Date:
20140107
Docket:
IMM-9844-12
Citation:
2014 FC 16
Ottawa, Ontario,
January 7, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Russell
BETWEEN:
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ALEJANDRO MARIANO CHUNG
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Applicant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF CITIZENSHIP
AND IMMIGRATION
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR
JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This
is an application under subsection 72(1) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, SC 2001, c. 27 [Act] for judicial review of the decision
of the Immigration Division [ID] of the Immigration and Refugee Board, dated 6
September 2012 [Decision], which found that the Applicant was a person
described under subsection 37(1)(a) of the Act and was therefore inadmissible
to Canada.
BACKGROUND
[2]
The
Applicant is a 47-year-old citizen of Chile and a permanent resident of Canada. He arrived in Canada in 1979, when he was 13 years old and, at the time of the
Decision, had not been back to Chile since.
[3]
The
Applicant has an extensive criminal record spanning approximately 30 years. He
joined the Hells Angels in 2010, and quit in 2011, though he had been
associated with the group for years. There is no dispute that the Hells Angels is
a criminal organization. The Applicant admits to being a past member of the Hells
Angels with “prospect” status, which is the final rank before becoming a
full-patch member.
[4]
Detective
Wes Law of the Winnipeg Police Service provided an opinion on the Applicant’s
involvement with the Hells Angels (Applicant’s Record, page 14). The Applicant
was observed at the Hells Angels Halloween Social on 27 October 2000
associating with Hells Angels members. On 28 January 2002, the Applicant
was arrested for assault with another man who was wearing a Hells Angels
baseball cap and T-shirt at the time. The victim of that assault was hesitant
to cooperate with the police as he was aware that his attackers were members of
the Hells Angels, and the charges were eventually stayed. The Applicant was
also seen associating with Hells Angels members and in attendance at other
Hells Angels social events between 2003 and 2011. In 2011, the Applicant
verbally confirmed to Detective Law that he was a prospect member of the Hells
Angels. Later in 2011, he confirmed that he had been demoted to the rank of “hangaround,”
but he did not explain the reason for the demotion. Based on the above,
Detective Law’s opinion was that the Applicant is “an individual deeply
entrenched in the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club, and has actively involved
himself in the Outlaw Motorcycle Gang lifestyle over the course of the past two
decades.”
[5]
On
6 September 2012, the ID found the Applicant inadmissible to Canada under subsection 37(1)(a) of the Act on the grounds of organized criminality and ordered him
deported.
PRELIMINARY
MATTER
[6]
The
Respondent requests that the Court amend the style of cause to replace “The
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness” as the Respondent with
“The Minister of Citizenship and Immigration” pursuant to subsection 4(1) of
the Act.
DECISION UNDER
REVIEW
[7]
The
ID noted that the standard of proof with respect to the facts alleged is
“reasonable grounds to believe,” which is a lower standard than a “balance of
probabilities” but requires more than a mere suspicion. The ID also noted that
this was not a criminal trial and it did not need to be established that the
Applicant was guilty of a criminal offence.
[8]
At
the ID hearing, the Applicant testified that he joined the Hells Angels in 2010
and later became a prospect, but then quit in October, 2011. When asked why he
wanted to join, the Applicant said that he just wanted to ride a motorcycle
with them, and that his close friend, Shane Kirton, had been a member of
the Hells Angels for 10 years, and that he was always around Mr. Kirton. The
Applicant admitted to being demoted from prospect to hangaround status, and
said that it was because he had missed some events and a shift at the
clubhouse. He said that he quit the Hells Angels because he had no time for it,
it was causing him to spend less time with his daughter, and because there was
too much police harassment. He claimed that he did not know why the police
would be harassing the Hells Angels.
[9]
Evidence
was introduced that described the designation of a “hangaround” as requiring
that “full patch members must be certain that the individual is systematically
involved in crime before approving his promotion to this rank. He also has to
receive majority approval in a vote.” A “prospect” is “an individual who is
gaining the confidence of all colour-wearing members. He is demonstrating his
loyalty and ability to carry out and obey orders. He has been actively involved
in criminal activities.” This evidence was not challenged by the Applicant.
[10]
The
Applicant did not admit to any knowledge of Hells Angels’ criminal activity. As
a hangaround, he said that his shifts at the clubhouse consisted of cleaning
and serving drinks. He testified that he never heard any of the members talk
about criminal offences, and that he never saw a member of the Hells Angels
commit a criminal offence. Counsel submitted that just because the Applicant
progressed to the level of prospect does not mean that he had knowledge of the
criminal nature of the activities of the organization, and that the Hells Angels
are secretive by nature.
[11]
The
ID noted that the Applicant was observed by police as being involved with Hells
Angels as early as 2000, and that the Applicant’s own evidence was that his
life-long friend, Mr. Kirton, had been a member of the Hells Angels for 10
years. Another friend of the Applicant, Dale Paggett, testified that he knew
some people involved in the Hells Angels but did not view the Hells Angels as
being a criminal organization. The ID did not find this testimony helpful, as
Mr. Paggett, unlike the Applicant, was not a hangaround or prospect.
[12]
The
ID stated that the Hells Angels are a notorious criminal organization. The
Applicant’s explanation that he wanted to become a full patch member simply to
ride motorcycles with the group was not credible because the Applicant was
pulled over by police while riding his motorcycle with the Hells Angels both
when he was a hangaround and a prospect. Thus, he must have been able to ride
his motorcycle with the group without being a full patch member.
[13]
Detective
Law testified that the business of the Hells Angels is crime, and primarily
drug trafficking. He said there is no misconception that they are just a group
who likes to get together and ride motorcycles. For someone to make it to the
rank of prospect he or she would need to have demonstrated a commitment to the
organization and would be heavily involved and entrenched. Even to become an “official
friend” of the Hells Angels, which is the rank below a hangaround, a person
would have to have been actively involved in criminal activities.
[14]
The
ID noted that the case of Amaya v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2007 FC 549 [Amaya] established at para 30
that “In sum, even if the Applicant himself did not engage in the criminal
activities, if he had knowledge of the activities, he would meet the
requirements of membership. Knowledge of the gang’s activities is sufficient to
satisfy any mens rea requirement.”
