Date: 20120502
Docket: IMM-2877-12
Citation: 2012 FC 504
Ottawa, Ontario, May 2, 2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
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RUSTEM TURSUNBAYEV
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
Rustem
Tursunbayev seeks judicial review of a decision of the Immigration Division of
the Immigration and Refugee Board refusing to release him from detention.
[2]
For the
reasons that follow, I have concluded that the Board made a number of errors
both in its assessment of the flight risk posed by Mr. Tursunbayev and in its
assessment of the alternatives to detention that he proposed. As a consequence,
the application for judicial review will be allowed and the matter will be
remitted to the Board for a new detention review.
1. Background
[3]
Mr.
Tursunbayev is a citizen of Kazakhstan and a permanent resident of Canada. He is also a former
Vice-President of Kazatomprom, the state-owned uranium company in Kazakhstan.
[4]
Following
the receipt of an Interpol “Red Notice”, a FINTRAC report, and the issuance of
two inadmissibility reports made pursuant to section 44 of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, Mr. Tursunbayev was arrested
and detained by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) on an immigration
warrant.
[5]
One
inadmissibility report alleges that there are reasonable grounds to believe
that Mr. Tursunbayev is inadmissible to Canada due to his membership in a criminal
organization which is responsible for a complex and systematic scheme to
defraud Kazatomprom and its subsidiaries of significant monetary assets.
[6]
The second
inadmissibility report alleges that Mr. Tursunbayev used a series of off-shore
companies and bank accounts to transfer a considerable amount of money out of Kazakhstan. The report further alleges
that the source of these funds was criminal in nature.
[7]
Mr.
Tursunbayev’s detention was reviewed twice – once within 48 hours of his
arrest, and again within seven days of his first detention review. On both
occasions the Board concluded that Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention should continue
as he was unlikely to appear for his admissibility hearing.
[8]
Mr.
Tursunbayev’s third detention review took place several weeks later. He
provided a considerable volume of documentary material to the Board in
connection with this hearing. Viva voce evidence was also adduced by Mr.
Tursunbayev in support of his release.
[9]
The Board
nevertheless concluded that Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention should be continued.
This application for judicial review relates to that decision.
2. Procedural History
[10]
This
proceeding has a somewhat unusual history. The decision under review is dated
March 21, 2012. Mr. Tursunbayev’s next detention review was scheduled for
Wednesday, April 18, 2012.
[11]
Mr.
Tursunbayev was concerned that his application for leave and for judicial
review of the Board’s March 21, 2012 decision would be rendered moot if it was
not heard prior to his next detention review. As a consequence, he brought a
motion to have the hearing of his application for leave and for judicial review
expedited.
[12]
By order
dated April 4, 2012, Prothonotary Milczynski ordered that the application for
leave and for judicial review be expedited, and that the matter be set down for
hearing on the General Sittings list for Monday, April 16, 2012.
[13]
Following
the hearing of the application, and at the request of Mr. Tursunbayev, I
ordered an interim stay of his next detention review pending my decision in
this matter.
3. The Legality of Mr.
Tursunbayev’s Arrest
[14]
Mr.
Tursunbayev asserted before the Board that his arrest and detention were
illegal as there was no direction for an admissibility hearing in place at the
time the warrant for his arrest was issued. As a consequence, there was no
legitimate immigration purpose to either his arrest or his detention.
[15]
Although
Mr. Tursunbayev provided detailed arguments on this point in his memorandum of
fact and law, he acknowledged at the hearing that this issue is currently before
Justice Russell in a related proceeding. Mr. Tursunbayev indicated that he
would not be pursuing the issue before me and I make no finding in this regard.
[16]
Mr.
Tursunbayev does, however, continue to maintain that the Board erred in finding
that he was unlikely to appear for his admissibility hearing and in concluding
that there were no alternatives to his continued detention. Mr. Tursunbayev
also asserts that representations made by the Minister’s representative at his
most recent detention review hearing were misleading, with the result that the
decision arising from that hearing should be set aside.
4. Standard of Review
[17]
The
majority of Mr. Tursunbayev’s submissions relate to the Board’s assessment of
the evidence and its factual findings.
