Docket: T-1539-10
Citation: 2011 FC 1018
Ottawa, Ontario, August 26, 2011
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Shore
BETWEEN:
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YVES LEBON
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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
I. Overview
[1]
The
Applicant, Mr.
Yves LeBon, was stopped by a State
Trooper in respect of a minor traffic violation on August 22, 2007 on an
Illinois highway in the United States. The Applicant consented to the trooper’s
request to search his vehicle, which revealed 119 packages each containing 1
kilogram of cocaine for a total of 119 kilograms of cocaine (Certified U.S.
Case Summary of Canadian Citizen, dated November 19, 2008, Certified Tribunal
Record [CTR]; Exhibit “A” to the Affidavit of Johanne Lavigne, sworn November
7, 2010 [Lavigne Affidavit]).
[2]
The
Applicant pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute cocaine and
improper entry by an alien and was sentenced on July 18, 2008 to 120 months of
imprisonment and 5 years of supervised release, upon his release from
imprisonment (Judgment in a Criminal Case, United States of America v Yves Le Bon, dated July 18, 2008,
CTR). The term of supervised release cannot be administered in Canada
(Correctional Service of Canada [CSC] Executive Summary Report and cover
letter, dated April 14, 2010, CTR).
[3]
On
November 25, 2008, the Applicant requested, pursuant to the International
Transfer of Offenders Act, SC 2004, c 21 [ITOA], that the Minister
of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness approve his request to be
transferred to Canada in order to serve the remainder of his prison sentence
([Request], CTR)
II. Introduction
[4]
The ITOA
creates a framework for enabling Canadian offenders to serve their foreign
sentences in Canada in cases where the Minister is satisfied that a transfer
would advance the objectives of the Act having regard to the particular facts
and circumstances of each individual case, an applicant’s reasons submitted in
support of his/her request, and the factors the Minister is mandated to
consider in determining whether to consent to a transfer.
[5]
Section
3 of the ITOA provides for the Act’s layered purpose: to contribute to
the administration of justice, the rehabilitation of offenders and the reintegration
of offenders into the community. The ITOA’s purpose of contributing to
the administration of justice includes public safety and security
considerations. The layered purpose of the Act is at the core of the
legislative framework and is addressed and balanced in the Act through factors
which the Minister is required to consider and through the opportunity for
offenders to provide reasons in support of their transfer requests with regard
to any or all pertinent factors and circumstances.
[6]
In
exercising his discretion under the ITOA, the Minister may base his
decision on his assessment of the factors outlined in section 10 of the ITOA;
however, he is not required to limit his consideration to these factors, nor is
he required to make findings in respect of the mandated factors. The Minister’s
role in determining whether to consent to a transfer is to consider the
enumerated factors and weigh them in a reasonable and transparent way as he
sees relevant in making a global assessment of whether a given transfer meets
the stated objectives of the Act.
[7]
Based
on his examination of the unique facts and circumstances of the Applicant’s
transfer request – as presented to him – in the context of the purposes of the
Act and the specific factors enumerated in section 10, the Court accepts the
position of the Respondent in that the “Minister reasonably” demonstrated his
discretion in denying the Applicant’s request. The Minister’s decision has been
shown to be “transparent and intelligible”. As a result, the Court cannot do
otherwise but to accept the position of the three counsel of the Respondent as
the position which reflects the Minister’s decision can be said to be “within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and the law” of the case (Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at para 47).
[8]
In Grant
v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2010 FC 958, 373 FTR
281, 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 (Dunsmuir,
above, at para 54; Grant, above, at para 28).
[9]
Justice
Near’s reasons for this finding are apposite to the present case:
[28] …
A discretionary ministerial decision made pursuant to legislation which engages
the Minister’s expertise and policy role will similarly attract a great deal of
deference and point to a standard of reasonableness in some matters regarding
the interpretation of the statute.