[15]
The
ID specifically referred to the Applicant’s contention that his testimony that
he was not aware of the criminal activity of other Hells Angels was not
seriously challenged in cross-examination. However, the ID stated that it did
not have to accept the Applicant’s evidence as credible merely because of this
and that it was entitled to consider the reasonable probabilities of the surrounding
conditions. The ID thought that the Applicant’s testimony was “entirely
inconsistent with the preponderance of the probabilities which rationally
emerge out of all the evidence in the case and I do not believe his evidence.” The
ID also noted that, by virtue of subsection 173(c) of the Act, it was not bound
by any legal or technical rules of evidence.
[16]
The
ID noted it is sufficient to show that the Applicant was wilfully blind to the
criminal nature of the Hells Angels. To establish wilful blindness it must be
demonstrated that the Applicant knew of the need to make inquiries but chose to
remain ignorant. The ID noted that on 29 July 2010 the Winnipeg Hells Angels
clubhouse was raided, and the Applicant was inside at the time. The Applicant
was convinced to leave the clubhouse peacefully by negotiators. This incident
specifically, as well as many other encounters with police, should have alerted
the Applicant that something illegal was going on to attract so much police attention.
[17]
The
ID found that the Applicant had knowledge of the Hells Angels criminal
activity, and if he did not then he was wilfully blind to it. Thus, the
Applicant was found to be inadmissible under subsection 37(1)(a) of the Act.
STATUTORY
PROVISIONS
[18]
The
following provisions of the Act are applicable in this proceeding:
Rules
of interpretation
33.
The facts that constitute inadmissibility under sections 34 to 37 include
facts arising from omissions and, unless otherwise provided, include facts
for which there are reasonable grounds to believe that they have occurred,
are occurring or may occur.
[…]
Organized
criminality
37.
(1) A permanent resident or a foreign national is inadmissible on grounds of
organized criminality for
(a)
being a member of an organization that is believed on reasonable grounds to
be or to have been engaged in activity that is part of a pattern of criminal
activity planned and organized by a number of persons acting in concert in
furtherance of the commission of an offence punishable under an Act of
Parliament by way of indictment, or in furtherance of the commission of an
offence outside Canada that, if committed in Canada, would constitute such an
offence, or engaging in activity that is part of such a pattern;
[…]
|
Interprétation
33.
Les faits — actes ou omissions — mentionnés aux articles 34 à 37 sont, sauf
disposition contraire, appréciés sur la base de motifs raisonnables de croire
qu’ils sont survenus, surviennent ou peuvent survenir.
[…]
Activités
de criminalité organisée
37.
(1) Emportent interdiction de territoire pour criminalité organisée les faits
suivants :
a)
être membre d’une organisation dont il y a des motifs raisonnables de croire
qu’elle se livre ou s’est livrée à des activités faisant partie d’un plan d’activités
criminelles organisées par plusieurs personnes agissant de concert en vue de
la perpétration d’une infraction à une loi fédérale punissable par mise en
accusation ou de la perpétration, hors du Canada, d’une infraction qui,
commise au Canada, constituerait une telle infraction, ou se livrer à des
activités faisant partie d’un tel plan;
[…]
|
ISSUES
[19]
The
Applicant raised the following issues in his written submissions but modified
his position somewhat at the review hearing:
a.
Is
the standard of proof for rebuttal of sworn testimony under sections 34 through
37 of the Act “reasonable grounds to believe” or “a balance of probabilities”?
b.
If
the answer to the first question is “reasonable grounds to believe,” is the
answer different under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms?
c.
Does
the principle established in Browne v Dunn, (1893) 6 R 67 (HL) [Browne
v Dunn] apply to the ID’s proceedings?
d.
Was
there a breach of procedural fairness when the ID found that parts of the
Applicant’s testimony were not credible despite the fact that the Applicant was
not cross-examined on this testimony?
[20]
The
Applicant withdrew his Charter-based argument (issue b.) at the hearing
of the application, and asked the Court to focus upon the following issues:
a.
Did
the ID breach a duty of procedural fairness by concluding that the Applicant’s
testimony was not credible on material points on which he had not been
cross-examined, contrary to the rule stated in Browne v Dunn?
b.
Did
the ID err by failing to give proper effect to the presumption of credibility
of sworn testimony, or by applying the wrong standard of proof to the rebuttal
of that presumption?
STANDARD
OF REVIEW
[21]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir]
held that a standard of review analysis need not be conducted in every
instance. Instead, where the standard of review applicable to a particular
question before the court is settled in a satisfactory manner by past
jurisprudence, the reviewing court may adopt that standard of review. Only
where this search proves fruitless, or where the relevant precedents appear to
be inconsistent with new developments in the common law principles of judicial
review, must the reviewing court undertake a consideration of the four factors
comprising the standard of review analysis: Agraira v Canada (Minister of Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at para 48.
[22]
Past
jurisprudence has firmly established that the Board's determination of
inadmissibility on grounds of membership in a criminal organization “is largely
an assessment of facts, and is thus to be reviewed on the standard of
reasonableness”: Lennon v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2012 FC 1122 at para 13; see also M'Bosso v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2011 FC 302 at para 53 [M’Bosso];
Castelly v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2008 FC 788
at paras 10-12; He v Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2010 FC 391 at paras 24-25 [He]; Tang v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FC 292 at para 17. This
includes the ID’s evaluation of the evidence, including the credibility of
witnesses and the weight to be assigned to their testimony: see Mugesera
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 SCC 40 at paras
38-42.
[23]
As
others have noted, the application of the reasonableness standard of review in
cases relating to inadmissibility under sections 34 to 37 of the Act is
affected by the statutory standard of proof that applies to the constituent
facts of inadmissibility, namely “reasonable grounds to believe”: see s. 33 of
the Act. For clarity, then, the ID had to come to a reasonable conclusion that
there are reasonable grounds to believe that: a) Hells Angels is a criminal
organization (which is not in dispute here); and b) the Applicant was a
“member” of that organization as that term has been defined by the
jurisprudence: see Tjiueza v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), 2009 FC 1260 at paras
22-24; Rizwan v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2010
FC 781 at para 29; M’Bosso, above, at paras 4, 24.
