Date:
20140919
Docket: DES-2-10
Citation: 2014 FC 1050
[REVISED
ENGLISH TRANSLATION]
BETWEEN:
|
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF CANADA
|
Applicant
and
|
HANI AL TELBANI
|
Respondent
|
REASONS FOR ORDER
DE MONTIGNY J.
[1]
On June 1, 2010, the Attorney General of Canada filed
in the Federal Court a notice of application, pursuant to section 38.04(1) of
the Canada Evidence Act (CEA), for an order with respect to the
disclosure of certain excerpts in 31 documents. Said documents were to be
included in the tribunal record in respect of which the two applications for
judicial review filed by the respondent were made, as required by Rule 318 of
the Federal Courts Rules.
[2]
The disclosure of the information contained in
these 31 documents to the respondent was denied following notice to the
Attorney General under subsections 38.01(1) and (3), as provided in subsection 38.02(1)(a)
of the CEA. The Attorney General sought to have the prohibition
confirmed by the Court or, alternatively, to have the Court exercise its discretion
under subsection 38.06(2) to authorize the disclosure, subject to any
conditions that the judge considers appropriate to limit any injury to
international relations or national defence or national security. The
respondent obviously objected to the request and sought to obtain the
disclosure, of all or at the very least part, of the information the Attorney
General sought to protect.
[3]
These reasons follow a public hearing of both
parties, followed by an ex parte and in camera hearing of the
applicant and his witnesses attended by two amici curiae appointed by
the Court. These reasons set out the history of the proceedings, of the arguments
raised by the parties and the amici and the legal principles that guided
me in the processing of this application. They are accompanied by a
confidential order setting out my specific findings concerning the information for
which non-disclosure was sought.
History of the proceedings
[4]
The respondent was born on September 1982 in Saudi Arabia. Being a citizen of Palestine, he is considered to be stateless; he became a permanent
resident of Canada on January 21, 2004. On June 4, 2008, he was denied the
right to board an Air Canada flight to Saudi Arabia, where he was apparently
going to retain his permanent resident status
in that country. In so doing, the respondent was
given a copy of an Emergency Direction dated June 4, 2008, stating that the Department of Transport, Infrastructure
and Communities (the Minister) had determined that he posed an immediate threat
to aviation security.
[5]
That decision gave rise to the first application
for judicial review, filed by the respondent on June 19, 2008 (docket T-973-08).
The respondent challenged the decision to add his
name to the Specified Persons List (SPL) as part of the Passenger
Protect Program, the Emergency Direction issued
under section 4.76 of the Aeronautics Act. In the context of the
application, the respondent also challenged the constitutional validity of the at-risk
persons list, of Transport Canada’s Passenger Protect Program, and the above
provision of the Aeronautics Act on the ground that these instruments are
contrary to sections 6, 7 and 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms.
[6]
On June 24, 2008, a lawyer from the Department
of Justice in Montréal gave to the Attorney General the notice prescribed by
subsection 38.01(1) of the CEA. The notice issued was for seven (7)
documents. As a result, on July 30, 2008, Transport Canada sent a record to the
respondent from which these seven documents were excluded, and subsequently sent
these documents to the respondent after having redacted them. In the face of Transport
Canada’s refusal to send him the full record to which he claimed to have a
right of access, the respondent filed a request to obtain full disclosure of
the record concerning him, under Rule 317 of the Federal Courts Rules. Seized
with this request, Justice Frenette denied the request in a decision rendered on
November 27, 2008, and ordered a stay of proceedings to allow the Attorney General
to file a notice of application pursuant to section 38 of the CEA, so
the matter of whether the sensitive or potentially injurious information referred
to in the notice under subsection 38.01(1) could be dealt with in a separate proceeding,
pursuant to section 38.04 of the CEA. The respondent appealed that decision,
but discontinued his appeal on September 22, 2009.
[7]
At the same time as the first application for
judicial review, the respondent filed an emergency request for reconsideration
with Transport Canada’s Office of Reconsideration
(the Office) on June 6, 2008. On October 29, 2008, the Office recommended that
the Deputy Minister declare that the decision to put
the respondent’s name on the SPL and to issue an Emergency Direction was void and of
no effect. Accordingly, the Office recommended that the respondent’s name be removed
from the SPL. The respondent was only informed of that recommendation in June
2009; no information was provided to the Court as to why it took that long to
advise him of this decision.
[8]
On September 10, 2009, the Deputy Minister of Transport decided not to follow
the Office’s recommendation and concluded that he had reasonable suspicion that
the respondent may pose a threat to aviation. He accordingly decided to keep the respondent’s name on the SPL.
[9]
Following this new decision, on October 14, 2009,
the respondent filed a second application for judicial review (docket
T-1696-09).
[10]
On April 8, 2010, an “official” within the
meaning of subsection 38.01(3) of the CEA notified the Attorney General that
sensitive information or potentially injurious information could be disclosed
in the course of a proceeding. Said notice involved information contained in
the 31 documents. On April 15, 2010, the Attorney General authorized the full
disclosure of the seven documents and the disclosure of a redacted version of
the other 24 documents; the respondent received said documents on May 7, 2010.
[11]
On April 23, 2010, the Chief Justice ordered
that the two applications for judicial review proceed simultaneously and that Transport
Canada’s record be transmitted to the Registry, including the documents in
their redacted form. Justice Frenette’s order was also stayed, and it was
decided that the timelines and proceedings associated with an application under
section 38 of the CEA be the subject of a case management conference.
