Docket: T-1498-10
Citation: 2011 FC 814
Ottawa, Ontario, July 4, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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BRADLEY TIPPETT
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Applicant
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and
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MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
APPLICATION
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of a decision made by the Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness (Minister) on or about August 10,
2010 and communicated to the Applicant on August 18, 2010 (Decision) which
denied the Applicants transfer request under the International Transfer of
Offenders Act (ITOA).
BACKGROUND
[2]
In
October of 2007, the Applicant, Bradley Tippett, and two accomplices arranged
to purchase 100 kg of cocaine, at a price of $14,500 per kilogram
($1,450,000.00), from a confidential informant (CI) in Florida. The
Applicant negotiated with the CI regarding how the transaction would occur and
agreed to purchase 25 kg first and purchase the remainder in 25 kg increments.
The Applicant, accompanied by one accomplice, met with the CI in Florida to purchase
the first 25 kg, inspected 1 kg of cocaine, agreed to the acceptability of the
cocaine, and requested the remaining 24 kg. At that time, law enforcement
officers arrested the Applicant and his accomplice and subsequently recovered
$350,000 of US currency
from their vehicle.
[3]
On
May 30, 2008, the Applicant pleaded guilty to “Conspiracy to Possess with
Intent to Distribute Cocaine” and was sentenced to 63 months of imprisonment
and three years of supervised release, following his release from imprisonment.
[4]
On
September 30, 2008, the Applicant requested, pursuant to the ITOA, that the
Minister approve his request to be transferred to Canada in order to
serve the remainder of his prison sentence (Request).
[5]
The
CSC Request Forms for Canadian Citizens incarcerated abroad (CSC Request Forms)
expressly required the Applicant to provide reasons in support of his Request.
The forms provide several opportunities for the Applicant to make written
representations to the Minister addressing all pertinent factors and
circumstances of his individual Request in respect of the pressing and
substantial objectives of the ITOA. For example, the forms invited the
Applicant to provide information regarding a number of factors, including:
1. SUPPORT
List
persons or agencies who might be willing to give you support following your
transfer.
2. OTHER
INFORMATION:
Set
out any other information that you think Canadian officials should know about
you or your case.
3. PERSONAL
DATA:
Synopsis
of personal and family history.
4. RESIDENCE
ABROAD:
How long have you resided
abroad?
Briefly state the reasons for
being abroad.
5. CURRENT
OFFENCE(S):
Name of
accomplices(s)
Offenders
version of offense(s)
6. PREVIOUS
CRIMINAL HISTORY (In Canada and abroad):
7. PROGRAM
FACTORS:
Offenders
occupational and program interests
Drug
/alcohol involvement
General
health
Offenders
immediate needs
[6]
In
completing the CSC Request Forms in support of his request, the Applicant:
a. listed his
wife as a person willing to provide him support after his transfer;
b. provided the
following account of his reasons for being abroad:
I came to Miami for a vacation and was charged with
conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 5 kg or more of cocaine.
I pled guilty and have been sentenced to
63 months. I was given Minor Role by the Crown Prosecutor.
c. Named two
accomplices;
d. Provided the
following account of his version of the offense:
I was in Miami on vacation and I was with the wrong
people at the wrong time and I was arrested and charged with conspiracy to
possess with intent to distribute 5 kg or more of cocaine. I was given Minor
Role by the Crown Prosecutor and was sentenced to 63 months.
e. Identified
his most serious conviction/type of conviction as:
Damage of
Property and DWI
f.
Identified
only “Interested in receiving GED” as his “occupational and program interests”
under the “program factors” heading.
[7]
The
Applicant chose not to submit “any other information that you think Canadian
officials should know about you or your case” and presented no information
demonstrating: his acceptance of responsibility for his criminal offense; his
efforts at rehabilitation in the US; or any particular
rehabilitation and reintegration or other needs that could not be met in the US. He also
chose not to disclose information regarding: outstanding charges; previous
supervision experience; history of violence (not involving property damage); or
other convictions.
[8]
Significantly,
in respect of the “PROGRAM FACTORS” heading, the Applicant identified no other
“occupational and program interests,” no drug or alcohol involvement, and no
immediate treatment, protection or other needs.
[9]
On
December 23, 2008, the Applicant met with his Unit Team at the Northeast Ohio Correctional Center for
his “initial classification.” The Unit Team “recommended participation in the
Financial Responsibility Program to address his felony assessment, GED, and
vocational training.” The Certified U.S. Case Summary notes that “participation
in the facility 40 hour substance abuse group” was identified as a long-term
program participation goal for the Applicant.
[10]
The
CSC Community Assessment also noted that, as of March 6, 2009, when the
Applicant’s parents were contacted, they: were not “aware of [the Applicant]
participating in, or completing vocational or job-training programs”; were “not
confident what [the Applicant’s] employment plans are for his release”; “could
not describe social network [the Applicant] was involving himself with prior to
the index offense”; and “acknowledge[d] he was obviously associating with
negative peers during the commission of the offense,” but they “d[id] not know
the extent of [the Applicant’s] role within this peer group” and “could not
comment on the level of influence his most recent associates have had on him.”
[11]
As
the Applicant submitted his Request pursuant to the Council of Europe
Convention on the Transfer of Sentenced Persons, Canada must make a
decision prior to seeking a decision from the US.
[12]
On
July 30, 2010, the Minister denied the Request (Decision).
THE DECISION
[13]
In
his reasons for denying the Request, the Minister: (a) identified the purposes
of the ITOA; (b) noted that these purposes “serve to enhance public safety in
Canada”; and (c) articulated the legislative framework in which he exercised
his discretion in considering requests for transfer under the ITOA as follows:
For each application for transfer, I
examine the unique facts and circumstances as presented to me in the context of
the purpose of the Act and the specific factors enumerated in section 10.
[14]
The
Minister outlined the circumstances of the offense for which the Applicant is
serving a foreign sentence as follows:
The applicant, Bradley Tippett, is
serving a sentence of imprisonment for five years and three months in the United States for conspiracy to possess
with intent to distribute cocaine. On October 25, 2007, the applicant and an
accomplice were apprehended when attempting to purchase large quantities of
cocaine. An amount of $350,000 was recovered from their vehicle.
[15]
The
Minister identified a number of concerns upon his examination of the unique
facts and circumstances of the Applicant’s Request – as presented to him – in
respect of his mandated consideration of “whether, in[his] opinion, the
offender will, after the transfer, commit a criminal organization offense
within the meaning of section 2 of the Criminal Code” and noted that:
a. the Applicant
“worked with two accomplices”
b. “there is
information on file that suggests that another accomplice was involved who was
not apprehended”;
c. the Applicant
“has ties with an organized criminal syndicate believed to be involved in the
purchase and trafficking of a large quantity of narcotics”; and
d. the Applicant
“was involved in the commission of a serious offense that, if successfully
committed, would likely result in the receipt of a material or financial
benefit by the group he assisted.”
[16]
The
Minister noted in respect of his mandated consideration of “whether the
offender has social or family ties in Canada” that the Applicant “has social
and family ties in Canada and that [his] family members remain
supportive.”