[24]
The
Applicant’s attempts to separate out subsidiary legal issues regarding the ID’s
treatment of the evidence, such as the “standard of proof” applicable to the
rebuttal of evidentiary presumptions about credibility, does not affect the
standard of review. The ID is entitled to deference in its evaluation of the
evidence, including the judgments about witness credibility that this
necessarily entails: Mugesera, above.
[25]
The
question of the proper application of the rule from Browne v Dunn raises
an issue of procedural fairness. Specifically, where the rule is applicable and
is not properly applied, it could compromise a party’s right to know and fully
answer the case to be met, often referred to as the principle of audi
alteram partem. Questions of procedural fairness are reviewable on a
standard of correctness: Canadian Union of Public Employees
(C.U.P.E.) v Ontario (Minister of Labour), 2003 SCC
29 at para 100. As the Federal Court of Appeal stated in Sketchley v Canada
(Attorney General), 2005 FCA 404 at para 53, “[t]he
decision-maker has either complied with the content of the duty of fairness
appropriate for the particular circumstances, or has breached this duty.” This
is a question on which no deference is due.
[26]
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
para 47, and Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v
Khosa 2009 SCC 12 at para 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
[27]
The
Hells Angels make concerted efforts to hide the criminality of their
organization, and the Applicant submits that one cannot assume that a person
who hangs around the group will automatically know of its criminal activities.
Section 37 of the Act is specifically designed so that members of criminal
organizations who do not know about criminal activities are not deemed
inadmissible (Stables v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2011 FC 1319 [Stables]). In Stables, the applicant was found to
be a member of the Hells Angels, but he was a full patch member of high rank
and not a peripheral member like the Applicant.
[28]
The
Applicant says there is no evidence that he had any knowledge of the Hells
Angels’ criminal activity. Detective Law also acknowledged that the Hells
Angels try to give the impression that they are just a motorcycle club. Only
full patch members attend all the meetings of the organization, and hangarounds
and prospects do not have the organization’s full trust. The Applicant submits
that this type of membership does not, by its very nature, import knowledge of
the criminality of the organization.
[29]
The
Minister’s own materials say that a prospect “cannot vote or attend meetings.” A prospect
must be actively involved in criminal activities, but he can be involved in
these activities on his own. The Applicant’s status in the club was not in and
of itself enough to demonstrate knowledge, and there are no other facts
establishing knowledge in this case.
[30]
The
Applicant testified before the ID that he did not know anything about any of
the Hells Angels’ criminal activities, and this testimony was not
cross-examined. Nor did the Minister suggest in his submissions that the
Applicant knew of the criminality of the Hells Angels. The case of Browne v
Dunn, above, says that in order to impeach the credibility of the Applicant
he must have been cross-examined, and the Supreme Court of Canada said in R.
v Lyttle, 2004 SCC 5 at para 65 [Lyttle] that this remains a sound
principle of law.
[31]
The
Applicant says that it is clear from cases such as Suresh v Canada (Minister
of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1 and Agraira v Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2011 FCA 103 that a
person who is ignorant of the criminal activities of the organization with
which they are associated should not be considered a member of that
organization for inadmissibility purposes. If this were not the case, then subsection
37(1)(a) would be contrary to the Charter.
[32]
The
ID found at para 41 that there were reasonable grounds to conclude that the
Applicant had the requisite knowledge for membership, but the Applicant submits
that reasonable grounds is the wrong standard of proof and that the legally
correct standard of proof is balance of probabilities. The Applicant says that
if this is not the case then the presumption of credibility of testimony would
have no operational effect, and it would not matter whether or not an applicant
has testified. In order to give meaning to the presumption of credibility, the
standard of proof for rebuttal of the presumption must be different from the
standard of proof for establishing the underlying facts, absent contrary
testimony.
[33]
The
Applicant also points out that the ID found that he was wilfully blind to the
criminal activities of the Hells Angels; however, the Applicant was never asked
whether he made any inquiries or not. The ID reasons that if the Applicant had
made inquiries then he would have found out about the criminal nature of the
organization, but this reasoning is inconsistent with other parts of the
evidence that show that the Hells Angels are secretive in nature and have an
elaborate recruiting process involving many stages whereby only full patch
members know the full details of the organization’s activities.
[34]
Had
the Applicant been cross-examined at the hearing on whether he made inquiries,
he may have replied that he had. The Applicant submits that although the ID may
not be bound by formal rules of evidence, it is bound by the rule from Browne
v Dunn as a component of the duty of fairness. The Court said that the rule
was applicable to an ID proceeding in T.H.S.B. v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2011 FC 354. Furthermore, in Lyttle, above, the
Supreme Court said that the principle from Browne v Dunn is a sound
principle of general application, not a technical rule of evidence.
[35]
The
ID said that the principle from Browne v Dunn is not applicable when it
is “perfectly clear” that the person concerned “has had full notice beforehand
that there is an intention to impeach the credibility of the story he is
telling.” The Applicant submits that there was no such notice in this case.
Submissions were made on the law and on knowledge, but this is different from an
argument that the testimony the Applicant gave on his own knowledge was not
credible. The only time the Applicant told his story was at the hearing, so
there could be no prior impeachment of the credibility of that story. Thus, the
exception to the Browne v Dunn principle relied on by the ID was not
applicable.
[36]
Further,
the Minister knew that the Applicant was planning on testifying that he had no
knowledge of the Hells Angels’ criminal activities because it was raised in
pre-hearing submissions. The Applicant then testified to this effect and it was
unfair to him for the Minister to decline to cross-examine him on this issue,
and then afterwards impeach his credibility when he might have been able to
address the concerns at the hearing. It is precisely this situation that the
rule in Browne v
Dunn
was designed to avoid.
The
Respondent
[37]
The
Respondent points out that in R. v Palmer, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 759, the Supreme
Court held that the rule in Browne v Dunn is not absolute. If the issue
is “foreseen” then it is not necessary to put the witness on notice of every
detail. The Respondent submits that this is such a case. As the Applicant’s
contention that he did not have knowledge of the Hells Angels’ criminal
activity was the basis of his case, it cannot be said that he did not have notice
that knowledge was at issue.