[12]
On June 1, 2010, the Attorney General filed his application
for non-disclosure pursuant to subsection 38.04(1) of the CEA for the
two applications for judicial review. Subsequently, on June 21, 2010, the
Attorney General filed a copy of the public affidavit of “Eric”, an employee of
the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (the
Service) in support of his application. On August 27, 2010, the respondent filed
a motion to strike said affidavit which was dismissed on December 22, 2010. This
affidavit was to ultimately be replaced by an identical affidavit sworn by
another employee of the Service, Robert Young. The affidavit explains in general
terms the Service’s mandate, the reasons that the Service’s investigations must
remain secret and the various categories of information the disclosure of which, in the Service’s view, would be injurious to
Canada’s national security.
[13]
Pursuant to an order of the Chief Justice rendered
on June 22, 2010, Mr. Al Telbani was named by the Court as respondent in the
present case, by virtue of his being a party whose interests are affected by
the information for which the Attorney General seeks a non‑disclosure
order.
[14]
On November 10, 2010, the Court ordered the
appointment of two counsel as amici curiae (the amici) in this
case, François Dadour and Sylvain Lussier. The normal course of proceedings
was however interrupted by the motion filed by the respondent on February 17,
2011, seeking payment of his costs from the applicant. The undersigned
dismissed the motion on July 27, 2011, and the appeal from that decision was dismissed
on June 20, 2012. Following a direction issued by this Court on April 4, 2013,
setting the time limits for the prosecution of this case, the Attorney General filed
his public affidavit on May 6, 2013, and the respondent filed his own affidavit
on May 31, 2013.
[15]
The public hearing of both parties was held in Montréal
on October 15, 2013. Discussions subsequently ensued between the amici and
counsel for the Attorney General regarding the information in respect of which non-disclosure
is sought by the Attorney General. The amici made various proposals to
which counsel for the Attorney General responded. At the end of that process,
which occurred over a period of a few months, 16 of the 31 documents containing
information the Attorney General seeks to protect were the subject of a common
position between counsel for the Attorney General and the amici. As for
the other 15 documents, they were the subject of a partial agreement: the amici
and the Attorney General agreed that certain information should be protected, but
disagreed about other information.
[16]
Following that process, an ex parte and in
camera hearing was held in Ottawa on April 3, 4 and 11, 2014. On that occasion,
the Attorney General called the two witnesses who swore secret affidavits in
support of the application for non-disclosure, and the amici were able
to conduct their cross-examination. The amici then filed their submissions,
on the basis of the written submissions they had previously filed with the Court
and served on the applicant, and counsel for the Attorney General did the same,
also on the basis of the written submissions filed earlier with the Court and
served on the amici.
Issues
[17]
The central question raised by this application
is, of course, whether the prohibition to disclose the information identified
by the Attorney General, as provided for in paragraph 38.02(1)(a) of the
CEA, must be confirmed by this Court pursuant to subsection 38.06(3), or
whether the disclosure must be authorized, in full or subject to certain
conditions, pursuant to subsections 38.06(1) or (2).
[18]
The amici however raised a few preliminary
questions about their role and function, about the limited nature of the main
piece of information in issue and about the uncertainty arising from the
current lack of alternative to the non-disclosure of the disputed information in
the underlying proceeding. I will deal with the last two questions as part of
my summary of the principles that will guide me in reviewing the Attorney General’s
application, while addressing the role of the amici in the introduction to
my remarks.
The legal framework
[19]
It is certainly not necessary to reiterate that the
open court principle is a fundamental principle of our legal system. The
restrictions on this principle by Parliament and the case law have been
carefully delineated, and arise from the balancing sometimes required to take
into account other important interests to protect, such
as informant privilege, or to protect the right of an individual to a fair
hearing: see Named Person v Vancouver Sun, 2007 SCC 43, [2007] 3
SCR 253; Charkaoui (Re), 2008 FC 61; Bisaillon v Keable, [1983] 2
SCR 60.
[20]
Sections 38 and seq of the CEA create another
restriction on the open court principle. Section 38.01 requires every
participant, as well as all officials, other than a participant, to notify the
Attorney General of the possibility of disclosure of sensitive or potentially
injurious information. The Attorney General of Canada shall, within 10 days after
the day on which he or she receives a notice, make a decision with respect to
disclosure of the information (section 38.03(3)). In the event that the
Attorney General does not unconditionally authorize the disclosure of information
and no disclosure agreement is entered into, the disclosure issue may come
before the Federal Court (section 38.04). Such an application does not constitute
a judicial review of the Attorney General’s decision; the designated judge
seized of the application must rather determine whether or not the prohibition
to disclose the information sought to be protected should be confirmed.
[21]
The relevant provisions of the CEA in
this regard are reproduced in Appendix A, namely, 38.01(1) and (3), 38.02(1),
38.03, 38.031, 38.04, 38.06.
[22]
In the exercise of his or her powers under sections
38 et seq of the CEA, the designated judge applies the tests developed
by the Federal Court of Appeal in Canada (Attorney General) v Ribic,
2003 FCA 246. The judge must first determine whether or
not the information sought to be disclosed is relevant to the proceedings in
which it is intended to be used. The applicant for
disclosure bears that burden. If the judge is satisfied that the
information is relevant, the judge must then determine whether disclosure of that information would be injurious to
international relations, national defence or national security. At this
stage, the Attorney General must prove the potential
injury if disclosure of the information were to be ordered. Finally, if satisfied that disclosure of the sensitive
information would result in injury, the judge must determine whether the public
interest in disclosure outweighs in importance the public interest in non-disclosure.