[18]
As the
Federal Court of Appeal observed in Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Thanabalasingham, 2004 FCA 4, [2004] 3 F.C.R. 572 at para.
10, detention determinations are essentially fact-based decisions which should
be accorded deference.
[19]
That said,
because the individual’s liberty interests are at stake in detention reviews,
these decisions must be made with section 7 Charter considerations in mind: Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 7, Part I of the Constitution Act,
1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.), 1982, c. 11; Thanabalasingham,
above at para. 14.
[20]
The fact
that Charter interests are implicated does not change the standard of review,
which remains that of reasonableness: see Doré v. Barreau du Québec, 2012 SCC 12, [2012] S.C.J. No. 12 (QL) at para. 45.
However, the task for the Court on judicial review in such cases is to
determine “whether, in assessing the impact of the relevant Charter protection
and given the nature of the decision and the statutory and factual contexts,
the decision reflects a proportionate balancing of the Charter protections at
play”: Doré at para. 57.
[21]
To the extent that
Mr. Tursunbayev argues that he was treated unfairly by the Board, the task for
the Court is to determine whether the process followed by the decision-maker
satisfied the level of fairness required in all of the circumstances: see Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339 at
para. 43.
[22]
Similarly, it is for
the Court to determine whether representations made by the Minister’s
representative during the course of Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention review hearing
were misleading or resulted in a breach of natural justice.
5. The Alleged Misrepresentation
Regarding the Extradition Request
[23]
Mr. Tursunbayev
asserts that the Minister’s representative misstated material facts at his
detention review, which misstatements were relied upon by the Board. Mr.
Tursunbayev says that these misstatements amount to a breach of natural justice
and an abuse of process, and that the Board’s decision should be set aside on
this basis alone.
[24]
At issue
are representations made by the Minister’s representative concerning whether or
not the Government of Canada had received a request for the extradition of Mr.
Tursunbayev. The Minister’s representative is not a lawyer, but is very
experienced in these matters.
[25]
The
Interpol “Red Notice” issued with respect to Mr. Tursunbayev states that “The
country at the request of which this present notice has been published has
given assurances that extradition will be sought upon the arrest of the person
…”. Counsel for Mr. Tursunbayev raised this issue at his detention review,
noting that there was no evidence before the Board that Kazakhstan had sought his extradition,
and suggesting that this put the credibility of the Kazakhstani government in
doubt.
[26]
Counsel
for Mr. Tursunbayev also observed that if Kazakhstan had indeed sought his
client’s extradition, he would be arguing that it would amount to an abuse of
process to have Mr. Tursunbayev facing two different procedures at the same
time both aimed at his removal from Canada
and both based upon the same allegations.
[27]
In the
course of this discussion, the following exchange took place:
MINISTER’S COUNSEL: I have to object to this, Madam
Member. This is not an extradition proceeding, we don’t know what
extradition is going on or not. Unless counsel has evidence that is
contrary I think we should be moving on because clearly he’s arguing
extradition, this is not an extradition proceeding.
COUNSEL: Okay, well ---
MEMBER: Well ---
MINISTER’S COUNSEL: And counsel has not
presented any evidence that there has been a request or not a request.
MEMBER: Well I don’t really see a
problem – like Mr. Waldman is simply asking the question of why haven’t they
sought extradition.
MINISTER’S COUNSEL: Does he
know they have or they haven’t? Can he say that with a hundred percent
certainty? I can’t.
MEMBER: Well I mean at this point I
don’t have any evidence that they have.
MINISTER’S COUNSEL: Nor do
you have evidence that they haven’t.
MEMBER: And I’m not necessarily
drawing any particular inference at this point, I’m just listening to what Mr.
Waldman has to say about it.
Transcript of Detention Review
(March 2, 2012) at 65-66, Application Record Vol. 2, [emphasis added]
[28]
The
Minister’s representative subsequently reiterated his observations as to the
lack of evidence before the Board regarding the existence of an extradition
request. His closing submissions also comment on the lack of evidence one way
or the other, stating “We do not know whether extradition has been requested
under some other treaty or not. To make those assumptions is premature on
counsel [sic] without the evidence”: Transcript of Detention Review (6 Mar
2012), Application Record Vol. 3 at 49.