…
[30] …
Parliament appointed the Minister to be the gate-keeper of the international
transfer of offender’s regime. In this role, the Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness is particularly well suited to consider the evidence
before him and appropriately balance the reintegration interests of the
Applicant and concerns about the administration of justice in Canada. In this
case, the Minister did not interpret provisions that are of central importance
to the legal system as a whole, but rather gave context to a fact-laden
reasoning process in an effort to produce transparent, intelligible reasons …
[10]
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 offence
within the meaning of section 2 of the Criminal Code” and noted:
·
the
nature of the criminal activity “suggests that other accomplices were involved
who were not apprehended”;
·
the
nature of the criminal activity “is indicative of a serious criminal
organization activity”;
·
“the
applicant did not provide a statement to the police after his arrest”;
·
“it
appears from the file that the applicant did not cooperate with the police in
identifying other participants in the crime”;
·
“the
offence involved a large quantity of cocaine, which is destructive to society”;
and,
·
“[t]he
applicant was involved in the commission of a serious offence involving a
significant quantity of drugs that, if successfully committed, would likely
result in the receipt of a material or financial benefit by the group he
assisted”.
It is noted as significant to the Minister’s
decision that the offence involved a large quantity of cocaine which could have
had serious repercussions for society; and, furthermore, the Applicant did not
identify other participants in the crime; thus, no one else was apprehended in
regard to the crime in question.
[11]
In Holmes v Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2011 FC 112, Justice Michael Phelan held:
[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.
III. Background
[12]
The
CSC Request Forms for Canadian Citizens incarcerated abroad expressly provide
that the Applicant is to provide reasons in support of his Request (The first
page of the CSC Request Forms (CSC/SCC 308) and “Information form in support of
a request for transfer to Canada” (CSC/SCC 614) require the Applicant (and a
witness) to sign, attesting that “I hereby request a transfer to Canada to
complete my sentence for the following reasons”. For the purposes of this
application, reference will be made to the “CSC Request Forms” when addressing
the forms specifically and the “Request” when addressing the Applicant’s
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. The Forms invite the Applicant to
provide information regarding a number of factors, including:
SUPPORT:
·
List persons or
agencies who might be willing to give you support following your transfer.
OTHER
INFORMATION:
·
Set out any other information
that you think Canadian officials should know about you or your case.
PERSONAL
DATA:
·
Synopsis of personal
and family history
RESIDENCE
ABROAD:
·
How long have you
resided abroad?
·
Briefly state your
reasons for being abroad.
CURRENT
OFFENCE(S):
·
Name of accomplice(s)
·
Offender’s version of
offence(s)
PROGRAM
FACTORS:
·
Offender’s
occupational and program interests
(Under this heading, the
Request form invites the Applicant to “specify activities” of interest in
respect of the following types of programs: “Education/Vocational”,
“Industrial/Forestry”, “Agricultural”, “Individual/Group Counselling”, and
“Other”).
·
Drug/Alcohol
involvement
(Under this heading, the
Request form invites the Applicant to provide information regarding: his
drug/alcohol usage, whether the current offence related to drug or alcohol
involvement; and any past and/or present participation in drug/alcohol
treatment).
·
General health
(Under this heading, the
Request form invites the Applicant to identify and provide information regarding
any claimed medical ailments and/or medication required).
·
Offender’s immediate
needs
(Under this heading, the
Request form invites the Applicant to identify and provide information
regarding any treatment, protection or other identified needs).
[13]
In
completing the CSC Request Forms in support of his Request, the Applicant:
·
listed
persons willing to provide him support after his transfer;
·
gave
the following account of his version of the offence:
“DECOUVERTE DE COCAINE DANS LES BAGAGES
DANS LA VALISE DU VEHICULE QUE JE CONDUISAIT, APRES AVOIR ÉTÉ ARRETER PAR LA
POLICE DE LA ROUTE POUR UNE INFRACTION AU CODE DE LA ROUTE (AVOIR ROULER SUR LA
LIGNE DE ACCOTEMENT DROIT)”; and,
·
identified
only “TRANSPORT ROUTIER-CAMIONNAGE” as his “occupational and program interests”
under the “PROGRAM FACTORS” heading.
[14]
The
Applicant chose not to name any accomplice(s) and left several other sections
of the CSC Request Forms blank, presenting no information demonstrating his
acceptance of responsibility for his criminal offence, efforts at
rehabilitation in the U.S. or any medical or other needs. Significantly, in
respect of the “PROGRAM FACTORS” heading, the Applicant identified no other
“occupational and program interests”, no drug or alcohol involvement, no
medical ailments, no medication required, and no immediate treatment or other
needs.
[15]
The
U.S. Department of Justice approved the Request on March 6, 2009.
[16]
On
August 16, 2010, the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness denied
the Request.