[17]
The
Minister also noted the Applicant’s criminal history, including a number of
young offender and adult convictions between 1996 and 2004 and information that
the Applicant was wanted in Calgary for an impaired driving
conviction in 2006.
[18]
In
concluding his reasons, the Minister summarized his approach as follows:
Having considered the unique facts and
circumstances of this application and the factors enumerated in section 10, I
do not believe that a transfer would achieve the purposes of the Act.
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
[19]
The
ITOA states as follows:
3. The purpose of this Act is to contribute to the
administration of justice and the rehabilitation of offenders and their
reintegration into the community by enabling offenders to serve their
sentences in the country of which they are citizens or nationals.
…
Administration of Act
6. (1) The Minister is responsible for the
administration of this Act.
Designation by Minister
(2) The Minister may, in writing,
designate, by name or position, a staff member within the meaning of
subsection 2(1) of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act to act
on the Minister's behalf under section 8, 12, 15, 24, 30 or 37.
Request for
transfer
7. A person may not be transferred under a treaty,
or an administrative arrangement entered into under section 31 or 32, unless
a request is made, in writing, to the Minister.
CONSENT
Consent of three parties
8. (1) The consent of the three parties to a
transfer — the offender, the foreign entity and Canada — is
required.
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3. La présente loi a pour objet de faciliter
l'administration de la justice et la réadaptation et la réinsertion sociale
des délinquants en permettant à ceux-ci de purger leur peine dans le pays
dont ils sont citoyens ou nationaux.
Double incrimination
…
Application
6. (1) Le ministre est chargé de l'application de
la présente loi.
Délégation expresse
(2) Le ministre peut désigner par
écrit — nommément ou par désignation de poste — tout agent au sens du
paragraphe 2(1) de la Loi sur le système correctionnel et la mise en
liberté sous condition pour l'exercice des attributions que lui confèrent
les articles 8, 12, 15, 24, 30 et 37.
Demande de transfèrement
7. Le transfèrement d'une personne en vertu d'un
traité ou d'une entente administrative conclue en vertu des articles 31 ou 32
est subordonné à la présentation d'une demande écrite au ministre.
CONSENTEMENT
Consentement des trois parties
8. (1) Le transfèrement nécessite le consentement
des trois parties en cause, soit le délinquant, l'entité étrangère et le
Canada.
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[20]
Subsection
10(1) of the ITOA sets out the factors that the Minister must consider in
determining whether to grant or deny a Canadian offender’s request for a
transfer :
10. (1) In determining whether to consent to the
transfer of a Canadian offender, the Minister shall consider the following
factors:
(a) whether the offender's return to Canada
would constitute a threat to the security of Canada;
(b) whether the offender left or remained outside
Canada with the intention of abandoning Canada as their
place of permanent residence;
(c) whether the offender has social or family ties
in Canada; and
(d) whether the foreign entity or its prison
system presents a serious threat to the offender's security or human rights.
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10. (1) Le ministre tient compte des facteurs
ci-après pour décider s'il consent au transfèrement du délinquant
canadien :
a)
le retour au Canada du délinquant peut constituer une menace pour la sécurité
du Canada;
b)
le délinquant a quitté le Canada ou est demeuré à l'étranger avec l'intention
de ne plus considérer le Canada comme le lieu de sa résidence permanente;
c)
le délinquant a des liens sociaux ou familiaux au Canada;
d)
l'entité étrangère ou son système carcéral constitue une menace sérieuse pour
la sécurité du délinquant ou ses droits de la personne.
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[21]
Subsection
10(2) of the ITOA sets out the factors that the Minister must consider in
determining whether to grant or deny a Canadian offender’s or a foreign
offender’s request for a transfer :
Factors —
Canadian and foreign offenders
10(2) In determining whether to
consent to the transfer of a Canadian or foreign offender, the Minister shall
consider the following factors:
(a) whether, in the Minister's opinion, the
offender will, after the transfer, commit a terrorism offence or criminal
organization offence within the meaning of section 2 of the Criminal Code;
and
(b) whether the offender was previously transferred under
this Act or the Transfer of Offenders Act, chapter T-15 of the Revised
Statutes of Canada, 1985.
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Facteurs à
prendre en compte : délinquant canadien ou étranger
10(2) Il tient compte des facteurs
ci-après pour décider s'il consent au transfèrement du délinquant canadien ou
étranger :
a) à
son avis, le délinquant commettra, après son transfèrement, une infraction de
terrorisme ou une infraction d'organisation criminelle, au sens de l'article
2 du Code criminel;
b) le délinquant a déjà été transféré en vertu de la présente loi
ou de la Loi sur le transfèrement des délinquants, chapitre T-15 des
Lois révisées du Canada (1985).
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ISSUES RAISED
[22]
In his
written submissions, the Applicant raises three main issues that he says reveal
the Decision to be wholly unreasonable and lacking in transparency and
intelligibility:
1.
The
Minister’s Decision fails to account for the discrepancy between the Applicant
and his accomplice, Mr. Curtis, who was deemed not to have links to organized
crime and who has since been transferred to Canada;
2.
The
Minister’s Decision, to the extent that it is concerned about the Applicant’s
prior Canadian criminal record, provides no reason whatsoever as to why
continuing to exclude the Applicant will advance the objectives of the Act;
3.
The
Minister’s Decision does not provide any substantive or intelligible
explanation for how denying the Applicant’s transfer request is consistent with
the purpose of the Act.
[23]
These
issues were somewhat modified and refocused at the oral hearing of this
application in Ottawa on June 27, 2011 as
indicated in my Analysis.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[24]
Following
Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, the Federal Court has held that
decisions of the Minister refusing offender transfer requests, pursuant to the
ITOA, are discretionary, entitled to significant deference, and thus reviewable
on a reasonableness standard.
[25]
The
Parties agree that the applicable standard for the issues raised is
reasonableness and the Court concurs.
[26]
In Grant
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2010 FC 958, at
paragraphs 26-32, Justice David Near found that the Minister’s interpretation
and application of the ITOA in exercising his discretion to grant or deny transfer
requests under that statute will similarly attract the post-Dunsmuir
presumption that his decisions be reviewable on a standard of reasonableness.
[27]
As
Justice Sean Harrington underscored in Michael DiVito v Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2009 FC 983, the question for
the reviewing court is not whether it would have been reasonable for the
Minister to agree to the transfer, but whether it was unreasonable to refuse
the transfer.
[28]
When reviewing a decision on the standard of reasonableness, the
analysis will be concerned with “the existence of justification, transparency
and intelligibility within the decision-making process [and also with] whether
the decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law.” See Dunsmuir, above, at
paragraph 47; and Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC
12 at paragraph 59. Put another way, the Court should intervene only if the
Decision was unreasonable in the sense that it falls outside the “range of
possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and
law.”
ARGUMENTS
The Applicant
i)
No
Consideration of the Organized Crime Factors in relation to Mr. Curtis
[29]
The
CSC Memorandum of April 22, 2010 provided to the Minister explains that the
Applicant and his accomplices Brent Curtis and Marcel Meir Reboh met with a CI
to arrange the planned transaction for which the Applicant and his
co-defendants were ultimately convicted.