[29]
The
Minister’s representative has filed an affidavit in connection with this
application in which he acknowledges that, at the time of Mr. Tursunbayev’s
detention review, he was aware that the Government of Canada had in fact
received an extradition request from the Government of Kazakhstan.
[30]
According
to the Minister’s representative, this was “third party information” that he
had received on a confidential basis from the Department of Justice’s
International Assistance Group. No Authority to Proceed had been issued in
relation to this request, and the Minister’s representative was not authorized
to disclose the existence of the extradition request at Mr. Tursunbayev’s
detention review.
[31]
The
Minister’s representative asserts that the statements he made at Mr.
Tursunbayev’s detention review were intended only as commentary on the state of
the record and the lack of evidence as to whether or not Kazakhstan had sought the extradition of
Mr. Tursunbayev. Nothing said by the Minister’s representative at the detention
review was intended to be a representation by him to the Board that the
Government of Canada had not received an extradition request from Kazakhstan.
[32]
Finally,
the respondent argues that the existence of an extradition request would have
actually weakened Mr. Tursunbayev’s case for release as it would have provided
him with a further incentive not to appear at his admissibility hearing.
[33]
I would
start by noting that Mr. Tursunbayev has not persuaded me that the Minister’s
representative had a positive obligation to disclose the existence of the
extradition request during the March, 2012 detention review. In the absence of
an Authority to Proceed, there was no assurance that Mr. Tursunbayev would
indeed be facing extradition proceedings in Canada.
[34]
I have
read the transcript of Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention review hearing carefully,
and I agree with the respondent that a number of the statements made by the
Minister’s representative during the evidentiary portion of the hearing clearly
related to the state of the record before the Board and the absence of any
evidence one way or the other regarding the existence of an extradition
request.
[35]
I also
understand the comment made by the Minister’s representative that “[w]e do not know
whether extradition has been requested under some treaty or not” to be a
reference to the state of the record before the Board rather than a
representation as to the state of the Minister’s representative’s own knowledge
or the state of his client’s knowledge with respect to the extradition request.
[36]
One
statement made by the Minister’s representative is problematic, however. He
stated “Does [Mr. Tursunbayev’s counsel] know they have or they haven’t [sought
extradition]? Can he say that with a hundred percent certainty? I can’t.”
[37]
To the
extent that this statement may be understood as a representation of the state
of the Minister’s representative’s personal knowledge with respect to the
existence of an extradition request, the statement was untrue. The Minister’s
representative has admitted that at the time that he made this statement, he
knew that the Government of Canada had received a request from the Government
of Kazakhstan for the extradition of Mr. Tursunbayev. He could state
this with 100 percent certainty by the time of Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention
review, and the statement cited above was arguably misleading.
[38]
However,
this statement must be read in context. It follows several clear comments by
the Minister’s representative about the lack of evidence in the record. Read in
context, it is also arguable that the Minister’s representative was saying that
he could not state with 100 percent certainty that an extradition request had
been made based on the evidence before the Tribunal.
[39]
Indeed, it
appears from what follows that this is the way that the Board understood the
statement, as the Board member made a number of comments after this exchange
about the lack of evidence one way or the other in the record.
[40]
A finding
that a representative of the Crown has intentionally misled a Tribunal is a
very serious matter. While the comment identified above is troubling, I have
decided to give the Minister’s representative the benefit of the doubt in this
case. I would, however, note that this was a close call, and would caution the
Minister’s representative to be more careful in the future in his
representations to the Board.
[41]
I would
also note that in responding to Mr. Tursunbayev’s allegations of
misrepresentation by the Minister’s representative, the Minister’s counsel on
this application submitted that the comments made by the Minister’s
representative at Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention review were merely submissions,
and were not evidence given under oath.
[42]
I am very
concerned about this submission. Individuals representing the Crown before
courts and tribunals always have an obligation to be candid and fair in
their dealings both with litigants and with the courts and tribunals
themselves. The fact that the comments in question were made by the Minister’s
representative in submissions rather than in evidence does not in any way
reduce or limit the representative’s duty of candour.