[17]
In
his reasons for denying the Request, the Minister: identified the purposes of
the ITOA; noted that these purposes “serve to enhance public safety in
Canada”; and clearly articulated the legislative framework in which he
exercised his discretion in considering requests for transfer under the ITOA:
…
For each application for transfer, I examine the unique facts and circumstances
as presented to me in the context of the purposes of the Act and the
specific factors enumerated in section 10. [Emphasis added].
(Decision, Applicant’s Record [AR] at p 24).
[18]
The
Minister outlined the circumstances of the offence for which the Applicant is
serving a foreign sentence:
…
The applicant, Yves LeBon, is a Canadian citizen serving a
sentence of imprisonment of 10 years in the United States (U.S.) for the
following offences: possession with intent to distribute cocaine; and, improper
entry by an alien. On August 17, 2007, the offender entered the U.S. stating
that he was on his way to visit with family in Maine. On August 22, 2007, during
a routine traffic stop, an Illinois State Trooper asked Mr.
LeBon if he could search his vehicle. The
police officer discovered 119 packages in the trunk, each containing one
kilogram of cocaine.
(Decision, AR at p 24).
[19]
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 offence
within the meaning of section 2 of the Criminal Code” and noted:
·
the
nature of the criminal activity “suggests that other accomplices were involved
who were not apprehended”;
·
the
nature of the criminal activity “is indicative of a serious criminal
organization activity”;
·
“the
applicant did not provide a statement to the police after his arrest”;
·
“it
appears from the file that the applicant did not cooperate with the police in
identifying other participants in the crime”;
·
“the
offence involved a large quantity of cocaine, which is destructive to society”;
and,
·
“[t]he
applicant was involved in the commission of a serious offence involving a
significant quantity of drugs that, if successfully committed, would likely
result in the receipt of a material or financial benefit by the group he
assisted”.
It is noted as significant to the Minister’s
decision that the offence involved a large quantity of cocaine which could have
had serious repercussions for society; and, furthermore, the Applicant did not
identify other participants in the crime; thus, no one else was apprehended in
regard to the crime in question.
[20]
The
Minister noted the existence of supportive family ties in respect of his
mandated consideration of “whether the offender has social or family ties in
Canada” – the only “positive” ITOA factor identified in the Applicant’s
reasons in support of his Request.
[21]
In
concluding his reasons, the Minister demonstrated that he applied the correct
legislative framework and exercised his discretion reasonably:
Having
considered the united 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.
IV. Issues
[22]
(1)
What is the appropriate standard of review for a decision regarding an offender
transfer pursuant to the ITOA?
(2) What is
the proper characterization of the ITOA Legislative Framework and the
Minister’s Role in the ITOA context?
(3) Did the Minister
reasonably deny the Applicant’s Request for a transfer to Canada?
V. Analysis
A. Standard of Review
[23]
Following
Dunsmuir, above, 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 (Divito v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2009 FC 983 at para 19, aff’d 2011 FCA 39 at para
58; Grant, above, at paras 26-32).
[24]
In Grant,
above, Justice 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 (Dunsmuir,
above, at para 54; Grant at para 28).
[25]
Justice
Near’s reasons for this finding are apposite to the present case:
[28] …
A discretionary ministerial decision made pursuant to legislation which engages
the Minister’s expertise and policy role will similarly attract a great deal of
deference and point to a standard of reasonableness in some matters regarding
the interpretation of the statute.
…
[30] …
Parliament appointed the Minister to be the gate-keeper of the international
transfer of offender’s regime. In this role, the Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness is particularly well suited to consider the evidence
before him and appropriately balance the reintegration interests of the
Applicant and concerns about the administration of justice in Canada. In this
case, the Minister did not interpret provisions that are of central importance
to the legal system as a whole, but rather gave context to a fact-laden
reasoning process in an effort to produce transparent, intelligible reasons …
[26]
As
Justice Sean Harrington underscored in Divito, above, 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 (Divito at para 22; Grant, above,
at para 32).
[27]
Unless
the Minister’s Decision is unreasonable, the Court should not intervene.
B. ITOA Legislative Framework
and the Minister’s Role in the ITOA Context:
[28]
Section
6 of the ITOA vests the Minister with the responsibility for the
administration of the Act. 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 (Divito, above, at paras 57, 70; Holmes, above, at
paras 11-12, 38; Kozarov v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2007 FC 866, [2008] 2 FCR 377 at paras 22-25).