[30]
The
same CSC Memorandum indicates that the Applicant has ties to organized crime in
the person of Mr. Reboh’s brother, Max Reboh. It is alleged that Max Reboh
funded the trip of the Applicant and Mr. Curtis to Florida. On the strength of
this assertion, the Minister concludes that “the Applicant has ties with an
organized crime syndicate believed to be involved in the purchase and
trafficking of a large quantity of narcotics.” There is no other information in
the record apart from the link between the Applicant and Max Reboh through
Marcel Reboh and the Florida trip that appears on
the record.
[31]
However,
the file for Mr. Curtis, whose transfer was initially denied on May 14, 2009,
contained no CSC Memorandum or other information alleging that he had links to
organized crime.
[32]
Moreover,
subsequent to a successful judicial review application of his denial in
September 2010, Mr. Curtis has been transferred to Canada.
[33]
There
is a clear discrepancy between the treatment of the Applicant and Mr. Curtis
with respect to the allegation of a link to organized crime. On the facts, it
is established that both men were funded by Max Reboh to transport drugs from
Florida and were known to Max’s brother Marcel; however, not only is the link
to organized crime absent from the Curtis file, the Minister also chose to
repatriate Mr. Curtis after judicial review of his earlier decision.
[34]
While
there is a distinction between the respective criminal backgrounds and prior
records of the Applicant and Mr. Curtis, there is nonetheless an irreconcilable
factor in the Curtis file, which ultimately militated in favor of the
Applicant’s transfer back to Canada. The Minister must be consistent and transparent in his
reasons and may not arbitrarily invoke alleged links to organized crime to
delay or frustrate a transfer request. Clearly, the link to organized crime has
significance in the reasoning of the Minister to deny the Applicant’s Request;
however, it is unclear what the significance of such link may be, where it has
not precluded the transfer of the Applicant’s accomplice back to Canada.
[35]
Effectively,
the significant difference between the file of Mr. Curtis and that of the
Applicant resides in the fact that the Applicant has a criminal record, whereas
Mr. Curtis does not. No conclusion is contingent on this bare fact as the
recidivism rate for the Applicant has been judged as low and he is assessed as
not likely to commit an organized crime offense.
ii. Canadian Criminal
Record does not Preclude Transfer Back to Canada
[36]
The
criminal record of the Applicant is clearly included in the CSC Memorandum to
the Minister, which also includes an outstanding conviction for impaired
driving in Alberta and an assault
conviction.
[37]
There
is no reason articulated by the Minister as to why it would not meet the
objectives of the Act to deny the transfer of the Applicant to Canada given his prior
criminal record. The Canadian system is aware of the Applicant’s record and
there is no evidence that the Alberta Prairie Region cannot manage his
sentence.
[38]
To
the contrary, if indeed the existence of a prior criminal record requires
rehabilitation of the Applicant, such rehabilitation will only be managed by
the Prairie region intake unit if a transfer is granted.
[39]
Astonishingly,
if the Applicant serves his full sentence in North East Ohio Correctional, he
will be deported to Canada on or about May 21,
2012 and will not be subject to any supervision requirement or controls and his
foreign convictions will not be recorded in the RCMP’s criminal records
databank as part of his Canadian criminal record.
[40]
In
this sense, the Minister appears to be “free riding” off the American system in
order to maintain the Applicant’s term of incarceration, which would
effectively circumvent any transitional rehabilitation assessment in Canada
that is part of an early return. In this light, the Minister’s continued
refusal cannot be understood as a lawful exercise of discretion because the
Minister is constrained from the outset by the purpose of the ITOA.
[41]
As
part of his response to any transfer request, the Minister must turn his mind
to the question of rehabilitation and provide intelligible and transparent
reasons as to how rehabilitation and reintegration of the offender will be
advanced by his decision, or conversely, how the administration of justice will
be protected. It is entirely inadequate for the Minister to simply state as he
does in his Decision that “I do not believe that a transfer would achieve the
purposes of the Act.”
[42]
More
fundamentally, the Minister must be disabused of the notion that there is a
presumption that a decision that simply considers the statutory factors
pursuant to section 10 of the ITOA meets the objectives of the ITOA. The
statutory factors must be considered in light of the purposes of the Act. If
indeed, the Minister believes that delaying the transfer of the Applicant to Canada will enhance public
safety in Canada by providing no rehabilitative assessment or training to the
Applicant in Canada and simply reinserting
him into his community with no police supervision, the Minister must provide a
basis for his conclusion.
[43]
Similarly,
if the Applicant supposedly poses a threat to the public safety by his early
return, while still incarcerated, the Minister must provide evidence for this
assertion.
[44]
Logically,
the Minister has committed a fallacy and has obfuscated his reasons under the
rubric of enhancing public safety. His Decision in this regard is neither
transparent nor intelligible. Any substandard meaning that is ascribed to his
conclusion must be imputed because he has failed to provide transparent
reasons. It is not the role of the Court to impute meaning to bare conclusions,
but rather to determine whether the reasons proffered transparently and
intelligibly support the conclusion.
iii. Decision does not
Accord with Purpose of the ITOA
[45]
The
Applicant suffers from a problem with alcohol abuse that has escalated to
cocaine use.
[46]
While
being housed at a privatized detention facility in the US, the Applicant needs
access to proper treatment. Where clear evidence is raised as to the nature of
the rehabilitative and reintegrative needs of the Applicant, it is incumbent on
the Minister to determine whether the Applicant’s needs may be advanced through
effecting his transfer from the foreign state to Canada.
[47]
On
the record, there is no comparative information regarding rehabilitative
treatment programming in the US
as compared to Canada. In this regard, it is
important to note that there is also no presumption that public safety will be
enhanced by maintaining a foreign convicted offender outside of Canada. On the facts of the
case, although there is mention of a prior assault charge, there is no
indication that the Applicant is either prone towards violence or that he has
or will cause violence while detained in the US or in Canada. To the contrary, the
record reveals that
Mr.
Tippett is presently incarcerated in a Minimum security facility. He has
demonstrated a pattern of satisfactory institutional adjustment with no or
little intervention required and has not incurred any disciplinary charges.
[48]
The
question of comparative analysis of US and Canadian inmate programming is not
an esoteric one, but it has been completely marginalized on the false
assumption that public safety for Canadians and the inmate alike are fostered
by maintaining detention abroad. The analysis here is distinct from a specific
inquiry into whether the foreign prison system violates the detainee’s human
rights (i.e. ITOA s. 10(1)(d)). It raises pertinent questions such as:
1.
Does
the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) provide early pre-release or treatment programming
for non-citizens who will be deported?
2.
Is Youngstown prison administered
publicly or privately through the Corrections Corporation of America (CCA)?
What is the relative standard of private-run prisons in the United States as compared to public
jails in Canada?
3.
Does
the for-profit model of jailing impact upon the responsiveness of staff and the
institution to the individual needs of the inmate who is seeking transfer?
4.
Are
Sentenced Criminal Aliens (such as the Applicant) eligible for halfway house
release?