The burden of proving that the public interest scale
is tipped in favour of disclosure rests with the party seeking it. This
three step test was adopted by this Court in a number of cases (see, inter
alia, Canada (Attorney General) v Khawaja, 2007 FC 490, [2008] 1 FCR
547; Canada (Attorney General) v Canada (Commission of Inquiry into the
Actions of Canadian Officials in Relation to Maher Arar), 2007 FC 766,
[2008] 3 FCR 248; Khadr v Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 549), and
the parties agree on its application in the present application.
Analysis
[23]
As noted above, I will now address the role of
the amici in this proceeding, before turning to consider the principles that
will guide me in reviewing the Attorney General’s application for an order.
- The role of the amici in this proceeding
[24]
The amici argued, in their written
submissions, that the mandate and responsibilities vested in them leads them to
playing a [Translation] “role opposite” to
that of the public department. During the hearing, they went even further by
asserting that the interests of the amici and those of counsel for the respondent
converge as they are equally [Translation]
“adversaries” of the Attorney General. They rely on the wording of the
order ordering their appointment, particularly their power to “cross-examine”
the applicant’s affiants and witnesses, as well as the need for a [Translation] “robust” system to ensure
a just determination of the issues as part of an in camera and ex
parte proceeding.
[25]
This understanding of the role the amici are
called upon to play in proceedings conducted under section 38 of the CEA,
at least in the context of an underlying civil proceeding,
is erroneous in my view. Although the perception of their role did not have a
significant impact on the conduct of this matter where the amici discharged
the mandate given to them by in strict accordance with the terms of the order,
it is nevertheless important to note the spirit in which they must normally approach
their functions.
[26]
Sections 38 et seq of the CEA do not explicitly
provide for the possibility for the Court to appoint an amicus. However,
it is well established that the Court may, on its own initiative, appoint an amicus
when entertaining an application under section 38 of the CEA: Harkat
(Re), 2004 FC 1717, at paragraph 20. Chief Justice Lutfy also indicated in Canada
(Attorney General) v Khawaja, 2007 FC 463 (at paragraph 57) that the judge’s
discretion to appoint an amicus for the purposes of an application under
section 38 contributed to assuring adherence to the
principles of fundamental justice in the national security context. Indeed,
the Attorney General did not contest the appointment of the two amici in
this case and agreed at the outset with such an appointment.
[27]
That said, there is no precise definition of the
role of amicus that is applicable to all possible situations where a court
may find it beneficial to obtain advice from a lawyer not acting on behalf of
the parties: R v Cairenius (2008), 232 CCC(3d) 13, at paragraphs 52-59; R
v Samra (1998), 41 O.R.(3d) 434 (C.A). It is generally agreed that the
appointment of an amicus is generally intended to represent interests
that are not represented before the court, to inform the court of certain factors
it would not otherwise be aware of, or to advise the court on a question of law:
see Attorney General of Canada et al v Aluminium Company of Canada,
(1987) 35 DLR (4th) 495, at page 505 (BCCA).
[28]
There is no doubt, however, that the amicus
is not the accused’s lawyer (in a criminal proceeding) or respondent (in a
civil proceeding). The role of an amicus is not any more analogous to
that of a special advocate appointed under section 83 of the IRPA in the context
of a security certificate. The role of the amicus is to assist the court
and ensure the proper administration of justice, and the sole [Translation] “client” of the amicus is the
court or the judge that appointed him or her. As Justice Fish (speaking on
behalf of the dissenting judges) pointed out in Ontario v Criminal Lawyers’
Association of Ontario, 2013 SCC 43 (at paragraph 87), “[o]nce appointed, the amicus is bound by a duty of loyalty
and integrity to the court and not to any of the parties to the proceedings”.
[29]
It cannot be otherwise if the amicus is
to be able to fully carry out the role assigned to him or her. Indeed, it is
not inconceivable that he or she may be required to raise arguments or points of
law that are not necessarily favourable to the accused or the respondent. Indeed,
that is the reason that the Supreme Court unanimously concluded in Criminal
Lawyers’ Association that a lawyer appointed as amicus who takes on the role of defence counsel is no
longer a friend of the court (see paragraphs 56 for the majority and 114
for the minority). Although the Court was divided on the issue of whether a superior
court has the inherent power to set rates of
remuneration for amici, all the judges considered
that the role of an amicus and that of defence counsel are incompatible.
I find that the same is true in a civil proceeding, although the dividing line
may not always be so clear cut and the consequences of the blurring of lines
may not be as dramatic.
[30]
In short, playing a role that may sometimes be
opposite to that of the Attorney General does not make the amicus a
defence counsel or counsel for the civil party. The objective of the amicus
and the state of mind in which he or she acts is not to assume the role of an
advocate for the accused or the respondent, but to provide the Court with
insight that it would not otherwise obtain and to assist it in making a decision
that is in the best interests of justice. The fact that these interests may converge
in certain circumstances does not change anything and merely represents, in a
manner of speaking, a marginal benefit resulting from the appointment of amicus.
He or she must therefore act at all times with transparency, without ever
attempting to take counsel for the Attorney General by surprise. The tactics
and strategies that defence counsel, and even, in certain circumstances, a
special advocate, may properly use are misplaced in a proceeding under section
38 of the CEA.
[31]
That said, the role of the amicus in such
a proceeding may be modulated by the judge who appoints him or her to take into
account the unique nature of an application under section 38 of the CEA.