[29]
Section
3 of the ITOA provides for the Act’s layered purpose: to contribute to
the administration of justice, the rehabilitation of offenders and the
reintegration of offenders into the community:
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.
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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.
|
[30]
In Holmes, above, Justice 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” (Holmes
at paras 7-9). In his reasons for concluding that any infringement of the section
6 Charter rights is preserved by section 1, Justice Phelan observed that
the ITOA’s pressing and substantial objectives also included Canada’s
interests: “ensuring that punishment by countries with whom Canada has relevant
treaties is respected”; “respecting the rule of law in other countries”; and
“respecting international relations” (Holmes at paras 29, 31, 32, 40).
[31]
In
light of his recognition of the International Transfer of Offenders Act’s
broad, diverse, pressing and substantial objectives, Justice Phelan noted that
the suggestion that, once the foreign country consents to a transfer of an
offender, the Minister is “virtually obliged” to consent to the transfer:
[40] …
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.
[32]
In Divito,
above, Justice
Robert Mainville identified the security
of Canada and the prevention of offences 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 (Divito at paras 51-57. Note, while
Justice Marc Nadon disagreed with Justice Mainville’s conclusion that the ITOA
violates subsection 6(1) of the Charter, he agreed with his
justification analysis under section 1 of the Charter: Divito at
para 72).
[33]
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 of which they are citizens or nationals (ITOA
preamble; Holmes at paras 6, 21-28; Divito).
[34]
In
Getkate v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
2008 FC 965, [2009] 3 FCR 26, the Court noted that the ITOA does not
create an automatic right to return to Canada to serve their sentence, but
serves “to assist rehabilitation and reintegration in appropriate situations” [Emphasis added] (Getkate,
at paras 26, 29). Although rehabilitation is a core objective of the ITOA,
there is no presumption that a given transfer will serve the objective of
rehabilitation (Getkate at para 29; Holmes at paras 35, 40) and,
even if the Minister believes a transfer would serve this objective, it is open
for the Minister to deny the transfer request based on his consideration of the
other pressing and substantial objectives of the ITOA.
[35]
Similarly,
in Divito, the Federal Court of Appeal observed:
[62] …
Though for some offenders the loss of the perceived “benefit” of a potential
earlier conditional release under the Canadian correctional system may be
unfair …
[63] …
Barring exceptional circumstances, there is nothing unfair or unreasonable in
the fact that [offenders who have committed offences in foreign jurisdictions]
are subject to the incarceration systems of the foreign jurisdictions in which
they committed their offences …
[36]
In Divito,
Justice Mainville 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:
[58] …
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.
[37]
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 (Kozarov, above,
at para 28; Divito, above, at paras 81, 88-89), 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
(Holmes, above, at para 37; Divito, at para 53). 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.
Minister’s Discretion in
respect of Consideration of Section 10 Factors
[38]
Subsection
10(1) of the ITOA sets out the factors that a Minister shall consider in
determining whether to grant or deny a Canadian offender’s request for a
transfer:
Factors –
Canadian offenders
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.
|
Facteurs
à prendre en compte : délinquant canadien
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.
|
[39]
Subsection
10(2) of the ITOA sets out the factors that a Minister shall 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.
|
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).
|
[40]
In
Kozarov, above, 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 (Kozarov at paras
19, 20, 22, 24-25). 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” (Kozarov at paras 19-21, 22, 25; Holmes,
above, at paras 12, 38-39; Divito, above, at para 18). Rather, they
“are simply factors to be weighed by the Minister in a reasonable and
transparent way” (Holmes at paras 38-39). [Emphasis added].
[41]
The
factors that the Minister must consider under s 10 of the ITOA are
consistent with an rationally connected to the stated purpose of the Act as set
out in s 3 and the objectives of the legislation (Holmes, above, at para
34; Kozarov, above, at para 20; Divito, above, at paras 53-58).
In Holmes, Justice Phelan noted that “[t]he
protection of society and the best interests of the Canadian citizen prisoner
are balanced in the Act through the factors which the Minister is required to
consider” (Holmes at para 33).
[42]
Justice
Phelan identified the paragraph 10(2)(a) factors 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” [emphasis added], and rejected the argument that paragraph
10(2)(a) is a significant impairment on an offender’s disputed section 6
rights as “ignore[ing] the consideration that persons who will (again) engage
in these offences undermine the beneficial objectives of the Act” (Holmes,
above, at paras 35, 37).