[38]
In
addition, while the Applicant was not cross-examined on every detail on his
testimony, he was cross-examined at length about his involvement with the Hells
Angels. This included questions about his duties within the organization, his
rise in the ranks, his length of involvement, incidents with the police, why he
wanted to become a member, why he wanted to become a full patch member and his
friendships with certain members. Thus, the Respondent submits that in the
circumstances of this case the duty of fairness was met.
[39]
The
Respondent further submits that the ID’s finding that the Applicant had
knowledge of the Hells Angels’ criminal activities was reasonable. There was
extensive evidence before the ID about the group’s criminal activities, and
based on this evidence the ID found that there were reasonable grounds to
believe that the Applicant knew about the criminal activities of the Hells
Angels with whom he was an active member.
[40]
As
to the wilful blindness finding, the Respondent points out that the Applicant
was arrested or stopped by the police on numerous occasions while in the
company of Hells Angels members. In fact, one of the Applicant’s reasons
for leaving the organization was “too much police harassment.” He was also in
attendance during a police seizure at a clubhouse and continued his membership
for more than a year after that. After all this, the ID concluded that if he
did not know about the group’s criminal activities it was because he declined
to inquire and chose to be wilfully blind. The Respondent submits that this is
a reasonable finding on the facts.
[41]
The
Applicant relies on the testimony of Detective Law to argue that the Hells
Angels organization attempts to disguise its criminal nature and its members
would not have answered the Applicant truthfully had he asked about its
criminal activities. However, Detective Law’s testimony does not support this
argument. He testified that Hells Angels members will attempt to mislead the
public and law enforcement, but that it has “been proven that the Hells Angels
are a criminal organization and I found in my experience members involved with
the Hells Angels don’t even try to mislead the police any more.” If members do
not even bother to mislead the police anymore, it is reasonable to find that
they would not mislead a prospect member who has been associated with the
organization for 20 years.
[42]
The
Applicant has challenged the standard of proof relied on by the ID, but this
argument is without merit because the standard of proof is legislated. Section
33 of the Act provides that in the case of inadmissibility under section 34 to
37 the standard is “reasonable grounds.” Further, the Applicant’s Charter argument
is not relevant on these facts because the ID found that the Applicant did have
knowledge.
The
Applicant’s Reply
[43]
The
Applicant points out that if the ID’s findings of knowledge and wilful
blindness were made in a legally erroneous way then the requirements for
membership have not been met.
[44]
As
to the standard of proof set out in section 33 of the Act, the Applicant
replies that this standard refers to the facts that constitute inadmissibility
and not to the presumption of credibility. The ID is entitled to make a finding
of fact on membership using the standard of reasonable probability, but that
statutory provision says nothing about the standard of proof required to rebut
the presumption of credibility. The standard of proof for rebutting the
presumption of credibility must be higher than the standard of reasonable
probability or the presumption would have no meaning. Furthermore, the ID did
not even acknowledge that there is a presumption of credibility of the
Applicant’s sworn testimony.
[45]
The
Applicant also says that the ID never directly addressed the standard of proof
it used in making its finding that the Applicant was wilfully blind. This being
so, the Applicant submits that if the ID made the error he suggests on the
standard of proof for knowledge, then that same error was committed when addressing
wilful blindness. The ID also said that wilful blindness is equivalent to
knowledge, which implies it used the same standard of proof for both.
[46]
Furthermore,
the Applicant does not have to persuade the Court that the wrong standard of
proof was used; it is sufficient for the Applicant to establish that it was
unclear what standard was being used (Alam v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 4 at para 9). At the very least the ID was
unclear about what standard it was using in arriving at the conclusion that the
Applicant was wilfully blind. At para 53 of the Decision the ID says that the
Applicant’s evidence is “entirely inconsistent with the preponderance of
probabilities which rationally emerge out of all the evidence and I do not believe
his evidence.” Thus, it would appear the ID used two different standards of
proof: preponderance of probabilities and reasonable grounds for believing.
[47]
As
to the rule in Browne v Dunn, the Applicant states that his concern is
not that he did not have notice that knowledge would be an issue, but that
there was a detailed attack on his testimony on knowledge in the submissions of
the Minister without an opportunity to answer that attack in cross-examination.
The Respondent says that the Applicant was extensively cross-examined, but that
cross-examination focused on other matters and not on the Applicant’s knowledge
of the criminality of the Hells Angels. The Applicant says that the rule in Brown
v Dunn and the duty of fairness both require a good deal more than just
notice of relevant subject matter, and that in this case they required “cross-examination
on the substance of the challenge to the credibility of the testimony of the
applicant in order to give the applicant an opportunity to answer the concerns
raised” (Applicant’s Reply at para 47).
[48]
The
Applicant submits that he was not cross-examined on those matters which went
directly to the ID’s adverse credibility finding. In support of that
credibility finding the ID found that the Hells Angels are notorious for being
a criminal organization, but the Applicant was asked no questions about this
notoriety. The ID also found that there must be some other benefit to being a
full-patch member besides being able to ride motorcycles with the club, but the
Applicant was never asked about what that benefit might be. The Applicant was
also not asked about what his friend Shane Kirton told him about the
organization.
[49]
Furthermore,
the reasons the Respondent gives for the rule in Browne v Dunn not being
applicable in this case are not the same reasons given by the ID. The ID did
not reason that the rule does not require notice of every detail, and the
Applicant says that it was apparent to the ID that the Applicant was not given
notice of “more than mere detail.” The ID also did not reason that the
Applicant was subject to extensive cross-examination which amounted to
effective compliance with the rule from Browne v Dunn. The ID said that
the rule from Browne v Dunn did not apply because the ID is not bound by
formal rules of evidence. That is not the reasoning of the Respondent and the
Respondent does not try to defend that position. The Respondent says there was
cross-examination, but the ID has already admitted there was not.
[50]
The
Applicant also submits that the findings of knowledge and wilful blindness were
not reasonable. Detective Law testified that the Hells Angels do not even try
to mislead the police anymore, but that is a reference only to the police. The
Applicant is not a member of the police. The Respondent assumes that if the
organization does not try to mislead the police then it would not try to
mislead others. However, the organization may not try to mislead the police on
the assumption that the police already know the nature of the organization, and
this does not necessarily mean that the group would not attempt to mislead
others who do not know the nature of the organization. In fact, Detective Law
testified that “I think it would be fair to say some of the individuals
involved with Hell’s Angels criminal organization might try and mislead you by
saying that they simply enjoy riding motorcycles and are not a criminal
organization.”