5.
Are
Sentenced Criminal Aliens (such as the Applicant) eligible to participate in
drug treatment programs in view of the drug addiction problem of the Applicant?
6.
How
does eligibility for parole compare between Canada and the US under the Corrections
and Conditional Release Act?
7.
Does
the Minister’s declaration regarding organized crime links of the Applicant
bear upon his conditions of sentence in the United States (i.e. does it
disqualify him from an earlier release date)?
8.
Are
there issues of overcrowding at North East Ohio? How do such issues compare to
Prairie Region federal correctional facilities in Canada?
[49]
The
fact that none of these questions has ever been raised or answered by the Minister
is a testament to a systemic disregard in respect of meeting the objectives of
the ITOA in a manner that is meaningfully responsive to the rehabilitation and
reintegration needs of the Applicant in this community. This disconnect between
the Minister’s inquiry and the objectives of the Act renders his ultimate
conclusion entirely unreasonable.
Respondent
i. ITOA Legislative Framework and the Minister’s
Role in the ITOA Context
[50]
Section
6 of the ITOA vests the Minister with the responsibility for the administration
of the ITOA. Upon receipt of a request for a transfer under section 7, and
subject to the consent of the foreign entity to the transfer under section 8,
the Minister is empowered by Parliament to exercise substantial discretion in
determining whether to consent to each transfer request, subject to his
consideration of the relevant facts and the relevant factors set out in the
legislation.
[51]
In Holmes
v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2011 FC
112, Justice Michael Phelan rejected a narrow interpretation of the term
“administration of justice” in the Act’s Purpose clause and held that it includes
“public safety and security considerations.” In his reasons for concluding that
any infringement of section 6 Charter rights is saved by section 1 of the Charter,
Justice Phelan observed that the ITOA’s pressing and substantial objectives
also include Canada’s interests in: “ensuring that punishment by countries with
whom Canada has relevant treaties is respected”; “respecting the rule of law
and other countries”; and “respecting international relations.”
[52]
In
light of his recognition of the ITOA’s broad and diverse pressing and
substantial objectives, Justice Phelan noted that the suggestion that, once a
foreign country consents to a transfer, the Minister is “virtually obliged” to
consent to the transfer:
ignores
the fact that the prisoner has put himself in the position of restricting his
freedoms; ignores the goals of rehabilitation by assuming that no other country
can rehabilitate a person; ignores the particular individual circumstances of
reintegration by assuming that all Canadian citizens have long and deep
connections in Canada and ignores the secondary purposes of the Act in
respecting the rule of law in other countries and respecting international
relations.
[53]
In Pierino
DiVito v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
2011 FCA 39, Justice Robert Mainville identified the security of Canada and the
prevention of offenses related to terrorism or to organized crime as additional
pressing and substantial objectives served by Parliament’s decision to empower
the Minister to determine whether or not to allow offenders to serve their
sentences in Canada.
[54]
The
ITOA does not create or recognize a “right” of Canadian offenders to return to Canada, but creates a
framework for implementing Canada’s international treaty agreements and administrative
arrangements designed to enable offenders to serve their sentences in the
country to which they are citizens or nationals.
[55]
In Getkate
v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC
965 at paragraphs 26 and 29, the court noted that the ITOA does not create an
automatic right to return to Canada to serve a sentence, but serves “to assist rehabilitation
and reintegration in appropriate situations.” Although rehabilitation is a core
objective of the ITOA, there is no presumption that a given transfer will serve
the objective of rehabilitation and, even if the Minister believes a transfer would
serve this objective, it is open to the Minister to deny the transfer request
based on his consideration of the other pressing and substantial objectives of
the ITOA.
[56]
Similarly,
in Pierino DiVito, above, the Federal Court of Appeal observed that:
Though
for some offenders the loss of the perceived “benefit” of a potential earlier
conditional release under the Canadian correctional system may be unfair […].
Barring exceptional circumstances, there is nothing unfair or unreasonable in
the fact that [offenders who have committed offenses in foreign jurisdictions]
are subject to the incarceration systems of the foreign jurisdictions in which
they committed their offenses.
[57]
Justice
Mainville, in Pierino DiVito, above, found that the legislative
framework in which the Minister’s discretion is exercised in the ITOA context
is reasonable and rationally linked to the pressing and substantial objectives
of the ITOA in a number of ways:
First, the Minister’s discretion is strongly fettered by specific
enumerated factors which must be considered, including notably whether the
offender’s return to Canada would constitute a threat to the security of Canada
(paragraph 10(1)(a) of the act) or whether the offender will, after the
transfer to Canada, commit a terrorism offence or criminal organization offence
(paragraph 10(2)(a) of the act). These are serious and important
constraints on the Minister’s discretion. Second, the scheme of the legislation
allows the offender to make prior representations to the Minister through a
written request in which all pertinent factors and circumstances can be
addressed (section 7 of the act). Third, the Minister must provide written
reasons if he refuses his consent to the transfer (section 11 of the act).
Finally, the decision of the Minister is subject to judicial review before the
Federal Court, and the decision of that court is itself subject to appeal to
this Court and ultimately, in appropriate cases, to the Supreme Court of
Canada.
[58]
As
transfers under the ITOA are a discretionary privilege for offenders
incarcerated abroad, predicated on Canada undertaking to administer their
sentences and assuming the risks and responsibilities of these undertakings,
and are not a right or presumptive entitlement, applicants must demonstrate
that their transfers would advance – and not threaten or undermine – the
beneficial objectives of the Act. Applicants are put on notice of what
“pertinent factors and circumstances” will be considered by the Minister by
virtue of the purposes of the ITOA, the factors set out in section 10 of the
ITOA, and the information requested in the CSC Request Forms.
ii. Section
10 Factors
[59]
In Kozarov
v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2007 FC
866, Justice Harrington recognized that the Minister’s determination of whether
to consent to a transfer under section 8 of the ITOA is to be treated as a
discretionary decision and not as a fact-finding mission mandating approval
based on a binary analysis of the factors. The Court has repeatedly emphasized
the Minister’s residual discretion under the ITOA, noting that the factors the
Minister must consider under section 10 are not exhaustive, nor are any
“determinative of the result.” Rather, they “are simply factors to be weighed
by the Minister any reasonable and transparent way.”
[60]
The
factors that the Minister must consider under section 10 of the ITOA are
consistent with and rationally connected to the stated purpose of the Act as
set out in section 3 and the objectives of the legislation. In Holmes,
above, Justice Phelan noted that “[t]he the protection of society in the best
interests of the Canadian citizen prisoner are balanced in the Act through the
factors which the Minister is required to consider.”
[61]
For
example, Justice Phelan identified the section 10(2)(a) factor as
“address[ing] both the need to protect society and the utility of attempting to
rehabilitate a person who will continue the same kind of conduct that has led
to his or her incarceration,” and rejected the argument that section 10(2)(a)
is a significant impairment of an offenders disputed section 6 rights as
“ignor[ing] the consideration that persons who will (again) engage in these
offenses undermine the beneficial objectives of the Act.”