[43]
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 (Holmes, above, at para 33; Divito,
at paras 18-24, citing Commissioner’s Directive (CD) 586-3 – Identification and
Management of Criminal Organizations; Corrections and Conditional Release
Act, SC 1992, c 20, sections 3, 4).
[44]
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.
[45]
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.
[46]
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 (Divito, above, at
paras 57-58, 70; Holmes, above, at paras 61-63).
The Minister’s Decision
[47]
In
regard to the standard of reasonableness, the Minister’s Decision is defensible
in respect of the facts and law. His reasons are complete, intelligible and
sufficient to allow the Applicant to know that all of the factors set out in section
10 of the ITOA were fairly considered (Divito, above, at para 70;
Holmes, above, at para 63).
[48]
In
Holmes, above, Justice Phelan observed that the Minister’s discretion in
respect of the ITOA legislative framework is broad and significant
deference is owed to the Minister’s assessment of relevant factors in the
exercise of his discretion (Holmes, above, at para 46). 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 objectives of the Act (Holmes at paras 38-39). “[H]aving
addressed the relevant considerations, the actual weighing or balancing is for
the Minister to conduct.” (Holmes, at paras 38-39, 61-63 [emphasis added]; Divito,
above, at paras 57-58 70).
[49]
While
the Minister may take advice in respect of a transfer request under the ITOA,
he must make the final decision and not delegate (Kozarov, above,
at para 24). In Markevich v Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2011 FC 113, Justice Phelan provided guidance regarding the
reasonableness requirements for ITOA decisions where the Minister chose
not to follow the departmental advice, noting that the Dunsmuir test of
transparency and intelligibility would be met where, “to the extent that it
departs from that advice or emphasizes other relevant factors, the decision
clearly explains the departure and the shift of emphasis” (Markevich, at
para 20; reference is also made to Grant, above, at para 41).
[50]
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 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 of the ITOA.
[51]
As
in Holmes, above, the Decision “focused on the potential for commission
of a criminal organization offence”, making reference to the specific
information relating to the paragraph 10(2)(a) factor that caused the
Minister concern (Holmes at para 59; Decision, AR at pp 23-24). For
example, the Minister’s observation that the nature of the criminal activity
“suggests that other accomplices were involved who were not apprehended” and
“is indicative of a serious criminal organization activity” was reasonably open
to him on the evidence [Emphasis added].
[52]
Contrary
to the Applicant’s assertions, there is no evidence that the Applicant was
acting as a “drug mule” when he was apprehended with 119 kilograms of cocaine
(The only basis for this reference are Ms. Lavigne’s affidavit statement (based
on her conversations with the Applicant and her review of his file) and the
statement made in the CSC Executive Summary that “[i]t can be speculated
that the offence may have been committed for financial gain and that his role
was that of the ‘mule’.” [Emphasis added]); Lavigne Affidavit at para 3). Similarly,
there was no “observation of the CSC stating that this offence was not part of
an organized crime” anywhere in the record before the Minister. The CSC
Executive Summary and the CSC Community Assessment merely confirm that there
are no known accomplices.
[53]
In
fact, the CSC Community Assessment observed that the quantity of drugs being
transported by the Applicant (identified in the CSC’s information as being 112
kilograms) was large enough that one could believe he was dealing with people
fairly well placed in the criminal underworld. The Assessment also notes that,
considering the known illicit activities at the Port of Montreal, the
Applicant’s long-term employment as a truck driver at said Port may shed some
light on the various opportunities that led to his involvement in the transport
of drugs.
[54]
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” (Grant, at para
46 [emphasis added]). Furthermore, the Court can take judicial notice of the
fact that cocaine is dangerous, and sells between $100 and $120 per gram,
placing the street value of the drugs seized from the Applicant at between
$11,900,000 and $14,280,000 (R v Mackey (2007), 280 Nfld & PEIR 231,
[2007] NJ No 457 (NLP.C) at para 4 (QL); R v Meech, 2011 ONSC 1815,
[2011] OJ No 1417 at para 7 (QL)).