6. The Finding
that Mr. Tursunbayev was Unlikely to Appear for his Admissibility Hearing
[43]
Section 58 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act
provides that the Board
shall order the release of a detained person unless it is satisfied that,
amongst other things, the person is unlikely to appear for his or her
admissibility hearing.
[44]
The factors to be
considered by the Board in assessing whether an individual is likely to appear
for an admissibility hearing are identified in section 245 of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Regulations,
SOR/2002-227 [the Regulations]. These factors include whether the person
is a fugitive from
justice in a foreign jurisdiction, whether he or she has complied with orders
and conditions, whether there is a history of avoidance of examination or any
previous attempt to do so, and whether the person has strong ties to a
community in Canada.
[45]
It is also reasonable
for the Board to consider the strength of the Government’s case in determining
whether or not an individual poses a flight risk: Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. B188,
2011 FC 94, 383 F.T.R. 114 at para. 44.
[46]
Mr. Tursunbayev has
identified many errors allegedly made by the Board in this matter. Because he
will be subject to one or more detention reviews in the future, he has asked me
to address each of his arguments so as to provide guidance to future
decision-makers. Accordingly, each of Mr. Tursunbayev’s arguments will be
addressed below.
a) Did the Board Improperly Shift the Burden of
Proof to Mr. Tursunbayev?
[47]
The burden of proof
was on the Minister to establish on a balance of probabilities that Mr.
Tursunbayev was unlikely to appear for his admissibility hearing: Thanabalasingham, above at para. 15.
[48]
The CBSA
offered to withdraw the allegations against Mr. Tursunbayev if he explained the
source of his wealth. To date, Mr. Tursunbayev has declined to do so.
[49]
Mr. Tursunbayev
argues that the Board erred in law by using the fact that he has chosen to
remain silent as evidence of his guilt. I do not agree that this is what the
Board did.
[50]
The Board recognized
that Mr. Tursunbayev was under no obligation to provide Canadian authorities
with information regarding the source of his money. It noted, however, that Mr.
Tursunbayev already had a strong incentive to provide exculpatory information,
given that he was being held in detention. Having failed to do so when his
liberty was at stake, the Board found it not to be credible that Mr.
Tursunbayev would be motivated to appear at his admissibility hearing in order
to exonerate himself.
[51]
The Board’s comments
have to be read in context. Contrary to Mr. Tursunbayev’s submissions, the
Board did not shift the burden of proof onto him or draw an adverse inference
regarding his guilt based upon his assertion of his right to silence.
What the Board was addressing was whether Mr. Tursunbayev would be motivated to
appear at his admissibility hearing, or whether he was a flight risk. In this
context, the inference drawn by the Board was one that was reasonably open to
it on the record before it.
b) Did the
Board Apply the Wrong Standard in Assessing the Strength of the Case against
Mr. Tursunbayev?
[52]
The Board noted that
it was Mr. Tursunbayev’s position that the charges against him in Kazakhstan were baseless. In assessing
the strength of the Minister’s case, the Board stated that “[i]f there was absolutely
no basis to the Minister’s allegations, this would weigh in favour of
release, but that is not the case here”: Reasons at para. 47 [emphasis added].
[53]
I agree
with Mr. Tursunbayev that the Board erred in requiring him to demonstrate that
there was “absolutely no basis” to the Minister’s allegations before the
relative strength of the Minister’s case could weigh in favour of his release
from detention.
[54]
As noted
above, the jurisprudence of
this Court has established that the strength of the Minister’s case may be a
relevant factor in assessing whether an individual poses a flight risk. This is
because the relative strength or weakness of the case against an individual may
go to the motivation of the individual to appear at his or her admissibility
hearing.
[55]
Clearly, where a
detainee can demonstrate that there is absolutely no basis to the allegations
against him, that factor may argue in favour of release. That does not mean,
however, that no consideration can or should be given to this factor if a
detainee can merely show that the Minister’s case is very weak. The relative
strength or weakness of the Minister’s allegations must be evaluated in each
case and must then be considered in light of all of the other relevant factors
present in a particular case in order to determine whether the statutory and
regulatory conditions justifying continued detention have been met.
c) Was Mr. Tursunbayev a Fugitive From Justice?