[62]
In Dudas
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2010 FC 942, Justice John
O’Keefe observed that it would be open to the Minister to “[take] into account
all relevant considerations and come to the conclusion that approval of the
transfer request would not assist in achieving the objectives of the
international transfer of offenders system,” provided that the Minister “state
that this was the ultimate test he set out for himself” and “express which
purpose or purposes were most crucially relied on in coming to his ultimate
conclusion.” He also noted that “the Minister may lawfully come to his or her
own conclusion” in exercising his or her discretion under the ITOA and “[t]he
fact that a Minister has come to a given conclusion before, does not prevent
that same Minister or a different Minister from lawfully changing his or her
mind if faced with the same set of facts at a later date.”
[63]
The
Court has consistently recognized that the Minister’s exercise of his
discretion under the ITOA requires that he consider and weigh information from
various sources and ultimately make a decision in light of his obligations
under the ITOA as well as his other statutory obligations and policy
considerations, including “prevent[ing] members or associates of criminal
organizations from exercising influence and power in institutions and in the
community” and balancing the protection of society and the best interests of
the Canadian citizen prisoner.
[64]
In
determining whether he will approve a transfer request by a Canadian citizen,
the Minister may weigh the corollary risks and obligations of undertaking to
administer an applicant’s foreign sentence in Canada. Accordingly, the Minister’s discretion to
grant or deny a transfer request imports considerations and decision-making
functions pertaining to the administration of a custodial sentence for a
criminal conviction, such as offender classification, placement and transfers
within Canada, as well as parole and
conditional release.
[65]
Although
it is open for the Minister to base his decision to grant or refuse a transfer
request on his assessment of the enumerated factors, he is not required to
limit his consideration to these factors, nor is he required to make findings
in respect of any or all of the mandated factors.
[66]
The
Minister’s role is to consider the enumerated factors and weigh them in a
reasonable and transparent way in informing his global assessment of whether a
given transfer meets the stated objectives of the Act. However, having
addressed the enumerated factors, the Minister may weigh or balance the
relevant factors and considerations as he sees fit.
iii. The
Decision
[67]
In
his reasons for denying the Request, the Minister clearly articulated and
applied the legislative framework for the exercise of his discretion in
considering requests for transfer under the ITOA, in accordance with the
guidance provided by Pierino DiVito, above, and Holmes, above, namely
basing his Decision on his belief that a transfer would not achieve the
purposes of the Act, subject to his consideration of the unique facts and circumstances
of the Request as presented to him in the context of the purposes of the Act
and the specific factors enumerated in section 10.
[68]
As
in Holmes, above, the decision “focused on the potential for commission
of a criminal organization offense,” making reference to the specific
information relating to the section 10(2)(a) factor that caused the
Minister concern. Moreover, based on the nature of the Applicant’s criminal
activity, the Minister could reasonably conclude that “another accomplice was
involved who was not apprehended” and that the Applicant “has ties with an
organized criminal syndicate believed to be involved in the purchase and
trafficking of a large quantity of narcotics.” The Minister also reasonably
expressed concern regarding the Applicant’s “extensive” criminal history in Canada, including multiple
convictions dating back to 1996.
[69]
As
Justice Near noted in Grant, above, international drug trafficking
constitutes “a very serious crime that one could reasonably conclude required
financing, planning and other logistics often associated with organized crime.”
The Applicant and his accomplices had arranged to purchase 100 kg of cocaine.
The Applicant and his accomplice had the means to pay the CI more than $350,000
in US currency. Furthermore,
the Court can take judicial notice of the fact that cocaine is a dangerous
drug, and sells between $100-$120 per gram, placing the street value of the
drugs seized from the Applicant at between $10 million and $12 million.
[70]
Accordingly,
the Minister’s consideration of the fact that the Applicant was involved in the
commission of a serious offense involving large quantities of cocaine which
would have likely benefited the group he assisted is relevant to his assessment
of the section 10(2)(a) factor, as this recognizes the resources,
premeditation, and organization of the Applicant’s unidentified associations in
Canada and the US. This consideration also demonstrates that his rationale in
finding that the Applicant’s transfer would not achieve the purposes of the Act
was informed by his consideration of aspects of the administration of justice
purpose.
[71]
The
Minister also “noted the positive aspects of [the Applicant’s] situation,”
namely the existence of “social and family ties in Canada” and the fact that the
Applicant’s “family members remain supportive.” While the Minister’s reference
to the “positive aspects” in respect of the Applicant’s request is limited to
his consideration of the section 10(1)(c) factor, this was the only ITOA
factor for which the Applicant presented the Minister supportive reasons in his
CSC Request Forms in support of his request under section 7 of the Act.
iv. Little
Evidence Presented
[72]
It
was incumbent on the Applicant to present any evidence he wished the Minister
to consider as part of his application. He presented no evidence that the US could not rehabilitate
him and presented no information regarding his “particular individual
circumstances of reintegration.” In fact, both the Certified US Case Summary
and the CSC Executive Summary Report before the Minister note the Applicant’s
recommended program participation in the US, including GED, which was the only program
interest the Applicant identified in the CSC Request Forms in support of his
request. Moreover, the CSC Community Assessment noted obstacles to the
Applicant’s reintegration, namely uncertain employment prospects and
associations with “negative peers.”
[73]
Although
the Minister’s Decision clearly weighed the “public safety” and “administration
of justice” purposes of the Act more heavily than the rehabilitation and
reintegration purposes, he did not ignore those purposes. The Minister’s
hand-written notes underscore his balancing of the ITOA purposes on the
information before him, noting: “extensive record,” “organized crime activity,”
“[l]arge quantity of dangerous narcotics,” “[c]onsidered family and ties to Canada, but not satisfied this
warrants return at this time.”
[74]
Furthermore,
as Justice Phelan observed in Holmes, above, the Minister’s
consideration of the section 10(2)(a) factor “addresses both the need to
protect society and the utility of attempting to rehabilitate a person who will
continue the same kind of conduct that has led to his or her incarceration.”
The Minister’s consideration of this factor and the Applicant’s criminal record
demonstrate the Minister’s concerns regarding: the Applicant’s criminal history
and failure to remain “rehabilitated” and “reintegrated” in the past; his
involvement in the commission of a serious offense; his ties with an organized
criminal syndicate; and the likelihood “that another accomplice was involved
who was not apprehended.” These considerations are rationally connected to the
rehabilitation and reintegration purposes of the ITOA and may inform the
Minister’s consideration of whether the Applicant has accepted responsibility
for his offending, severed ties with his accomplices, and made efforts towards
his own rehabilitation such that his transfer would not threaten or undermine
the beneficial objectives of the Act.
v. Misapprehension
[75]
The
Applicant does not allege that the Minister considered any irrelevant factors,
made any errors in his assessment of the file information, or made any
conclusions contrary to information or advice before him. Contrary to the
Federal Court’s findings in respect of the Minister’s broad discretion to weigh
the relevant facts or factors as he sees fit, subject to his having addressed
the relevant factors raised in respect of a given transfer request, the
Applicant invites the Court to reweigh the factors cited by the Minister as
fixed and predetermined “tests” that the Minister must satisfy in order to
“disentitle” the Applicant from a transfer.
