook. The Charter breach (the secret
recording) neither caused nor contributed to the appellant’s
statements. The appellant may, from his point of view, reflect with hindsight
that he chose his friends unwisely, something which the Charter cannot
purport to protect him against (Duarte, supra, at p. 41),
but the officer heard nothing that the appellant did not intend him to hear.
Moreover, as noted by Hall J.A., the existence of the statements was not
contingent on the grant of the impugned authorization since the police would
have proceeded with the undercover operation with or without the recording
device, and the officer would, in either event, have heard what the appellant
had to say.
80
In a similar case involving the unauthorized recording of a conversation
by a police participant, R. v. Wijesinha, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 422, the full
Court, per Cory J., found the recorded evidence to be
non-conscriptive. In that case, the accused, a lawyer, initiated a scheme in
which he would pay police officers to refer impaired driving cases to him. The
evidence against the accused included statements he had made to an undercover
officer wearing a hidden recording device. As the officer had failed to obtain
prior authorization to record the conversation, the recording contravened s. 8
of the Charter . In concluding that the admission of this evidence would
not affect the fairness of the trial, Cory J. observed, at para. 55, that
the accused “could not by any stretch of the imagination be said to have been conscripted
into incriminating himself in these conversations” (emphasis added).
81
Wijesinha was cited with approval by the majority in Stillman,
at para. 96, as being “an example of a situation where evidence obtained in
violation of a Charter right was admitted because there was no
compulsion”.
82
It is not entirely clear from the report of Wijesinha how much
independent recollection of the conversation the policeman retained at the time
of the trial. Here, it is important to remember, the undercover officer to whom
the statements were volunteered recalled at the time of trial all the most
significant elements of what was said. The officer’s evidence on that point at
trial, previously reproduced at para. 44, was so striking as to warrant
repetition:
Well, it’s not every day that someone comes to you in
a hotel room and sits down and has a one-on-one conversation with you
explaining how they killed someone, disposed of their bike in the bush, hit
them with a crowbar while they were still alive, drove down a road with the
deceased in the truck, dragged her into the bush, took her spandex shorts off
to make it look as though it might be a rape, purposely throw those spandex
shorts across the road behind some logs and then go home. It’s not every day someone will sit down and tell you that.
With respect to the additional detail provided by verbatim
recitation from the transcript, we cannot now know (because the officer did not
know) precisely what “parts” the officer recalled when he looked at the
transcript the day after the confession and what “parts” he did not recall at
that time. What is important is that all of the essential elements of the
confession were still present in the officer’s mind at the date of the trial.
83
I therefore conclude, on the first question, that the admission of the
additional detail, despite its 34-page length, did not affect the fairness of
the trial.
84
On the second question, the seriousness of the Charter breach, it
is beyond dispute that the police officers acted in good faith. They applied
for and received prior judicial authorization for the surreptitious recording.
The authorization was not quashed because of false statements or misstatements
in the supporting affidavit. The trial judge simply disagreed with the
authorizing judge about the sufficiency of the allegations. This is a stronger
case for the Crown than Duarte itself where the evidence gathered in
violation of s. 8 of the Charter was nevertheless admitted because
the breach “stemmed from an entirely reasonable misunderstanding of the law by
the police officers who would otherwise have obtained the necessary evidence to
convict the accused in any event” (p. 60). Here the officers correctly understood
the law and, in the opinion of the authorizing judge, they had complied with
it.
85
Moreover, the appellant’s act of volunteering
these statements to the officer indicates a low expectation of privacy. A
greatly reduced expectation of privacy in a s. 8 case should have “a
significant impact on the trial judge’s assessment of
the seriousness of the breach”: R. v. Belnavis, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 341, at
para. 40. Here the appellant intended disclosure of the facts of the
victim’s murder (though not, of course, his identity). His expectation was
that the information should eventually be disclosed in the courts through the
mouth of a substitute accused. Disclosure of his identity was achieved not
through the unauthorized recording but by the undercover officer himself based
on his unaided present recollection.
86
On the third question, I believe that exclusion of the
officer’s testimony of his conversation of January 29th would
itself bring the administration of justice into disrepute. Murder is the most
serious of crimes. This murder was particularly brutal and senseless. The
appellant freely confessed his guilt to someone he thought was a partner in
crime in what he thought was an act of enlightened self-interest. The
exclusion of the tape and transcript did not make the confession disappear and
nor should it have done so. The key elements of the confession were available
from the undercover officer with or without the benefit of the corrected
transcripts. He would have been unshakeable on the most damaging points in the
confession, corroborated by his January 30th visit to the crime scene with the
appellant as his guide. In short, the appellant has not established that,
having regard to all the circumstances, admission of the truthful, accurate and
complete details of his voluntary statements into evidence would bring the
administration of justice into disrepute.
87
Duarte established an important aspect of privacy rights
which must not be undermined by allowing the state to introduce unauthorized
“participant” wiretaps under the guise of an undercover policeman’s “notes”. We should affirm the s. 8 protection laid down in Duarte,
but acknowledge that where the issue is the admissibility of evidence, s. 8
rights are not to be read in isolation from s. 24(2) , as the Court affirmed in Duarte
itself and in R. v. Wiggins, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 62, R. v. Solomon,
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 696, and in other cases.
88
It must be remembered that Duarte was decided on very broad
policy grounds. At a time when participant surveillance using body-packs was
not regulated by the Criminal Code , this Court’s concern was with the
inhibition of social discourse amongst Canadians generally, and not
particularly amongst those with criminal proclivities, as is evident in some of
the judicial dicta adopted in that case (at pp. 50, 52 and 54):
Few of us would ever speak freely if we knew that all our words were
being captured by machines for later release before an unknown and potentially
hostile audience. No one talks to a recorder as he talks to a person.
[T]he relevant question is not whether criminals must bear the risk of
warrantless surveillance, but whether it should be imposed on all members of
society.
Were third-party bugging a prevalent practice, it might well smother
that spontaneity -- reflected in frivolous, impetuous, sacrilegious, and
defiant discourse -- that liberates daily life.
89
The Ontario Court of the Appeal in Duarte was gently admonished for
having put the focus too narrowly on those people engaged in “illegal
activities” (p. 53). This Court acknowledged the force of the Crown’s
argument that it might be seen to be anomalous to allow the participant to give
viva voce evidence from memory of the conversation but exclude an
accurate tape recording of the same conversation. Nevertheless, the Court
adopted the view that the risk of unauthorized electronic recording is not part
of our common experience “and it should not be thrust upon us” (p. 50
(emphasis deleted)). This broader policy focus puts Duarte in proper
perspective when it comes to exclusion of evidence in a criminal trial.
Section 24(2) requires a balancing exercise on the facts of each particular
case. In Duarte itself, the evidence obtained in breach of s. 8 was
ultimately admitted after consideration under s. 24(2) . On the facts of this
case as well, s. 24(2) ought not to be applied to exclude the testimony. This
does not nullify the s. 8 protection. It gives it the measured effect in terms
of the admissibility of evidence which the Charter , read as a whole,
intended it to have. In another case, the s. 24(2) hurdle may not be so
readily surmounted.
V. Conclusion
90
The appeal should be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Peck and Company,
Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: The Ministry of the
Attorney General, Vancouver.