[55]
Accordingly,
the Minister’s consideration of the fact that the Applicant’s offence involved
a large quantity of cocaine which would cause harm to society and benefit to
the group he assisted is relevant to his assessment of the paragraph 10(2)(a)
factor, as this recognizes the resources, premeditation, and organization of
the Applicant’s unidentified associations in Canada and the U.S. Moreover, the Minister’s focus on the
“seriousness of the drug trade and its social implications” in respect of his
consideration under paragraph 10(2)(a) 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 (Holmes, above, at paras 59-61).
[56]
It
was similarly open to the Minister to consider the Applicant’s failure to
provide a statement to the police after his arrest and his failure to cooperate
with the police in identifying other participants in the crime as relevant
factors in his determination of whether to grant his Request for a transfer
under the ITOA.
[57]
The
relevance of the Applicant’s acceptance of responsibility and cooperation with
authorities in identifying accomplices is underscored by the inclusion of an
opportunity for him to provide information regard his “accomplice(s)” and his
“version of offence(s)” in the CSC Request Forms; however, as noted, the
Applicant chose not to identify any accomplices in his Request and provide an
account of his offence that demonstrated no acceptance of responsibility for
his offence, which more so sheds light on the Minister’s consideration of
whether the Request advanced the purposes of the ITOA.
[58]
The
Minister, “in reaching his negative conclusion on the transfer application,”
also “noted the positive aspects of [the Applicant’s] situation”, namely his
family ties in Canada, “including the fact that his wife and son remain
supportive” (Holmes, above, at para 60; Decision, AR at p 24). While the
Minister’s reference to the “positive aspects” in respect of the Request is
limited to his consideration of the paragraph 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 (Divito, above, at para 58).
[59]
Although
the Minister’s Decision clearly weighed the “public safety” and “administration
of justice” objectives of the Act more heavily than the rehabilitation and
reintegration purposes, he did not ignore those purposes (Holmes, above,
at para 61). Rather, to the extent that these purposes were raised in respect
of the Applicant’s Request, these objectives were addresses in the Minister’s
consideration of the paragraph 10(2)(a) factor, which “addressed 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” (Holmes, at para 35).
[60]
The
Minister’s observations that the Applicant did not provide a statement to the
police or cooperate with the police in identifying other participants in the
crime and that the nature of the criminal activity “suggests that other accomplices
were involved who were not apprehended”. According to the Minister’s
observations, this “is indicative of a serious criminal organization activity” which
informs the Court of the Minister’s consideration of whether the Applicant has
accepted responsibility for his offending, severed ties with his accomplices,
and made sincere efforts towards his own rehabilitation such that his transfer
would not undermine the beneficial objectives of the Act (Holmes, above,
at para 37).
ITOA Statutory Context, Minister’s
Role, and Reasons
[61]
The
Applicant improperly alleges that the Minister’s Decision was based on an
implied “conclusion” or “suggestion” that the Applicant “would likely commit a
criminal organization offence” – which “conclusion was unreasonable given the
record of information before the Minister” and in spite of the Applicant’s
allegedly “[meeting] all criteria outlined in the Act to be permitted a
transfer to Canada”.
[62]
As
noted above, the Applicant is not presumptively entitled “to be permitted a
transfer to Canada” to serve his sentence upon having “met all criteria
outlined in the Act”. Similarly, it is well-established that the factors the
Minister is mandated to consider under section 10 are fluid, non-binary,
non-determinative, and do not exhaust the Minister’s discretion (Kozarov,
above, at paras 19-22, 24-25; Divito, above, at para 18; Holmes, above, at paras
38-39). Rather, they “are simply factors to be weighed by the Minister in a
reasonable and transparent way” (Holmes, at paras 38-39).
[63]
The Minister’s
Decision neither “suggests” nor “concludes” that the Applicant “would likely
commit a criminal organization offence”. Although the Minister addressed this
factor in the Decision, he was not required to make findings or conclusions in
respect of whether or not this factor was “met” in the context of the
Applicant’s Request, nor did he make any such findings or conclusions.
[64]
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 (Divito,
above, at paras 57-58, 70; Holmes, above, at paras 38-39; Markevich,
above, at para 20), the Applicant invites the Court to reweigh the factors
cited by the Minister in respect of his consideration of the paragraph 10(2)(a)
factors.