The very nature of the information to which the amicus will have access,
the seriousness of the issues raised by the balancing of national security and
the fairness of the proceedings, and the degree of transparency with which the
Attorney General as well as the witnesses called in support of the application
discharge their duties, are factors that may lead an amicus to play a
more or less interventionist role depending on the circumstances.
[32]
In closing, I note that the order dated November
10, 2010, was entirely clear and left no doubt as to the role the amici were
called upon to play. It ordered that Mr. Dadour and Mr. Lussier be appointed [Translation] “to
act as amici curiae in this proceeding to assist the Court in preparation
for the in camera hearings and intervene in those same hearings”,
and that they could not communicate with the respondent or his counsel from the
moment they had access to confidential material and information. As for the
power to cross-examine the applicant’s affiants and witnesses, it is a clause found
in all the orders issued by this Court in similar cases. Again, the object of such
cross-examinations is not to advocate for the respondent and embrace his
interests as if the amicus had a solicitor-client relationship with the
respondent, but rather to verify the reliability and the probative value of the
evidence filed by the applicant and the strength of his arguments.
[33]
The Court was obviously not a party to the discussions
between counsel for the Attorney General and the amici regarding the disclosure
of information contained in the 31 documents in issue in this application. Clearly,
these discussions were successful to the extent that an agreement was concluded
on much of the information for which non-disclosure was sought. It is
undoubtedly useful for the Court (and perhaps for the Attorney General as well)
to know prior to the ex parte and in camera hearing the reasons
underlying the position of the amici when there is disagreement between
them. That said, the position of the Attorney General is no more explicit and
is solely based, for each piece of information, on xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxx generically representing the
basis for the exclusion sought. In short, I find nothing objectionable about
the manner in which the amici discharged their duty, and further, I do
not consider that they ought to have sought the Court’s permission before
filing their preliminary submissions in writing. This was authorized by order dated
November 10, 2010, and their memorandum was submitted to the Attorney
General almost a month before the hearing.
[34]
With these clarifications in mind, I now turn to
the three-step test developed by the Federal Court of Appeal in Ribic.
(a) Relevancy of the information sought in the application
for non-disclosure
[35]
As mentioned above, the Attorney General’s application
for an order under section 38.06(3) of the CEA only pertains to a
limited number of documents (31). Furthermore, non-disclosure is not sought for
the documents in full but only for portions of these documents. Finally, it is
important to note that several documents are redundant or contain the same
information, which limits even more the amount of information being sought to
be protected.
[36]
Sixteen of the thirty-one documents for which an
application for non-disclosure has been filed were the subject of a total
agreement between counsel for the Attorney General and the amici. Although
said agreement is not binding on the Court, it will nonetheless be of keen
interest when the time comes to determine whether the non-disclosure of certain
information claimed by the Attorney General is justified or not. It must be
said that the redacted information in the sixteen documents is not really
relevant for the purposes of the underlying judicial reviews to the extent that
it essentially reveals the names of certain employees of the Service as well as
operational telephone numbers that are not known to the public. In one document,
the redacted information is related to a file xxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxx xxxxx xx xxxxxxxx whereas in another document, the information
could reveal the success or failure of an investigation. Indeed, the only
information appearing in a few of these sixteen documents (as well as in other documents
on which a comprehensive agreement was not reached) that could potentially be
of some use to the respondent was obtained from third parties. I will have an
opportunity to explain my reasoning a little later.
[37]
There are therefore only fifteen documents that
are not the subject of a common position in their entirety between counsel for
the Attorney General and the amici. Once again, it must be reiterated
that the Attorney General is not seeking the non-disclosure of the fifteen
documents in full but only certain portions (more or less substantial) of these
documents. However, the disagreement between counsel for the Attorney General and
the amici is not over all the excerpts sought to be protected, but only
some of them.
[38]
As stated in Ribic, the first task of a designated
judge tasked with examining an application for non-disclosure pursuant to section
38 of the CEA is to determine whether the information for which exclusion
is sought is relevant to the underlying proceeding. Although the burden rests
with the party seeking the non‑disclosure, the threshold is low. In a
criminal proceeding, the test of relevance will be dependent on the rule set out in R
v Stinchcombe, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 326, that is, that the information at issue may
reasonably be useful to the defence.
[39]
The relevance test will not be the same in a
civil proceeding, as was the case in Canada (Attorney General) v Almaki,
2010 FC 1106, or even in an inquiry procedure (Canada (Attorney General) v
Canada (Commission of Inquiry into the Actions of Canadian Officials in Relation
to Maher Arar), 2007 FC 766).
[40]
In this case, the underlying proceedings are two
judicial reviews of decisions made by Transport Canada. In this regard, it is
Rule 317 of the Federal Courts Rules that governs relevance and
determines the documents that must be produced by the tribunal whose order is
the subject of judicial review. That Rule sets out that a party may request
material “relevant to an application”. That Rule
has been given a broad interpretation to the point of encompassing any document
that “may affect the decision that the Court will make
on the application”: Canada (Human Rights Commission) v Pathak,
[1995] 2 FC 455, at page 460 (FCA). In another matter, it was concluded that a
document could be relevant even if the decision-maker did not refer to it or
use it in support of his or her decision: Friends of the West Country
Association v Canada (Minister of Fisheries and Oceans) (1997), 46 Admin LR
(2d) 144, 130 FTR 206 (FC). That means that the obligation to present a
complete record covers not only the documents before the decision-maker at the
time of the decision, but also the documents that should have been before the
decision-maker for the purposes of the judicial review: Kamel v Attorney
General of Canada, 2006 FC 676, at para 13.