[76]
The
Applicant’s characterization of the issues in this application wrongly presents
the Minister’s role as requiring him to “provide evidence” in support of any
negative conclusions regarding the purposes of the ITOA. The Applicant also
proposes to impugn the Minister’s Decision by imposing constraints on the
Minister’s exercise of his discretion that have no basis in the ITOA, namely
requiring the Minister to consider factors not provided by the ITOA and not
raised in the Applicant’s Request.
[77]
In Grant,
above, Justice Near expressly held that there is no legal basis to require the
Minister to explain decisions in respect of an applicant’s accomplices and that
“each case must be determined by the Minister individually on its merits and
record of evidence.”
[78]
Observing
that the doctrine of legitimate expectations is limited to procedural fairness,
and citing Justice Ian Binnie’s guidance in Mount Sinai Hospital v Quebec
(Minister of Health and Social Services), 2001 SCC 41, that the reviewing
court frame its inquiry “in terms of the underlying principle […] that broad
public policy is pre-eminently for the Minister to determine, not the courts,”
Justice Near observed that:
We
have no idea what conditions the co-accused faced in Costa Rican prisons or
what their personal circumstances were, and it is unreasonable and unnecessary
to expect the Minister to list these as a justification for the outcome of the
present application.
[79]
Moreover,
the Federal Court has repeatedly emphasized that the Minister may weigh or
balance the relevant factors and considerations as he sees fit. As Justice
O’Keefe observed in Dudas, above, a decision released together with Curtis
– the Minister may lawfully come to his own conclusion in exercising his
discretion as to whether to grant an applicant the “discretionary privilege” of
a transfer under the ITOA and “[t]he fact that a Minister has come to a given
conclusion before, does not prevent that same Minister or a different Minister
from lawfully changing his or her mind if faced with the same set of facts at a
later date.”
[80]
Notwithstanding
the above, the Applicant submits that the Minister’s consideration of the
criminal organization factor is unreasonable “for its failure to provide a
consistent assessment of criminal organization affiliation,” which the Minister
“may not arbitrarily invoke,” concluding that: “[e]ither the Applicant is
linked to organized crime or he is not – the selective tolerance of organized
crime links erodes the intelligibility of the decision.”
[81]
This
argument is completely unsupported, both in fact and in law. Mr. Curtis’
transfer request and other documents relating to his request were not part of
the record before the Minister in this case. The Minister considers each
transfer request on the basis of its separate facts and circumstances. The
Applicant cites the “facts” on the record in this case as “establishing” the
same link to organized crime in respect of Mr. Curtis; however, there is no
basis for the Court to assume that the same “facts” were before the Minister in
assessing Mr. Curtis’ transfer request. It is not for this Court to speculate
as to what “significance” the Minister ascribed to factors in respect of
individual requests considered on their merits and record of evidence.
vi. No
Right or Presumptive Entitlement
[82]
As
transfers under the ITOA are a discretionary privilege for offenders incarcerated
abroad, predicated on Canada undertaking to administer their sentences and
assuming the risks and responsibilities of these undertaking, and not a right
or presumptive entitlement, applicants must demonstrate that their transfers
would advance – and not threaten or undermine – the beneficial objectives of
the Act. Applicants are put on notice of what “pertinent factors and
circumstances” will be considered by the Minister by virtue of the purposes of
the ITOA, the factors set out in section 10 of the ITOA, and the information
requested in the CSC Request Forms.
[83]
Contrary
to the Applicant’s assertion that the Applicant’s “Canadian Criminal Record
does not preclude transfer back to Canada,” the Minister made no such
determination, nor was he required to treat his consideration of the Applicant’s
prior record as a binary analysis to disentitle the Applicant from a transfer.
The Applicant presents as a foregone conclusion that the Applicant’s
rehabilitation and reintegration can only be managed in Canada. As such, he suggests
that the Minister must “provide evidence” that: Canada cannot manage the Applicant’s sentence;
and/or the Applicant’s early return “poses a threat to public safety.”
[84]
Given
this narrow presentation of the Minister’s discretion under the ITOA, and
ignoring the ITOA’s diverse pressing and substantial objectives, the Applicant
suggests that the Minister is “virtually obliged” to consent to his transfer
request:
In
this sense, the Minister appears to be “free riding” off the American system in
order to maintain the Applicant’s term of incarceration, which would
effectively circumvent transitional rehabilitation assessment in Canada that is
part of an early return. In this light, the Minister’s continued refusal cannot
be understood as a lawful exercise of discretion because the Minister is
constrained from the outset by the purpose of the ITOA.
[85]
The
Applicant attempts to underscore his presumptive entitlement to a transfer by
asserting that there is “no presumption that public safety will be enhanced by
maintaining a foreign convicted offender outside of Canada” and accusing the
Minister of employing “the false assumption that public safety for Canadians
and the inmate alike are fostered by maintaining detention abroad.”
[86]
However,
as noted above, the Applicant’s suggestion of presumptive entitlement to a
transfer has been expressly rejected by this Court in Holmes, above,
which observed that other countries can rehabilitate offenders and that the
ITOA’s pressing and substantial objectives include Canada’s interests in:
“ensuring that punishment by countries with whom Canada has relevant treaties
is respected;” “respecting the rule of law and other countries;” and
“respecting international relations.”
[87]
The
Minister is not “‘free riding’ off the American system.” The Applicant’s own
criminal conduct led to his conviction and sentence in the US. Barring Canada’s
undertaking to administer the Applicant’s US sentence, he must serve his sentence in the US
in accordance with US law. This is a consequence
of his own actions and is not unfair or unreasonable.
[88]
The Court’s
role is to assess the reasonableness of the Minister’s Decision, having
reference to the Minister’s analysis of the materials before him. It was open
to the Applicant to frame issues before the Minister in his Request with
reference to the purposes of the ITOA, the factors set out in section 10, and
the information requested in the CSC Request Forms. However, contrary to the
Applicant’s assertion that “clear evidence was raised as to the nature of the
rehabilitative and reintegrative needs of the Applicant,” his Request
identified no particular rehabilitation and reintegration or other needs that
could not be met in the US.
[89]
If
the Applicant believed the issues of “the adequacy of current rehabilitative
and integrative programming in the United States” and “whether these needs can
be better served in a Canadian federal institution” warranted the Minister’s
consideration in his assessment of the Applicant’s Request, it was incumbent on
the Applicant to identify these issues and make submissions regarding all
pertinent factors and circumstances in his Request.
ANALYSIS
[90]
The
Applicant has raised a variety of issues but the focus at the hearing of this
matter requires the Court to address the following.
Comparisons with Mr.
Curtis
[91]
First
of all, the Applicant complains that his co-accused, Mr. Curtis eventually
achieved a transfer back to Canada while the Applicant was refused a transfer by the same
Minister. He says that the Minister came to contradictory decisions upon
similar facts. Hence, the Decision is unreasonable in that it lacks
intelligibility because it fails to explain why he was treated differently from
Mr. Curtis.