[56]
I am not persuaded
that the Board erred in concluding that Mr. Tursunbayev was a fugitive from
justice.
[57]
The term “fugitive
from justice” is not defined in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 or Regulations. The term must,
therefore, be given its ordinary meaning.
[58]
I do not agree with
Mr. Tursunbayev that a person can only be considered a “fugitive from justice”
if he fled his home jurisdiction after legal proceedings had been
formally instituted. The term is broad enough to include individuals who are
sought by law enforcement officials in their country of origin, who were aware
of an ongoing investigation that could implicate them in criminal conduct at
the time that they left the country, and who have no intention of voluntarily
returning to face the charges.
[59]
In this case, Mr.
Tursunbayev fled Kazakhstan two days after Mukhtar
Dzhakishev, the President of Kazatomprom, was arrested.
[60]
Mr.
Tursunbayev’s position is that he left the country because he was afraid that
he would be arrested and tortured by state authorities in order to obtain
evidence against Mr. Dzhakishev. He further submits that as he had not been charged with any
offences at the time that he fled Kazakhstan,
he could not be a fugitive from justice.
[61]
The Board
rejected this explanation. It found that Mr. Tursunbayev had fled Kazakhstan knowing that the authorities
were investigating offences involving Kazatomprom, and that he had left the
country in order to avoid being questioned about his own role in the matter.
The Board did not accept that a “savvy businessman” such as Mr. Tursunbayev
would not have known that the Kazakhstani authorities were likely also
interested in prosecuting him for his actions as the Vice-President of
Kazatomprom. This was a finding that was reasonably open to the Board on the
record before it.
d) The Use of General Evidence of Corruption
[62]
I also do not agree
with Mr. Tursunbayev that the Board erred by using country condition
information describing the pervasiveness of corruption within Kazakhstan as a basis for a
finding that Mr. Tursunbayev must himself have been involved in corrupt
activity.
[63]
I agree
that it would be an error for the Board to find that simply because corruption
is endemic in a country, a particular individual must himself have been
involved in corrupt activities. However, that is not what happened here.
[64]
Once
again, the Board’s comments
have to be read in context. The
Board noted that Mr. Tursunbayev had been a Vice-President of Kazatomprom, and
was also the director of foundations that either reported to or were linked to
Kazatomprom. While he had described himself as a successful businessman and civil
servant, the Board noted that there was nothing in the record that could
account for Mr. Tursunbayev’s considerable wealth, apart from his past
employment.
[65]
It was
thus in the context of Mr. Tursunbayev’s vast and unexplained wealth that the
Board observed that it was “reasonable to conclude that he had benefited
greatly from his participation in the Kazakhstani system” and that it was not
credible that “a person [could have] benefit[ed] so much from such a corrupt
system without having facilitated and contributed to it”: Reasons at para. 41.
There is nothing unreasonable about this finding.
e) The Board’s
Treatment of the Evidence Regarding the Prosecution of Mukhtar Dzhakishev
[66]
Mr. Tursunbayev
argued before the Board that no weight should be given to the fact that Mukhtar Dzhakishev was
convicted of offences related to Kazatomprom. He submitted that this was a poor
indicator of the strength of the Minister’s case because Kazakhstani courts
routinely rely on evidence obtained through the use of torture.
[67]
The Board
found that although the country condition information showed that Kazakhstani
courts likely do rely on evidence obtained through torture, there was “no
evidence that this occurred in Mr. Dzhakishev’s case”.
[68]
In coming
to this conclusion, the Board relied on an excerpt from the 2009 United States’ Department of State Report
which specifically referred to Mr. Dzhakishev’s case and discussed the
limitations on his ability to access legal representation. As the Board
observed, nothing in the document referred to evidence against Mr. Dzhakishev
having been obtained through the use of torture, although the report does note
the routine use of torture by state officials in Kazakhstan.
[69]
What the
Board did not mention, however, was the information contained in the March,
2010 Amnesty International report entitled “Kazakhstan: No Effective Safeguards against
Torture”, which discusses the Dzhakishev case at some length.