[41]
In this case, the Attorney General conceded that
much of the information he is seeking to protect is relevant for the purposes
of the applications for judicial review filed by the respondent. At the
relevance stage, only information concerning the names and contact information
of certain employees of the Service, as well as internal and administrative
procedures, like file numbers, are excluded. For all other information, it is
necessary to proceed to the second step set out in Ribic and determine
whether the disclosure of that information would be injurious to national
security.
(b) Identification of an injury to national security
[42]
When it is established that the information is
relevant, the Attorney General bears the burden of proving that that
information, if disclosed, “could injure international
relations or national defence or national security”, to use the words of
the definition of the expression “potentially injurious
information” in section 38. In this regard, the assessment made by the
Attorney General will be of considerable weight given the special information
and expertise to which he has access. The Court of Appeal stated the following
in Ribic (at para 19):
This means that the Attorney General's
submissions regarding his assessment of the injury to national security,
national defence or international relations, because of his access to special
information and expertise, should be given considerable weight by the judge
required to determine, pursuant to subsection 38.06(1), whether disclosure of
the information would cause the alleged and feared injury. The Attorney General
assumes a protective role vis-à-vis the security and safety of the
public. If his assessment of the injury is reasonable, the judge should accept
it. . . .
See also: Canada (Attorney
General) v Khawaja, 2007 FC 490, [2008] 1 FCR 547, at paragraph 64; Canada (Attorney General) v Almaki, 2010 FC 1106, [2012] 2 FCR 508, at para
70.
[43]
As a result, the Court must show deference when
it is called upon to determine an application for non-disclosure under the
authority of section 38 of the CEA. That attitude is all the more justified
since the very concept of “national security” is fluid and does not lend itself
to a specific definition. My colleagues Justice Mosley and Justice Noël engaged
in a lengthy analysis of this concept in Almaki and Canada (Attorney
General) v Canada (Commission of Inquiry into the Actions of Canadian Officials
in Relation to Maher Arar), 2007 FC 766, [2008] 3 FCR 248, and they
concluded, in particular, that national security could not be limited to the preservation
of national integrity or the capacity to respond to the use or threat of force,
and meant, at minimum, the preservation of the Canadian way of life, including
the safeguarding of the security of persons, institutions and freedoms in
Canada. I agree with their comments. The difficulty in identifying exactly what
constitutes a threat to national security is, in my opinion, an additional
reason in favour of a fairly high degree of deference from this Court in
respect of assessments carried out by government authorities. The Supreme Court
stated the following in this regard in Suresh v Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, at para 85:
. . . a fair, large and liberal
interpretation in accordance with international norms must be accorded to
“danger to the security of Canada” in deportation legislation. We recognize
that “danger to the security of Canada” is difficult to define. We also accept
that the determination of what constitutes a “danger to the security of Canada” is highly fact-based and political in a general sense. All this suggests a broad
and flexible approach to national security and, as discussed above, a
deferential standard of judicial review. Provided the Minister is able to show
evidence that reasonably supports a finding of danger to the security of Canada, courts should not interfere with the Minister’s decision.
[44]
That said, the Court cannot abdicate the role
entrusted to it by Parliament and merely blindly endorse the applications for
non‑disclosure which may be filed by the Attorney General. Even though
the Court must show deference, it is nonetheless entitled to expect the
Attorney General to demonstrate, from the facts established by the evidence,
that the alleged injury is not merely possible or speculative, but probable: Arar,
para 49; Almaki, para 70. In other words, it is not sufficient to
speculate that a piece of information could be potentially injurious to
national security; it must be established, through concrete and reliable
evidence, that the injury is serious and not based on mere speculation. We are
no longer in the days when courts had to comply each time a minister refused to
produce a document by availing himself of Crown privilege in relation to
national security. With the coming into force of section 36.2 of the CEA
(S.C. 1980-81-82, c 111, section 4), now section 38, the Federal Court has been
given the mandate to determine whether information can be disclosed under
section 38.04. To fulfil this role, the Court must not only take notice of the
information that the Attorney General seeks to not make public, but also verify
that that information is indeed covered by the prohibition on disclosure set
out in subsection 38.02(1) of the CEA.
[45]
It is recognized that the disclosure of certain
categories of information would generally be injurious to national security.
Since 1988, this Court has stated that the disclosure of information that
identified or tended to identify human or technical sources, past or present
investigation subjects, the nature and the content of classified information,
techniques or methods of investigation or even the length, scope, success or
failure of investigations, could be considered injurious to national security:
see Henrie v Canada, [1989] 2 FC 229, at para 29; see also, similarly, Singh
v Canada (Attorney General), 2000 CanLII 15563, at para 32.
[46]
My colleague Justice Dawson, when she was still
a member of this Court, provided the following examples of information of the
type that must be kept confidential:
1. Information obtained from human sources, where disclosure of the information would identify the
source and put the source's life in danger . . . . As well,
jeopardizing the safety of one human source will make other human sources or
potential human sources hesitant to provide information if they are not assured
that their identity will be protected.
2. Information obtained from agents of the Service, where the disclosure of the information would
identify the agent and put the agent's life in danger.
3. Information about ongoing investigations where disclosure of the information would alert those
working against Canada's interest and allow them to take evasive action.
4. Secrets
obtained from foreign countries or foreign intelligence agencies where
unauthorized disclosure would cause other countries or agencies to decline to
entrust their own secret information to an insecure or untrustworthy recipient.
. . .