[51]
The
Applicant submits that the ID’s reasoning is internally inconsistent and
therefore unreasonable.
The
Respondent’s Further Submissions
[52]
The
Respondent points out that there was both documentary and oral evidence before
the ID demonstrating the Applicant’s membership in the Hells Angels and his
knowledge that it is a criminal organization. The Applicant conceded both the criminal
nature of the Hells Angels and Detective Law’s expertise on the subject at the
hearing. Detective Law testified that:
In the case of the Hell’s Angels, over the course of
time a friend may be promoted to the rank of hang around and eventually promoted
to the rank of prospect or full patch. I can say that all those individuals,
if you’re wearing the vest, you are a member of the criminal organization and
you are involved in criminal activities for that organization.
[53]
The
Respondent argues that the “reasonable grounds to believe” standard of proof is
applicable to questions of fact in relation to subsection 37(1)(a): Mugesera,
above, at para 116. The Respondent acknowledges that knowledge of, or wilful
blindness regarding, the organization’s pattern of criminal activity is a
requirement for inadmissibility under subsection 37(1)(a) (Amaya,
above, at para 30), but argues that whether a person has the requisite
knowledge is a question of fact to which the “reasonable grounds to believe”
standard of proof is applicable. On review, the ID’s determination that the
Applicant did know about the Hells Angels’ criminal activities is entitled to
significant deference: He, above, at para 25.
[54]
The
Respondent also argues that the Applicant’s submissions conflate the standard
of proof with the weighing of evidence. The standard of proof applicable to
each of the factual components of inadmissibility under subsection 37(1)(a)
is reasonable grounds to believe, and this does not change simply because there
is sworn testimony denying one or more of the disputed factual components. With
respect to the weight to be given to the Applicant’s sworn testimony, the
standard of proof is not a relevant consideration.
[55]
While
sworn testimony is presumed to be true in the absence of contradiction, the
presumption is rebuttable: such testimony can be reasonably rejected if found
to be implausible. Such a finding must be rational and clearly expressed, and
the basis for the finding must be apparent in the tribunal’s reasons: Rahal
v Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2012 FC 319 at para 44.
The Respondent argues that the ID member properly stated the determination he
was required to make – that is, whether the Applicant was credible when he said
he did not know that the Hells Angels is a criminal organization – and stated
that he did not believe this evidence. Rather, he found it to be “entirely
inconsistent with the preponderance of the probabilities that rationally emerge
out of all the evidence in the case.” The reasons for this conclusion were
“apparent, rational and clearly expressed” and there is no basis upon which
this Court should re-weigh this evidence. The ID member explicitly asked
himself whether he was required to accept the Applicant’s testimony as
credible, since it was given under affirmation and not seriously challenged on
cross-examination, and applied the well-accepted test from Faryna v Chorny,
[1951] BCJ No 152 (QL) to make a finding about the Applicant’s credibility.
There is thus no confusion as to the basis upon which this finding was made and
no reason the Court should interfere.
[56]
With
respect to the Applicant’s argument concerning procedural fairness and the rule
in Browne v Dunn, the Respondent states that it was clear from the
outset of the hearing that “knowledge was the issue that would be
determinative.” The Minister presented his case first, and the Applicant was
present during Detective Law’s testimony. He was thus aware of the case to be
met. The Applicant has not provided any evidence as to what additional evidence
he may have given if explicitly challenged on his claimed lack of knowledge.
[57]
In
addition to its previous argument with respect to the Applicant’s Charter
argument, the Respondent notes that the Court has previously found subsection 37(1)(a)
to be constitutional: Stables, above.
ANALYSIS
[58]
At
the judicial review hearing before me on August 29, 2013, Applicant’s counsel
informed the Court that the Applicant was withdrawing the Charter-related
arguments referred to in written submissions. Counsel asked the Court to direct
its attention to those aspects of the Decision dealing with the Applicant’s
knowledge of the criminal nature of the Manitoba Chapter of Hells Angels and
the ID’s failure to consider and deal with the presumption of credibility that
arises from the Applicant’s sworn testimony that he did not know that Hells
Angels is a criminal organization.
[59]
As
regards the Applicant’s alleged lack of knowledge of the criminal nature of the
organization, the ID acknowledged that a form of mens rea was required,
but found that the requirement was satisfied in this case because the
Applicant’s evidence that he was unaware of the criminal activity of the
Manitoba Chapter was not credible. This evidence was found to be “entirely
inconsistent with the preponderance of the probabilities which rationally
emerge out of all the evidence in the case and I do not believe his evidence.”
Either the Applicant had actual knowledge or he was wilfully blind to the
criminal activity of the Manitoba Chapter, and “[s]ince wilful blindness is
equivalent to knowledge, [the Applicant] had knowledge of the illegal
activities of the Manitoba Chapter.” The ID concluded that this meant the mens
rea ingredient of membership in a criminal organization had been established
by the Minister.
[60]
The
Applicant has raised two principal issues with regard to the mens rea or
knowledge findings of the ID and, in my view, they are the only arguable issues
that he brings before the Court in this application.
[61]
First
of all, the Applicant raises a procedural fairness argument based upon Browne
v Dunn, above. Applicant’s counsel raised this issue in written submissions
to the ID, and the ID dealt with it in the following way:
[63] In written submissions, counsel pointed
out that in direct examination Mr. Chung said that he did not know about any
criminal activities committed by the Hells Angels members and that on
cross-examination, the Minister did not confront Mr. Chung regarding what
knowledge he had of the criminal activities of the Manitoba Chapter. He argues
that having failed to put it to Mr. Chung that his evidence on this point was
not believable, now the Minister cannot say that Mr. Chung’s evidence on the
issue of knowledge of the activities of the Manitoba Chapter is not credible.
He relies on Browne v. Dunn (1893), 6 r. 67 (H.L.), at 70-71 in support
of his argument.
[64] I reject this submission. In the first
place by virtue of paragraph 173(c) of the Act, the Immigration Division is not
bound by any legal or technical rules of evidence.