[70]
This
report states that police in Kazakhstan routinely arrest individuals
who are then held incommunicado for varying periods of time during which
confessions are obtained from the individuals through the use of torture.
[71]
According
to the Amnesty report, in the days leading up to Mr. Dzhakishev’s arrest, seven
of his co-directors and staff were detained by officers of the National
Security Service. These individuals were told that they were being taken into a
‘witness protection program’ and were being taken to a safe house. However,
they were instead handcuffed and blindfolded and were flown in a special plane
to a different location. Their families were not told of their whereabouts and
lawyers hired by the families were not given access to the detainees, who were
instead represented by lawyers assigned to them by the State.
[72]
The
detainees’ wives were finally allowed to see their husbands after they had
spent two weeks in custody. These meetings were not private, and it was
impossible to determine whether the men had been mistreated. Some of the wives
expressed fears that their husbands had been “if not physically ill-treated,
then at the very least intimidated into refraining from making any
complaints”. The Amnesty report notes that the men were still being held in an
unofficial detention facility when the report was published some ten months
later.
[73]
It is true
that the Board will be presumed to have considered all of the evidence before
it: see, for example, Hassan v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), (1992), 36 A.C.W.S. (3d)
635, 147 N.R. 317 (F.C.A.). That said, the more important the evidence that is
not specifically mentioned and analyzed in the Board’s reasons, the more
willing a court may be to infer that the Board made an erroneous finding of
fact without regard to the evidence: see Cepeda-Gutierrez v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), (1998), 157 F.T.R. 35, 83
A.C.W.S. (3d) 264 at paras.14-17.
[74]
The
evidence contained in the Amnesty Report was directly relevant to a central
finding made by the Board relating to the legitimacy of the charges against Mr.
Tursunbayev. Moreover, it appears to run counter to the Board’s finding that
there was “no evidence” that Mr. Dzhakishev’s conviction was based on evidence
obtained through the use of torture. The failure of the Board to mention, let
alone analyze this evidence thus constitutes a material error and renders the
Board’s decision unreasonable.
f) The Reliability of the
Interpol “Red Notice”
[75]
Mr. Tursunbayev also
submits that the Board erred in finding that there was no evidence that the
Interpol “Red Notice” in this case was unreliable. I do not agree.
[76]
It is apparent from
paragraph 46 of the Board’s reasons that it understood the evidence adduced by
Mr. Tursunbayev addressing the abuse of the “Red Notice” system by corrupt
States. The Board also clearly understood that Interpol does not “vet”
allegations or authenticate evidence relied on by a State in support of
allegations made against its citizens. Nevertheless, the Board found that the
evidence before it was insufficient to establish that such abuse occurred in
this case. Mr. Tursunbayev has not persuaded me that this finding was
unreasonable.
g) The Failure of the Board to Confront Mr.
Tursunbayev with an Alleged Inconsistency
[77]
The Board had
concerns about Mr. Tursunbayev’s credibility based, in part, on an alleged
inconsistency in information provided by him to Canadian immigration
officials. Mr. Tursunbayev argues that there was no obvious inconsistency in
the information that he provided and that, in any event, it was unfair of the
Board not to put its concerns to him and allow him an opportunity to address
them. I agree with Mr. Tursunbayev on both points.
[78]
The information in
issue relates to Mr. Tursunbayev’s position as Vice-President of Kazatomprom.
In his application for permanent residence, Mr. Tursunbayev stated that he
stopped being Vice-President in November of 2004. However, notes prepared by a
visa officer in connection with Mr. Tursunbayev’s 2008 application for a
temporary resident visa contain the words “Vice-President, Kazatomprom”.
[79]
The Board concluded
from the presence of these words in Mr. Tursunbayev’s immigration file that “it
is therefore likely that he identified himself as such in his application”:
Reasons at para. 53. After observing that Mr. Tursunbayev had elsewhere claimed
to have left his position in November of 2004, the Board stated that “[a]
person’s employment is a basic fact and in the absence of any explanation for
this inconsistency, I find that this raises concerns regarding Mr.
Tursunbayev’s credibility”: Reasons at para. 53.