[92]
I
find this argument illogical. Mr. Curtis’ request for transfer was initially
refused by the Minister. Mr. Curtis then had the Minister’s decision judicially
reviewed. It was only after Justice O’Keefe sent the matter back for
reconsideration on September 21, 2010 that Mr. Curtis was eventually granted a
transfer in light of the issues and conclusions found in Justice O’Keefe’s
reasons. Those reasons identified evidentiary facts that suggest Mr. Curtis’
case was very different from the Applicant’s case. In particular, Justice O’Keefe
concluded that, in Mr. Curtis’ case, the “CSC only had a belief that he had
links to organized crime” and that Mr. Curtis “had no previous criminal record.”
The Minister’s Decision regarding the Applicant was rendered on or about August
10, 2010, so it is difficult to see how the Minister could or should have made
any reference to the Curtis situation.
[93]
As the
Respondent points out, no explanation was required on the facts of this case
because, even on its face, the situation of Mr. Curtis was very different from
that of the Applicant. As Justice O’Keefe pointed out in Curtis, above,
at paragraph 16, the evidence related to Mr. Curtis gave rise to separate
considerations that were highly material to the two cases:
Secondly, neither U.S. nor
Canadian investigations into his background and the circumstances of his
offending have specifically identified the applicant as associated or involved
with any specific criminal organization. In fact, the evidence points to the
contrary and to conclude otherwise was unreasonable. Certainly, the evidence does
not support that the applicant will commit a criminal organization offence. The
evidence provided the following things:
The applicant had no previous criminal record;
The CSC only had a belief that he had links to
organized crime;
CSC concluded that the applicant should
experience little difficulty securing employment on release;
U.S. investigators determined that he was not
affiliated with a drug cartel or gang;
[94]
Mr.
Curtis may have been involved in the commission of the same offense as the
Applicant but the facts in his case that were highly material to a transfer
decision were not shared by the Applicant. The Applicant, for instance, did
have a previous criminal record, CSC had more than a belief that he had links
with civilized crime, there was no evidence that the Applicant would not
experience difficulty in securing employment on release. In any event, Mr.
Curtis’ transfer request and the documentation related to that request were not
before the Minister when he made the Decision in this case.
[95]
Perhaps
more importantly, there is really no evidence before the Court as to how or why
the Curtis decision was made other than as appears in the judgment of Justice O’Keefe,
which suggests significant differences. Even the sentences were different: the
Applicant received a sentence of 63 months while Mr. Curtis received 57 months.
This does not suggest that the Minister was dealing with similar cases when the
transfers were considered or that the Minister needed to explain why the
Applicant’s request for transfer was refused when Mr. Curtis’ request was eventually
granted.
[96]
The
jurisprudence is clear that the Minister is obliged to deal with each case
individually on its merits. In Grant, above, Justice Near had the
following to say on point at paragraphs 47 and 48:
Counsel for
the Applicant acknowledged during the hearing that had Mr. Grant's co-accused
been denied their transfer application, it would be improper to conclude that
Mr. Grant's application be similarly denied. Counsel agreed that each case must
be determined by the Minister individually on its merits and record of
evidence.
As an
anecdote, the fact that two of Mr. Grant's co-accused transfer requests have
been approved may be compelling, but as a matter of law, the doctrine of
legitimate expectations is limited to procedural fairness. In Mount Sinai Hospital v. Quebec (Minister of Health and Social
Services), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 281, 200
D.L.R. (4th) 193, Justice Ian Binnie affirms that the doctrine of
legitimate expectation is limited to procedural relief. Furthermore, at para.
35 Justice Binnie emphasizes that although in some situations it might be
difficult to distinguish between substance and procedure, "The inquiry is
better framed in terms of the underlying principle mentioned earlier, namely that
broad public policy is pre-eminently for the Minister to determine, not the
courts." We have no idea what conditions the co-accused faced in Costa
Rican prisons or what their personal circumstances were, and it is unreasonable
and unnecessary to expect the Minister to list these as a justification for the
outcome of the present application.
[97]
There
is nothing before me on the present set of facts to suggest that the Minister
acted unreasonably because the Applicant was not granted the same transfer that
Mr. Curtis eventually received, or that the Minister had to provide a specific
explanation as to why the Applicant was denied a transfer when Mr. Curtis eventually
achieved that result.
Drug and Alcohol
Dependency – Rehabilitation
[98]
The
Applicant also says that the Decision is unreasonable because the Minister
failed to consider his drug dependency issues in the context of section 3 of
the ITOA and failed to conduct a comparison of the different programs available
in Canada and the US that promote rehabilitation
and reintegration.
[99]
This
was not an issue that the Applicant raised in his Request to the Minister. The
Applicant says, however, that in the Executive Summary Report that informs the Minister’s
Decision, there is a mention in the Public Safety Risk Assessment that “File
information indicates that Mr. Tippett has a history of beer and hard liquor
abuse which escalated to cocaine for which he has not received any treatment or
programming.” The Applicant says that the mere mention of this issue in the Report
required the Minister to initiate an investigation into the Applicant’s
problems and whether programs available in Canada would better assist the
Applicant’s rehabilitation and reintegration than programs available in the US. The Applicant was
unable to refer the Court to any jurisprudence that would support such a
position. It is not difficult to see why.
[100] The onus is upon the
Applicant, in his request for a transfer, to raise the matters and provide the
evidence and information that he wishes the Minister to consider. The ITOA
scheme does not require the Minister to independently raise and review issues
that the Applicant has not raised in his Request. As the Respondent points out,
transfers under the ITOA are a discretionary privilege for offenders incarcerated
abroad, predicated on Canada undertaking to
administer their sentences and assuming the risks and responsibilities of these
undertakings, and not a right or presumptive entitlement. Applicants must
demonstrate that their transfers would advance – and not threaten or undermine
– the beneficial objectives of the Act. Applicants are put on notice of what
“pertinent factors and circumstances” will be considered by the Minister by
virtue of the purposes of the ITOA, the factors set out in section 10 of the
ITOA, and the information requested in the CSC Request Forms.
[101] If the Request and the
materials before the Minister are read as a whole, there is nothing that would,
reasonably speaking, alert the Minister to a need to consider that the
Applicant’s drug habits and rehabilitation needs might require a comparison of
US and Canadian programs, or to suggest that the Applicant’s rehabilitation and
reintegration needs related to his drug use could not be addressed in the US
system. There is also nothing to suggest that the Applicant has considered
and/or attempted to access what is available to him in the US. This is borne out by
the Request itself.
[102] The Request does not
even indicate that the Applicant has a drug or alcohol problem or that he has
any complaint with the US system regarding this
issue. There is nothing before the Minister – and there is nothing before this Court
– to suggest that the Applicant was seeking a transfer on the basis of
something that was not available to him in the US. In my view, the Applicant has raised this issue
in this review application in a desperate attempt to fault the Minister. He
offers no grounds to suggest that the Minister could or should have been aware
that he was seeking a transfer in order to facilitate his rehabilitation with
respect to a drug dependency; and he offers no logic or authority that would
suggest that the Minister, irrespective of what might be set out in the Request,
should have initiated a comparative investigation into the availability of
programs for drug and alcohol dependency under the US and Canadian systems.