[65] Secondly, I agree with Minister’s counsel
that the last part of the quotation from Browne v. Dunn is applicable to
this case “… it seems to me that a cross-examination of a witness which errs in
the direction of excess may be far more fair to him than to leave him without
cross-examination, and afterwards to suggest that he is not a witness of truth,
I mean upon a point on which it is not otherwise perfectly clear that he has
had full notice beforehand that there is an intention to impeach the
credibility of the story which he is telling.” (my emphasis)
[66] Mr. Chung and his counsel had notice that
the Minister would be submitting that Mr. Chung would have known that the Hells
Angels and the Manitoba Chapter are criminal organizations. The issue of
knowledge as an element of membership in a criminal organization was raised
before the hearing and both counsel made submissions on the issue. Mr. Chung’s
counsel wrote in his Reply “… the submissions of the Minister at paragraph 15
appear to suggest that the Minister agrees, and that there is only a factual
issue whether the applicant knew or was wilfully blind to the pattern of
criminal activity of the Hells Angels.”
[67] Mr. Chung and his counsel would have known
that if he said he had no knowledge of the Manitoba Chapter’s criminal
activities that the Minister would submit that this is not believable. The
Minister put in his case before Mr. Chung testified. Therefore Brown v.
Dunn does not apply.
[62]
Essentially,
the Applicant’s argument is that he testified that he had no knowledge of the
criminal activities of the Manitoba Chapter and the Minister failed to cross-examine
him on this aspect of his sworn testimony. It was thus, he argues, procedurally
unfair for the ID to make findings based upon the preponderance of the
probabilities which rationally emerge out of all of the evidence in the case to
conclude that the Applicant was either lying or was wilfully blind.
[63]
Browne
v Dunn,
above, deals with a point of procedural fairness and reads in relevant part as
follows:
Now, my Lords, I cannot help saying that it seems to
me to be absolutely essential to the proper conduct of a cause, where it is
intended to suggest that a witness is not speaking the truth on a particular
point, to direct his attention to the fact by some questions put in
cross-examination showing that that imputation is intended to be made, and not
to take his evidence and pass it by as a matter altogether unchallenged, and
then, when it is impossible for him to explain, as perhaps he might have been
able to do if such questions had been put to him, the circumstances which it is
suggested indicate that the story he tells ought not to be believed, to argue
that he is a witness unworthy of credit. My Lords, I have always understood that
if you intend to impeach a witness you are bound, whilst he is in the box, to
give him an opportunity of making any explanation which is open to him; and, as
it seems to me, that is not only a rule of professional practice in the conduct
of a case, but is essential to fair play and fair dealing with witnesses.
Sometimes reflections have been made upon excessive cross-examination of
witnesses, and it has been complained of as undue; but it seems to me that a
cross-examination of a witness which errs in the direction of excess may be far
more fair to him than to leave him without cross-examination, and afterwards to
suggest that he is not a witness of truth, I mean upon a point on which it is
not otherwise perfectly clear that he has had full notice beforehand that there
is an intention to impeach the credibility of the story which he is telling. Of
course I do not deny for a moment that there are cases in which that notice has
been so distinctly and unmistakably given, and the point upon which he is
impeached, and is to be impeached, is so manifest, that it is not necessary to
waste time in putting questions to him upon it. All I am saying is that it will
not do to impeach the credibility of a witness upon a matter on which he has
not had any opportunity of giving an explanation by reason of there having been
no suggestion whatever in the course of the case that his story is not
accepted.
[Emphasis added]
[64]
The
Supreme Court of Canada in Lyttle, above, at para 65 confirmed that the
“rule in Browne v Dunn remains a sound principle of general application
…”.
[65]
In
the present case, the Applicant was well aware that the principal issue at the
hearing before the ID would be his knowledge of, or wilful blindness to, the
criminal nature of the Manitoba Chapter of Hells Angels. The Minister had,
before the Applicant testified, entered his case, including clear and
compelling evidence concerning the Applicant’s long involvement with the
Manitoba Chapter and his efforts to work his way up the hierarchy to
“full-patch” status. The Applicant never did achieve full-patch, but he did
become a “prospect,” the status that immediately precedes full-patch. The
evidence shows that it was more than clear that the Minister’s case was that – given
the nature of Hells Angels, its notoriety as a criminal organization, its long
and arduous recruiting system, the criminal involvement of recruits at
different stages in the hierarchy (friend, hang-around, prospect, full-patch),
the Applicant’s own involvement and aspirations within the system, and his interaction
with police in that context – the Applicant had full knowledge of the criminal
nature of the Manitoba Chapter and, if he did not, then he was being wilfully
blind. This meant that there were reasonable grounds to believe that he was, or
had been, a member of a criminal organization in accordance with the governing
jurisprudence.
[66]
The
Applicant not only had full notice that there was an intention to impeach
anything he might say about being unaware of the criminal nature of the Manitoba
Chapter, he also knew, given the case entered against him, that a mere denial
of knowledge of criminal activity and an assertion that he just wanted to ride
motor bikes would not explain his long involvement with the Manitoba Chapter,
his aspirations to achieve full-patch status, his success in achieving prospect
status, and his knowledge of the police interaction with the Manitoba Chapter.
In other words, before the Applicant gave evidence, he had notice, and had to
be fully aware, that the issue he had to answer was not just “Did you know
about the criminal activities of the Manitoba Chapter?” but also “Given your
long history of involvement with the Manitoba Chapter, how is it possible that
you did not know about the criminal activities of the Chapter?” Some
explanation on this point was clearly required.
[67]
Knowing
what was at stake, examination in chief by Applicant’s counsel was very brief.
On the issue of mens rea, the extent of the evidence offered by the
Applicant is as follows:
Q. Were you aware of criminal
activity of other Hell’s Angels – people who were members of Hell’s Angels?