[80]
It is not at all
clear, however, that there was in fact any inconsistency in the information
provided by Mr. Tursunbayev in connection with his various applications. In
reference to Mr. Tursunbayev’s current position, the visa officer’s notes
relating to his 2008 visa application clearly state that he “is a director of
the corporate foundation “Demur” since May 2006…”. This is consistent with the
information that Mr. Tursunbayev provided in his application for permanent
residence.
[81]
Further on in the visa
officer’s notes is the statement that “He is well established in Kazakhstan”. What then follows is information relating to Mr.
Tursunbayev’s personal history. This information includes his address, date of
birth, marital status, the name of his wife, and so on. It is in the middle of
this information that the words “Vice-President, Kazatomprom” appear.
[82]
There is no timeframe attached to this
statement, nor is there
anything in the officer’s notes to suggest that Mr. Tursunbayev had claimed to still
be the “Vice-President, Kazatomprom” as of 2008. Indeed, the notes identify Mr.
Tursunbayev’s current position as being that of a director of Demur. Given that
the words appear in the context of information regarding Mr. Tursunbayev’s
personal history, it seems more likely that the reference to “Vice-President,
Kazatomprom” was intended to refer to Mr. Tursunbayev’s past employment.
[83]
It was also unfair of
the officer to make such a negative credibility finding without giving Mr.
Tursunbayev an opportunity to address the alleged inconsistency.
[84]
The Board is not
obligated to draw an obvious inconsistency in a party’s evidence to the party’s
attention and to afford him or her an opportunity to explain the discrepancy.
However, in this case, the record before the Board was several hundred pages in
length. The three words in issue were buried deep in the record, and were not
the subject of any discussion at Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention review. Moreover,
as explained above, the alleged inconsistency was not obvious on the face of
the record. In such circumstances, the duty of fairness required that the Board
put its concern to Mr. Tursunbayev and that he be provided with an opportunity
to explain his position in this regard.
[85]
Consequently, I am
satisfied that it was both unreasonable and unfair for the Board to base a
negative credibility finding on this alleged inconsistency.
h) The Alleged Misrepresentation as to Mr.
Tursunbayev’s Net Worth
[86]
While the Board did
not attach a great deal of weight to this finding, it was nevertheless
unreasonable for it to conclude that Mr. Tursunbayev had misrepresented his net
worth to Canadian immigration authorities during the processing of his
application for permanent residence.
[87]
At the time that Mr.
Tursunbayev and his family were seeking permanent residence in Canada he was asked for proof that he had settlement funds of at
least $20,654. Mr. Tursunbayev provided a bank statement showing that he had a
balance of approximately $50,000 in a Canadian bank account.
[88]
While stating that it
was “not clear” whether Mr. Tursunbayev was under any legal obligation to
disclose the full extent of his wealth, the Board concluded that “the fact
remains that the financial picture he presented was vastly different from the
truth”: Reasons at para. 52. After noting that the disclosure of his wealth
would likely have raised questions, the Board goes on to observe that “[i]t
therefore seems likely that Mr. Tursunbayev preferred to avoid attracting any
particular attention”. This was, in my view, an unreasonable inference.
[89]
A review of the
documentation associated with Mr. Tursunbayev’s application for permanent
residence shows quite clearly that all Mr. Tursunbayev was asked to do was to
provide confirmation that he was in possession of the necessary level of
settlement funds. This he did. There was no evidence before the Board that Mr.
Tursunbayev was ever asked about his net worth during the application process,
nor did he represent in any way that the money in his bank account constituted
the full extent of his assets. The Board’s negative finding in this regard was
simply unreasonable.
i) Other
Indicators of Flight Risk
[90]
Mr. Tursunbayev has
not persuaded me that it was unreasonable for the Board to rely on Mr.
Tursunbayev’s past flight from Kazakhstan, the mobility afforded to him by his
considerable wealth, and the resourcefulness that he has shown through his
acquisition of citizenship in the country of St. Kitts and Nevis
as indicators of his potential flight risk.
7. Alternatives to Detention
[91]
I am
satisfied, however, that the Board erred in assessing whether there were
alternatives to Mr. Tursunbayev’s continued detention.