[65]
The
Applicant also improperly attempts to prescribe the facts and factors that the
Minister may consider in the exercise of his discretion to those facts that
“prove or disprove” a conclusion in respect of a mandated factor under section
10. In so doing, the Applicant presents the Minister’s concerns in respect of
factors informing his consideration of the objectives of the ITOA –
namely, administration of justice and public safety – as improper
considerations in respect of the Minister’s exercise of his discretion under
subsection 10(2)(1).
[66]
The
above submission belies the intention of Parliament that the Minister exercise
substantial discretion in his assessment of the section 10 factors – and any
other factors or considerations relevant to the purposes of the Act – in
determining whether a transfer would serve the purposes of the Act. It is now
well-established that the factors outlined in section 10 are not to be treated
as some form of test for either an applicant or the Minister to satisfy in
order to entitle or disentitle an applicant to a transfer. It would
fundamentally undermine the beneficial objectives of the ITOA regime to
find that – in exercising his discretion under the ITOA – the Minister may
only consider the mandated factors in respect of the purposes of the Act
but may not consider the purposes of the Act themselves.
[67]
The
Applicant attempts to undermine the Minister’s observation that the nature of
the criminal activity “suggests that other accomplices were involved who were
not apprehended” and “is indicative of a serious criminal organization
activity” by imputing a criminal law standard to the Minister’s reference to a
“criminal organization” and noting the absence of a conviction “of a criminal
organization offence within the meaning of section 2 of the Criminal Code of
Canada or its equivalent in the State of Illinois”; however, the principles of
“dual criminality” and “conduct determinative” provided by section 4 of the ITOA
expressly provide that the characterization of the conduct forming the basis
for their foreign sentences is not relevant in respect of the availability of a
transfer, provided the conduct would have constituted a criminal offence in
Canada.
[68]
The
Applicant’s assertion that the Minister “may draw no adverse inferences from
the silence of the Applicant” is similarly predicated on a conflation of
criminal law standards of proof and due process rights and the ITOA
legislative framework and the Minister’s Role in the ITOA context. While
the confessions rule does prevent one’s silence in respect of criminal charges
to be used against him or her in respect of a finding of criminal liability,
this presumption does not apply in respect of the determination and
administration of a sentence for a criminal offence. In fact, the Criminal
Code, RSC 1985, c C-46, section 718, identifies the “promot[ion of] a sense
of responsibility in offenders, and acknowledgement of the harm done to victims
and to the community” as an objective tied to the fundamental purpose of
sentencing. Moreover, an offender’s expression of remorse, timely plea of
guilty, and cooperation with authorities when apprehended are all regarded as
mitigating factors in respect of sentence length (Criminal Code, s
718.2; Nash v R, 2009 NBCA 7, at para 47; R v Knoblauch, 2000 SCC
58, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 780 at para 63).
[69]
Finally,
even it if was “more likely, given the evidence on the record, that he and
others spontaneously formed a group for the commission of a single offence”, it
was nevertheless reasonable for the Minister to articulate his concern
regarding the nature of the Applicant’s activity as engaging both paragraphs
10(2)(a) and the administration of justice purpose of the ITOA.
Additional Consideration
[70]
The
Applicant has filed the affidavit of his spouse, Ms. Johanne Lavigne, in support of this application. Via
this affidavit, the Applicant attempts to introduce evidence that was not
before the Minister at the time he made the Decision, including evidence
regarding the Applicant’s health. The jurisprudence is clear that absent
exceptional circumstances, which are not present in this case, the role of the
Court on judicial review is to review the decision on the basis of the record
that was before the decision-maker. It is incumbent on an applicant to present
any evidence at the time he or she wishes the Minister to consider as part of
his or her application (Divito, above).
[71]
This
affidavit also improperly adduces evidence of Ms. Lavigne’s impression and beliefs about the
circumstances of the Applicant’s criminal involvement and the conditions of his
sentence and conditional release. As noted in the CSC Community Assessment, Ms. Lavigne would seem to know very
little about the circumstances of the Applicant’s offence; did not know the
Applicant’s motives for transporting drugs; and did not seem aware of the full
extent of the circumstances and context in which the Applicant was involved and
the large amount of drugs involved.
[72]
Based
on the foregoing, Ms.
Lavigne’s affidavit evidence is
improper and, therefore, afforded little weight by the Court on this
application.
VI. Conclusion
[73]
For
all of the above reasons, the Applicant’s application for judicial review is
dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS that the Applicant’s
Application for Judicial Review be dismissed with costs.
“Michel
M.J. Shore”