5. Information about the technical means and capacities of surveillance and about certain methods
or techniques of investigation of the Service where disclosure would assist
persons of interest to the Service to avoid or evade detection or surveillance
or the interception of information.
Harkat (Re), 2005 FC 393, at para 89.
[47]
In the public affidavit in support of this
application for non‑disclosure, Robert Young categorized the information
that the Service seeks to protect according to, more or less, that
classification. Two other confidential affidavits were also submitted and use
that same classification by providing more specifics about the information
involved. Those categories are as follows:
- Information that would identify or tend to identify the Service’s interest in individuals,
groups or issues, including the existence or nonexistence of past or present files,
the intensity of investigations, or the degree or lack of success of
investigations;
- Information that would identify or tend to identify the methods of operation and investigative
techniques used by the Service;
- Information that would identify or tend to identify relationships that the Service maintains
with other police and security and intelligence agencies and would disclose
information exchanged in confidence with such agencies;
- Information that would identify or tend to identify the identity of certain employees, internal
procedures and administrative methodologies of the Service, such as names and
file numbers;
- Information that would identify or tend to identify human sources of information for the Service
or the content of information provided by human sources which, if disclosed,
could lead to the identification of human sources.
[48]
In the present case, and following discussions
between counsel for the Attorney General and the amici, the only
information that was not the subject of an agreement falls exclusively under
the first three categories of information mentioned in the preceding paragraph.
Of course, some of the information may fall under more than one category.
Therefore, I will now address each of those three categories.
[49]
The Attorney General is first seeking the
non-disclosure of information concerning the interest the Service might have in
Mr. Al Telbani and the investigations into his activities or those of
other persons with which he is or was in contact. It is true that
Mr. Al Telbani is obviously aware of the Service’s interest in his
online activities following the interview he had with the Service on June 2,
2008, during which he was confronted with certain facts concerning the
technical support he apparently provided to extremist activities. What the
Service is seeking to protect is other facts that were not brought to the
attention of Mr. Al Telbani and that are likely to reveal the nature
and scope of the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
investigation and the resulting assessments and analyses.
[50]
There seems to be no doubt, as the witness who
swore an affidavit on behalf of CSIS argued, that a security agency cannot
operate effectively if the subjects of its investigations are able to ascertain
that they are persons of interest or determine the state of the agency’s
operational knowledge about them at a particular point in time, the resulting
operational evaluation and even the fact that the agency is able to make some
findings regarding the targets of its investigations. The disclosure of such
information would allow a person of interest to take steps to avoid the
Service’s investigative efforts, or even introduce false or misleading
information into the investigation. The extent and reliability of the
information gathered by the Service would be diminished, and its capacity to
identify and deal with potential threats would be compromised.
[51]
In this case, the respondent’s interview with
the Service, xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxx xx xx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx I
agree with the applicant that the disclosure of the information the Service
provided to Transport Canada as part of its recommendation that the
respondent’s name be put on the SPL would be of great help to the respondent in
his alleged role of xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx xx xxxx By providing him with
specific information regarding the investigation xxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx x xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx x x x xx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx That would have negative
consequences not only for the present investigation, but also for other
investigations conducted by the Service xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
[52]
In light of the foregoing, I am therefore of the
view that the disclosure of all of the xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
excerpts in the fifteen documents that the Attorney General and the amici
did not fully agree upon would be injurious to national security. Of course,
the real issue is whether the public interest reasons that justify disclosure
outweigh in importance the public interest reasons that justify non-disclosure,
and if so, under what conditions and in what medium must the information be
disclosed. Before proceeding to the last step in the test, it is appropriate,
however, to examine the two other categories of information for which the
Attorney General is seeking non-disclosure and that were not the subject of an
agreement with the amici.
[53]
The second category of information for which non‑disclosure
is sought is information that would identify or tend to identify the methods of
operation and investigative techniques utilized by the Services. In this
regard, the Service’s affiant testified that the disclosure of that type of
information would render the techniques and methods that could be utilized in
the context of this investigation or investigations of other persons less
effective, to the extent that the potential subjects of such investigations may
be able to thwart the Service’s efforts or at the very least reduce the
effectiveness of current methods.
[54]
That risk is greater in this case because the
respondent has completed a master’s degree in information systems security. Xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxx xx x xxxx
xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxx It is also worth noting that, according to the affiant, the
respondent was visibly shaken to learn during his interview that the Service
had discovered his aliases and wanted to know how they had discovered that he
was “Mujahid Taqni”. In this context, the Attorney General’s concerns seem to
me to be particularly well founded. The serious possibility that the respondent
may be able to exploit the information at issue in this application to
jeopardize the investigation that he or other persons could be the subject of,
which would make the task of the Service and even, potentially, third parties,
considerably more difficult, certainly cannot be ruled out.
[55]
Among the pieces of information sought to be
protected, there is one specific piece of information that would tend to
demonstrate, according to the position of the Attorney General, that the respondent
constitutes a threat to aviation security. That information, which is found in
various forms in several documents, xxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxx xx xx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxx x x xxx xxxx During the in camera and ex
parte hearings, the amici referred to that information as “the elephant in the room”.
[56]
The Attorney General forcefully objects to the
disclosure of that information for two reasons. He first contends that that
information xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx x xxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxx xxx
xxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx. Moreover, it is argued that the
disclosure of that information would enable the respondent to suspect, if not
confirm, that that information xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
[57]
On cross-examination, xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx acknowledged that xxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxx x xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxx xxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xx xx xx xx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx . xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxx
[58]
Once again, the fact that the disclosure of
information under that second category and xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
in the impugned documents would be injurious to national security does not end
the analysis that this Court must carry out under section 38 of the CEA.