A. No, I don’t.
Q. Did they talk to you about it?
A. No.
[68]
Counsel
for the Applicant says that it was not his job to cross-examine his own client
on this answer. I agree, but I do not think that is the issue before me. When
these brief questions were asked, the Applicant and his counsel were fully
aware of the evidence on mens rea entered by the Minister. They also
knew that these were not criminal proceedings and that the ID would have to
weigh all of the evidence from both sides in order to determine whether there
were reasonable grounds to believe that the Applicant had the requisite mens
rea to render him a member of a criminal organization. Knowing this, they
decided not to enter evidence that would explain how, in the full context of
the evidence already entered, the Applicant was not aware of the obvious. No real
explanation was forthcoming on an issue for which the Applicant had full notice
by the time he stood up to testify. He simply denied having any
knowledge.
[69]
The
Court cannot speculate as to why no further explanation was offered and, if
there were reasons why the Applicant was not aware that the Manitoba Chapter was
a criminal organization, the Applicant has chosen not to reveal them to the
Court. In any event, the Applicant chose to meet the whole case entered against
him on mens rea with a simple denial of any knowledge. As counsel’s
submissions to the ID and before this Court reveal, the Applicant chose to enter
a simple denial and rely upon the presumption of credibility to persuade the ID
that he was not a member of a criminal organization.
[70]
What
I cannot say, however, is that, when the whole sequence of the hearing is
examined, there was any procedural unfairness of the kind that the rule in Browne
v Dunn is meant to alleviate. The Applicant had full notice of the case he
had to meet – including mens rea and wilful blindness – and he chose not
to enter evidence in chief that would explain how he was not aware of the
obvious.
[71]
As
the Supreme Court of Canada has made clear, even in criminal proceedings, the
rule in Browne v Dunn does not automatically apply on a failure to
cross-examine on a particular point. The effect to be given to the absence or
brevity of cross-examination depends upon the circumstances of each case. See R
v Palmer, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 759, pp 780-782.
[72]
In
the present case, the Applicant was also cross-examined by the Minister. Given
the extreme brevity of the examination in chief, it is not surprising that cross-examination
was not extensive. In my view, however, the questions of Minister’s counsel are
directly related to the mens rea issue and the Applicant’s denial
of knowledge of criminal activities. The following sequence, for example,
obviously goes to the credibility of the Applicant’s assertion of lack of
knowledge.
Q. So what was your ultimate goal in the
organization?
A. I just wanted to ride a motorcycle, you
know.
Q. But you started as a
friend and then went to hang around and then became a prospect.
A. Mm-hmm.
Q. Obviously you’re moving through the ranks,
is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. In an upwards direction?
A. Yes, I am.
Q. We heard some testimony
earlier that explained the rank structure of the Hell’s Angels. The next step
from prospect would be full patch member. Was that your intention?
A. At one time.
Q. Why would you want to be a full patch
member?
A. I just wanted to ride motorcycles with
them, that’s about it.
Q. Why the Hell’s Angels in particular?
A. Because I have a friend that’s a member.
Q. And that’s Shane Kirton?
A. Yes.
Q. Were you ever
investigated for any offences by the Winnipeg Police along with Mr. Kirton?
A. Not that I recall.
[73]
The
evidence is clear that the Applicant was investigated for offences along with
Mr. Kirton. And the other questions about why the Applicant was involved with
Hells Angels are obviously related to the mens rea issue. This is
because there was direct evidence introduced by the Minister that members could
not become a “prospect” without becoming involved in criminal activity. This
evidence is referred to in para 26 of the Decision. Detective Law had testified
that “if you are wearing a vest, you are a member of the criminal organization
and you are involved in criminal activities for that organization.” The fact of
the Applicant’s status and long association goes directly to the mens rea
and knowledge issue.
[74]
For
the reasons given, I cannot accept the Applicant’s submissions on this point. In
my view, there was no procedural fairness error.
[75]
The
other principal point raised by the Applicant is that, given his sworn
testimony that he had no knowledge of criminal activities, the ID committed a
reviewable error by not acknowledging and applying in his favour the
presumption of credibility.
[76]
In
my view, however, a reading of the Decision reveals that, although the ID does
not use the words “presumption of credibility,” it provides substance and
reasons as to why any such presumption cannot prevail in this case:
[50] Counsel points out that Mr Chung’s
evidence was not seriously challenged in cross-examination. As a result do I
have to accept Mr. Chung’s testimony as being credible? No, I do not have to
accept his evidence as credible merely because it was given under affirmation
and it was not seriously challenged on cross-examination.
[51] In
Faryna v. Chorny [1951] B.C.J. No. 152, the British Columbia Court of
Appeal in considering the trial judge’s assessment that a witness was not
credible wrote:
11 The credibility of
interested witness, particularly in cases of conflict of evidence, cannot be
gauged solely by the test of whether the personal demeanour of the particular
witness carried conviction of the truth. The test must reasonably subject his
story to an examination of its consistency with the probabilities that surround
the currently existing conditions. In short, the real test of the truth of the
story of a witness in such a case must be its harmony with the preponderance of
the probabilities which a practical and informed person would readily recognize
as reasonable in that place and in those conditions. Only thus can a Court
satisfactorily appraise the testimony of quick-minded, experienced and
confident witnesses, and of those shrewd persons adept in the half-lie and of
long and successful experience in combining skilful exaggeration with partial
suppression of the truth. Again a witness may testify what he sincerely
believes to be true, but he may be quite honestly mistaken. For a trial Judge
to say "I believe him because I judge him to be telling the truth",
is to come to a conclusion on consideration of only half the problem. In truth
it may easily be self-direction of a dangerous kind.
12 The trial Judge ought to go
further and say that evidence of the witness he believes is in accordance with
the preponderance of probabilities in the case and, if his view is to command
confidence, also state his reasons for that conclusion. The law does not clothe
the trial Judge with a divine insight into the hearts and minds of the witnesses.
And a Court of Appeal must be satisfied that the trial Judge's finding of
credibility is based not on one element only to the exclusion of others, but is
based on all the elements by which it can he tested in the particular case.
13 Mr. Justice Stephen put it
another way: He said (General View of the Criminal Law, 2nd ed., p. 191)
"that the utmost result that can in any case be produced by judicial
evidence is a very high degree of probability ... The highest probability at
which a court of justice can, under ordinary circumstances arrive is the
probability that a witness or a set of witnesses tell the truth when they
affirm the existence of a fact".