[92]
Where the
Board has been determined that there are grounds for the detention of an
individual, section 248(e) of the Regulations requires the Board to consider
whether alternatives to detention are available.
[93]
In this
case, Mr. Tursunbayev provided the Board with a comprehensive proposal whereby
any risk of flight could allegedly be managed. Mr. Tursunbayev proposed to
offer several sureties and to be subject to strict conditions of release. As
part of these conditions, Mr. Tursunbayev would wear an ankle bracelet
connected to a GPS monitoring system. He would also engage a private security
company to provide physical surveillance of him on a round-the-clock basis, and
to install surveillance cameras at his home in order to monitor his movements.
[94]
The
evaluation of the suitability of sureties is a matter squarely within the
jurisdiction and expertise of the Board. Mr. Tursunbayev has not persuaded me
that the Board erred in its assessment of the suitability of three of the
sureties offered by Mr. Tursunbayev or the sufficiency of the amounts of the
bonds offered by two of these individuals.
[95]
I do,
however, agree with Mr. Tursunbayev that the Board does not appear to have
understood the nature of the undertaking being offered by the head of the
private security company as a means of ensuring that his company complied with
its obligations to monitor Mr. Tursunbayev’s whereabouts.
[96]
I am also
satisfied that the Board erred in failing to properly consider the
appropriateness of the overall proposal offered by Mr. Tursunbayev as an
alternative to his continued detention.
[97]
While the
Board discussed the limitations associated with ankle bracelets at some length,
there is no consideration given in the Board’s reasons of efficacy of
video-cameras to monitor Mr. Tursunbayev’s whereabouts.
[98]
Perhaps
even more importantly, there is no discussion in the Board’s reasons as to
whether the physical surveillance of Mr. Tursunbayev on a round-the-clock basis
would be sufficient to manage any risk of flight.
[99]
Mr.
Tursunbayev provided the Board with a multi-faceted proposal for his continued
monitoring following his release from detention. Each element of the proposed
release plan had to be weighed by the Board on its own, and in combination with
the other proposed methods of ensuring compliance, in order for it to determine
whether there were alternatives to Mr. Tursunbayev’s continued detention. The failure
of the Board to properly consider some of the elements of the plan proposed by
Mr. Tursunbayev means that its assessment of the overall adequacy of the
proposed release plan was unreasonable.
8. Conclusion
[100] Mr. Tursunbayev has not
persuaded me that the Minister’s representative misled the Board with respect
to the existence of an extradition request, or that some of the disputed
findings made by the Board were unreasonable. I have, however, concluded that a
number of the Board’s findings were made in error, and that Mr. Tursunbayev was
treated unfairly in relation to one finding.
[101]
These
errors were sufficiently serious as to require that the application for
judicial review be granted. The Board’s decision is set aside, and the matter
is remitted to a differently constituted panel for a new detention review. This
review is to take place within seven days of the date of this decision.
[102]
Neither
side has proposed a question for certification, and I am satisfied that this
decision turns primarily on the unique facts of this case. Consequently, no
question will be certified.
9. Costs
[103] Mr. Tursunbayev submits that
he should be entitled to his solicitor and client costs in connection with the
application his judicial review based upon the misrepresentation allegedly made
by the Minister’s representative in relation to the existence of the
extradition request.
[104]
Costs are not
ordinarily awarded in immigration proceedings in this Court. Rule 22 of the Federal
Courts Immigration and Refugee Protection Rules, SOR/93-22 provides
that “No costs shall be awarded to or payable by any party in respect of an
application for leave, an application for judicial review or an appeal under
these Rules unless the Court, for special reasons, so orders”.
[105]
Given that I have not
been persuaded that the Minister’s representative misled the Board in relation to the existence of the
extradition request, this is not a case for costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1.
Leave is granted to
Mr. Tursunbayev to judicially review the Board’s March 21, 2012 decision
refusing to release him from detention;
2.
This application for
judicial review is allowed, and the matter is remitted to a differently
constituted panel for a new review of Mr. Tursunbayev’s detention. This review
shall take place
within seven days of the date of this decision.
“Anne
Mactavish”