The fact that the respondent xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx will of course be an
important consideration in the injury balancing step required by Ribic.
[59]
The last category of information in dispute
between the Attorney General and the amici is information that would
identify or tend to identify relationships that the Service maintains with
other intelligence agencies or that would disclose or tend to disclose
information exchanged in confidence with such agencies. The numerous excerpts
sought to be protected under this category all contain the same information,
which is xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
[60]
The Attorney General argued that it was
essential for the Service to cooperate with other secret services to fulfil the
mandate that was conferred on it to advise the government in the fight against
terrorism. This is because terrorist acts are not necessarily planned, funded,
managed or executed by the residents of one country or within the borders of
one State. Consequently, the only way to effectively investigate those threats
to try to prevent them is to engage in close collaboration and information
sharing at the international level.
[61]
That sharing of secret information by foreign
intelligence agencies with which the Service has a comprehensive or ad hoc
agreement is always done assuming that the source or content of the information
thus obtained will not be disclosed without the consent of the agency that the
information came from. It is what is sometimes called the “third party rule”.
It is an acknowledgment that foreign agencies provide information to the
Service not only because agreements are entered into to ensure that that
information will be utilized in confidence, but also because those agencies are
confident that the Canadian government in general, and the Service in
particular, are fully aware of and recognize the need to preserve the
confidentiality of that information and have taken steps in that respect.
[62]
Of course, a failure on the part the Canadian
government or the Service to protect intelligence obtained from a foreign
agency could have disastrous consequences on the maintenance of existing
agreements or on the Service’s capacity to enter into new agreements with other
foreign agencies. As has been said in numerous cases, Canada is a net importer
of intelligence information, and any interruption or reduction in the exchanges
of that information would adversely affect the maintenance of our collective
security and the role Canada plays in the international arena in that respect.
In Ruby v Canada (Solicitor General), 2002 SCC 75, [2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, the
Supreme Court recognized (at paras 43 and 54) the importance of that “pressing
and substantial” concern. More recently, it stated in Charkaoui v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2007 SCC 9, [2007] 1 S.C.R. 350 (at para 68) that Canada is a net importer of security information, that that information is “essential
to the security and defence of Canada”, and that its disclosure “would adversely affect its flow and quality”. My
colleague Justice Noël aptly summarized the importance of that rule in Arar,
at paragraph 77 of his reasons:
This being said, in my view the third party
rule is of essence to guarantee the proper functioning of modern police and
intelligence agencies. This is particularly true given that organized criminal
activities are not restricted to the geographic territory of a particular
nation and that recent history has clearly demonstrated that the planning of
terrorist activities is not necessarily done in the country where the attack is
targeted so as to diminish the possibility of detection. Consequently, the
need for relationships with foreign intelligence and policing agencies, as well
as robust cooperation and exchanges of information between these agencies, is
essential to the proper functioning of policing and intelligence agencies
worldwide.
See also: Khadr v Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 766, at para 92.
[63]
In this case, xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[64]
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx.
[65]
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx.
[66]
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxx
[67]
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxxxx.
[68]
A priori, I do
not doubt that the disclosure of the information xxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx would be injurious to the national interest of Canada. The case law in this area, and the secret testimony of the affiants, convinces me
that the Service xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxx. This would certainly result in a
diminished capacity to fulfil the mandate xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxx by Parliament, in particular in the fight against terrorism
in Canada and around the world.
[69]
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx..
[70]
As important as the third party rule might be,
however, it cannot be absolute. There is no statutory basis for that “rule”,
and the mere fact that a foreign agency did not relieve the Service (or any
other Canadian agency) of its confidentiality obligation cannot suffice, on its
own, to conclude that the disclosure of information thus obtained would be
injurious to national security. Other factors must be considered, including the
fact that the information in question was subsequently disclosed and is now in
the public domain, as well as the passage of time. There must also
consideration for how the sharing of information, both quantitative and
qualitative, with a foreign agency might be important for Canada. My colleague, Justice Noël, stated the following in Arar (at para 80):
When determining whether disclosure will
cause harm, it is also important to consider the nature of Canada’s relationship with the law enforcement or intelligence agency from which the information was
received. It is recognized that certain agencies are of greater importance to Canada and thus that more must be done to protect our relationship with them.
Consequently, care must be taken when considering whether to circumvent the
third party rule in what concerns information obtained from our most important
allies.
[71]
In this case, xxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxx x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx are
critically important for Canada. I also accept the Attorney General’s argument
that the disclosure of information obtained from an agency with which Canada
has not so critical ties could still have long-term repercussions, not only
because this could cause information from that agency to dry up but also
because it could discourage other agencies from maintaining or creating ties
with Canada.
[72]
Another factor that must be considered, both in
assessing the injury and in balancing public interests, is the Canadian
government’s effort (or lack of effort) to obtain the consent of a foreign
agency in the disclosure of the information provided by that agency. In Ruby
v Canada (Solicitor General), [2000] 3 FC 589 (reversed on other grounds by
the Supreme Court), the Federal Court of Appeal seemed to be of the opinion
that Canadian authorities had to make “reasonable efforts” to seek the consent
of the third party agency that provided the information before finding that it
would be injurious to disclose that information. See also, similarly: Khawaja,
at paras 145-146; Charkaoui (Re), 2009 FC 476, at paras 28-29.