Criminal Organization
Offense
[103] In my view, when the Decision
is read as a whole, the Minister indicates that he has considered all of the
factors necessary under the ITOA scheme, the purposes of the ITOA, and the
facts that are specific to the Applicant’s Request. The Decision to refuse the Request
is clearly based upon considerations arising out of section 10(2)(a) of
the ITOA and the Applicant’s connections to organized crime:
The
Act requires that I consider whether, in my opinion, the offender will, after
the transfer, commit a criminal organization offense within the meaning of
section 2 of the Criminal Code. In considering this factor, I note that the
applicant worked with two accomplices and there is information on file that
suggests that another accomplice was involved who was not apprehended.
Furthermore, the applicant has ties with an organized criminal syndicate
believed to be involved in the purchase and trafficking of the large quantity
of narcotics. The applicant was involved in the commission of a serious offense
that, if successfully committed, would likely result in the receipt of a
material or financial benefit by the group he assisted.
[104] I see nothing unclear or
unintelligible about the reasons on this point as they relate to the purposes
of the ITOA. The only question that arises, in my view, is whether the Minister’s
conclusions on point are reasonable given the evidence that was before him. The
Applicant says they are not because Minister goes beyond the evidence and comes
to conclusions that the evidence does not support.
[105] The Applicant says that
the relevant information on point that was before the Minister appears in
paragraph 5E of the Report prepared by the International Transfer Unit:
Given
the results of verification with counterparts in the Security and Intelligence
areas, the information obtained to date does not lead one to believe that he
would, after the transfer, commit an act of terrorism, within the meaning of
section 2 of the Criminal Code. However, the CSC Prairies regional
security division Senior Project Officer has found information that suggests
that Mr. Tippett has links to an organized syndicate. In fact, Intelligence
information indicates that Max Reboh, the brother of Marcel Meir Reboh, one of
Mr. Tippett’s accomplices, funded the attempt to purchase the drugs and sent
Mr. Tippett and Mr. Curtis to Florida to purchase the drugs. Mr. Max Reboh is
currently living in Alberta and is considered to be associated to
elements of organized crime.
[106] In my view, this
paragraph makes it clear that the Minister was obliged to consider subsection
10(2)(a) of the ITOA from the perspective of whether, after transfer,
the Applicant will “commit a…criminal organization offense within the meaning
of section 2 of the Criminal Code….”
[107] Under section 2 of the Criminal
Code a “criminal organization offense” means
(a) an offence under section 467.11, 467.12 or
467.13, or a serious offence committed for the benefit of, at the direction
of, or in association with, a criminal organization, or
(b) a conspiracy or an attempt to commit, being an
accessory after the fact in relation to, or any counselling in relation to,
an offence referred to in paragraph (a);
|
a)
Soit une infraction prévue aux articles 467.11, 467.12 ou 467.13 ou une
infraction grave commise au profit ou sous la direction d’une organisation
criminelle, ou en association avec elle;
b)
soit le complot ou la tentative en vue de commettre une telle infraction ou
le fait d’en être complice après le fait ou d’en conseiller la perpétration.
|
[108] The relevant evidence
before the Minister on this issue was
a.
The
advice from the International Transfer Unit that:
i.
“CSC
Prairies regional security division Senior Project Officer has found
information that suggests that Mr. Tippett has links to an organized
syndicate”;
ii.
“Intelligence
information indicates that Max Reboh, the brother of Marcel Meir Reboh, one of
Mr. Tippett’s accomplices, funded the attempt to purchase the drugs and sent
Mr. Tippett and Mr. Curtis to Florida to purchase the drugs”;
iii.
“Mr.
Max Reboh is currently living in Alberta and is considered to be associated to elements of
organized crime”;
b.
Large
sums of money and large quantities of narcotics were involved and there is no
indication from the Applicant’s background how he could have financed the drug
purchases himself or through any means other than his connection to the Rebohs.
[109] So the issue here is
whether there was sufficient evidence to allow the Minister to make a good
faith finding that the Applicant presents a significant risk of committing a
criminal organization offense once transferred to Canada. See Grant,
above, at paragraph 38.
[110] The Applicant plead
guilty to “Conspiracy to Possess with Intent to Distribute Cocaine,” a serious
crime that, given the quantity of narcotics involved, required financing,
planning and other logistics – as the record shows. Considering the entirety of
the evidence and the discretion allowed the Minister in making this Decision,
his conclusion that the Applicant will likely commit an organized crime offense
if returned to Canada falls within the range
of possible, acceptable outcomes defensible in respect of the facts and the
law. See Grant, above, at paragraph 46.
[111] Although noting the
specific fact differences between the situation in Holmes, above, and
the situation in the present case, nevertheless I think Justice Phelan’s words
in Holmes can be applied appropriately to the Minister’s Decision in the
present case:
59 In this 2nd
decision the Minister focused on the potential for commission of a criminal
organization offence. He noted the knowing use of the Applicant's residence for
criminal activities, the payment for its use and the smuggling activities
conducted. He further noted the amount of drugs smuggled, the participation of
an unidentified (presumably by the Applicant) accomplice and the long-term
implications on Canadian society had the Applicant been successful.
60 The Minister, in
reaching his negative conclusion on the transfer application, noted the
positive aspects of Holmes' situation including the strong family support, lack
of criminal record and rehabilitation efforts.
61 With respect to
the reasonableness of the decision, it is evident that the Minister weighed the
aspects of administration of justice, such as the nature of the offence, its
circumstances and consequences, more heavily than the other purposes of the Act
- rehabilitation and reintegration. However, he did not ignore these other
purposes. The Applicant's challenge to the Minister's decision is a challenge
to the relative weight the Minister gave.
62 While it is
arguable that Holmes appears to be a perfect candidate for transfer given the
strong facts of rehabilitation and reintegration, the very essence of deference
in this case is to acknowledge that having addressed the relevant
considerations, the actual weighing or balancing is for the Minister to
conduct. Absent unreasonableness or bad faith or similar such grounds, it is
not for the Court to supervise the Minister.
63 There is nothing
unreasonable in the Minister's decision; it takes into consideration the
relevant factors and imports no new and unknown factors, and it is intelligible
and transparent as to how the Minister came to his conclusion. It therefore
meets the requirements of law and should not be disturbed.
[112] The Applicant takes
issue with paragraph 4 of the Decision and suggests that the Minister employs
faulty logic regarding the Applicant’s criminal history as it relates to his
future rehabilitation and reintegration needs. In my view, however, the purpose
of paragraph 4 is clearly to support the heart of the Decision and the Minister’s
conclusion that, notwithstanding the positive aspects of the Request,
subsection 10(2)(a) of the ITOA was engaged and that, given the links to
organized crime, and the Applicant’s past criminal record, the Applicant
presents a significant risk of committing a criminal organization offense if
transferred to Canada.
[113] I can find no
reviewable error in the Decision.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT
is that
1.
The
application for judicial review is dismissed with costs to the Respondent.
“James
Russell”