[52] Ultimately
the Court of Appeal concluded that the evidence of the witness “is entirely inconsistent
with the preponderance of the probabilities that rationally emerge out of all
the evidence in the case, and therefore the conclusion reached by the learned
trial Judge cannot be disturbed.”
[53] Such
is the case here, although Mr. Chung affirms that he was unaware of criminal
activity on the part of the Manitoba Chapter, his evidence is entirely
inconsistent with the preponderance of the probabilities which rationally
emerge out of all of the evidence in the case and I do not believe his evidence.
[77]
In
other words, the ID makes it clear that, whatever value the Applicant’s sworn
testimony may attract, it cannot be accepted when balanced against the other
evidence adduced. In my view, there is no reviewable error with this approach.
The ID gave proper effect to the presumption of credibility and applied the
right standard of proof to the rebuttal of that presumption.
[78]
These
are the points emphasized by the Applicant at the judicial review hearing of
this application. In effect, they go to the substance of the Decision and I can
find nothing unreasonable or procedurally unfair about the way the issues were
addressed by the ID. In written submissions, the Applicant raised a number of
other points such as standard of proof and clarity issues. I have examined each
in turn against the Decision and the governing jurisprudence and find the
Applicant’s arguments unconvincing. Hence, I appreciate the fact that
Applicant’s counsel chose not to address these issues at the hearing and
directed the Court to the Browne v Dunn and presumption of credibility issues.
Certification
[79]
In
post-hearing written submissions allowed by the Court, the Applicant has
suggested that, in assessing the knowledge requirement under subsection 37(1)(a)
of the Act the ID should have considered and applied the principles enunciated
by the Supreme Court of Canada in Ezokola v Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 SCC 40, and has submitted the following question for
certification:
What is the degree of knowledge required
for membership in a criminal organization under the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act subsection 37(1)(a), in light of the Ezokola decision
in the Supreme Court of Canada [Ezokola v Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration), 2013 SCC 40]
[80]
The
issues now raised by the Applicant concerning the relevance of Ezokola
to the Decision were not raised before the ID and were not raised in the
Applicant’s leave application. Hence, the Applicant is, in effect, asking the
Court to assess a new issue and return the matter for reconsideration on the
basis of new law and new arguments.
[81]
As
the Applicant points out, the Supreme Court in Ezokola, above, was
considering Article 1F(a) of the Refugee Convention, while the present
case involved the applications of section 33 and subsection 37(1)(a) of the Act.
He argues, however, that the question addressed by the Supreme Court in Ezokola
is concerned with the “degree of knowledge...in a criminal activity [which]
justifies excluding secondary actors from refugee protection” and this should
be relevant to the question of the degree of knowledge of a criminal
organization which justifies a finding of inadmissibility under subsection
37(1)(a) of the Act.
[82]
The
Applicant’s counsel has submitted detailed and able argument on why Ezokola should
apply to the present case and, if it is applied, the Decision is unreasonable.
After considering these arguments carefully, however, I am not convinced that Ezokola
can be applied in the suggested way. I also feel that the Applicant seriously
misstates the evidentiary record before the ID in his suggestions regarding the
result of any such application.
[83]
Essentially,
I agree with the Respondent that complicity in the crimes of an organization
(1F(a)) is very different from membership in an organization (37(1)(a)).
Knowledge or mens reas is important under both provisions but, as the
Supreme Court points out in Ezokola itself at para 89, complicity under
1F(a) requires that the individual “be aware of the government’s crime or
criminal purpose and aware that his or her conduct will assist in the
furtherance of the crime of criminal purpose.”
[84]
Under
subsection 37(1)(a), the person concerned, as well as being a member in the
criminal organization, only needs to have knowledge of the criminal nature of
the organization. See Stables, above, at para 37. I see nothing in Ezokola,
above, to suggest that the Supreme Court also intended its remarks to apply to subsection
37(1)(a) of the Act or to change the law that was identified and applied in
this case. The Applicant is arguing that, in his view, Ezokola should
be applied to the present situation, but I cannot accept that IF(a) of the Refugee
Convention can be equated with 37(1)(a) of the Act, because the two
provisions use different language and it seems plain that the knowledge
requirements are different.
[85]
The
ID in the present case applied the jurisprudence applicable to subsection
37(1)(a) and there is nothing in Ezokola, in my view, to render that
approach either incorrect or unreasonable.
[86]
I
also feel that, in his application of the Ezokola factors to the present
case, the Applicant seriously misstates the evidence before the ID in several
important instances. For example, the evidence was not that Hells Angels is a
multifaceted organization so that criminality is only one of several principal
purposes. Detective Law made it clear that the organization is not “a group of
individuals that just likes to get together to ride motorcycles…Anybody
involving themselves…are aware that what the Hells Angels do is crime and what
they’re involved with is criminal.” The Applicant also suggests that the fact that
he has been a “prospect” does not mean he was involved in crime or knew that
other members were. As the ID pointed out in its reasons, however, Detective
Sergeant Isnor’s evidence was that a “prospect” is someone who “is
demonstrating his loyalty and ability to carry out and obey orders. He has
been actively involved in criminal activities.” Detective Law also said that
“if you’re wearing the vest, you are a member of the criminal organization and
you are involved in criminal activities for that organization.” The Applicant
also persists in saying that the period of his involvement with the Manitoba
Chapter was “relatively brief,” while the evidence before the ID was that the
Applicant was “deeply entrenched in the Hell’s Angels Motorcycle Club, and has
actively involved himself in the Outlaw Motorcycle Gang lifestyle over the
course of past two decades.”
[87]
Even
if the ID was obliged to consider the Ezokola factors, it is my view
that, given the evidence before the ID, those factors in dispute were
reasonably considered by the ID.
[88]
Consequently,
I do not think the Applicant’s proposed question for certification is a serious
question of general importance. This is because I do not think that Ezokola,
above, even by way of analogy, can be said to affect the jurisprudence
application to subsection 37(1)(a) of the Act as reasonably applied by the ID
and that, even if it did, on the evidence before the ID, the relevant aspects
of the Ezokola factors were reasonably addressed.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT’S JUDGMENT is that:
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
There
is no question for certification.
3.
The
style of cause is amended to remove “The Minister of Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness” as the Respondent and substitute “The Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration” as the Respondent.
“James Russell”