[73]
More recently, this Court somewhat qualified
that obligation. In Arar (at paras 75 and 94), Justice Noël stated that
he was of the opinion that it was not appropriate to draw a negative conclusion
from the fact that the Attorney General did not seek consent from a foreign
agency to disclose information, given the fact that such authorization would
have likely been refused based on the evidence in the record. Justice Mosley
found that the failure to make inquiries of foreign agencies regarding the
disclosure of their information was not fatal but could be taken into
consideration and could undermine a privilege claim, especially when the
information appears innocuous on its face. In Almaki, he nonetheless
accepted the Attorney General’s submissions to the effect that it would be
futile to ask certain countries to consent to the disclosure of their
information.
[74]
In this case, xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxx x xxx, I readily accept that it is highly unlikely that such
consent would have been given.
[75]
I am therefore of the opinion that the
information for which non-disclosure is sought on the basis that it comes from
third parties passes the second step of the test set out in Ribic. That
does not necessarily mean that that information must be completely removed from
the record that Mr. Al Telbani has a right to in his applications for judicial
review. To determine this issue, it is necessary to proceed to the third step
of the test and determine which public interest prevails: the public interest
in disclosure or the public interest in non-disclosure. As with the other
categories of information for which non-disclosure is sought, at that step,
other considerations must be taken into account, like the passage of time and
the fact that some information is now in the public domain. From this
perspective, there must also be an examination of the possibility of minimizing
the injury that the disclosure of a piece of information could cause, by
replacing, for example, an excerpt deemed too sensitive with a summary. In that
regard, it would have been useful if the original document transmitted by the
third parties was submitted before the Court to better compare the text to be
protected with that document and thus better assess the damage that a redacted
version or a summary of that text could cause. Despite the Court’s request to
that effect, the Attorney General did not see fit to submit the original
documents provided by the third parties and it is thus with a certain disadvantage
that the Court must engage in that review.
(c) Balancing public interest in disclosure and public
interest in non-disclosure
[76]
Pursuant to the case law that has developed with
respect to the interpretation of section 38 of the CEA, the party
seeking disclosure bears the burden at this stage of proving that the public
interest scale is tipped in its favour. If the Court is satisfied that public
interest favours disclosure, subsection 38.06(2) provides for the authorization
of disclosure of information in the form and under the conditions that are most
likely to limit any injury to international relations or national defence or
national security.
[77]
Section 38 of the CEA does not specify
the test to apply, but of course the Court must consider several different
factors that may vary from case to case. In a criminal context, the issue of
whether the information at hand would likely establish a fact crucial to the
defence is an important factor that must be considered when weighing the
interests. This case is not of that nature as the respondent does not face
criminal charges. The applications for judicial review that the respondent
filed are more akin to a civil case, and in that context the Federal Court of
Appeal confirmed in Ribic (at para 22) that it was important to apply a
more stringent test than that of relevance, and that there must instead be
consideration of whether the information sought would establish a fact crucial
to the case of the party seeking it.
[78]
From that perspective, the courts identified
several factors to consider in when weighing competing interests in disclosure
and non-disclosure: see Khan v Canada, [1996] 2 FC 316 (FCTD), at para
26; Jose Pereira E Hijos, S.A. v Canada (Attorney General), 2002 FCA
470, at paras 16-17; Canada (Attorney General) v Kempo, 2004 FC 1678, at
para 102; Arar, at para 98; Almaki, at para 174. Although not
necessarily exhaustive, this list includes, but is not limited to, the
following elements:
- the nature of the
public interest sought to be protected by confidentiality;
- the admissibility
of the documentation, its usefulness and the probative value of the information
it contains;
- the seriousness of
the criminal charges or the issues raised in the underlying proceeding;
- whether the party
seeking disclosure has established that there are no other reasonable ways of
obtaining the information;
- whether the
disclosure sought amounts to legitimate disclosure or a fishing expedition;
- whether the
redacted information is already known to the public, and if so, the manner by
which the information made its way into the public domain;
- whether there are
higher interests at stake such as a breach of Charter rights, the right to make
full answer and defence in the criminal context, etc.
[79]
Counsel for the applicant and the amici
also argued that the stigma created by the respondent’s association to a group
or terrorist activities and the application of preventive measures restricting
his liberty also involved rights under sections 7, 8, 9 and 10 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Attorney General argued that the ban on
taking a commercial flight to which the respondent was subject did not restrict
his liberty or security rights, as interpreted by the courts, given that such a
ban is not akin to interference with fundamental personal choices or what
constitutes the core of human dignity, or even interference with the
psychological integrity of an individual. That debate has not occurred and will
take place in the context of the two applications for judicial review filed by
the respondent. For that reason, I decline to rule on that issue, directly or
indirectly, in connection with the application for non-disclosure.
[80]
For the purposes of this discussion, suffice it
to say that the Charter arguments raised by the respondent are not completely
lacking in merit and cannot be dismissed out of hand. Consequently, the Court must
consider them when weighing interests in this case. If the non‑disclosure
of certain information could compromise not only the right to procedural
fairness but also the respondent’s ability to assert his fundamental rights, it
is an additional factor to consider.
[81]
This now leads me to consider more specifically
the various pieces of information for which non‑disclosure is sought and
for which the Attorney General and the amici have not been able to find
a common solution. The first document is attached to the letter from the Deputy
Director of the Service to the Deputy Minister of Transport dated September 3,
2009, found at tab xx of the
supplementary ex parte affidavit of xxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
In that letter, the Deputy Director of the Service informs the Deputy Minister
of Transport, pursuant to section 19 of the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service Act, that the Service had received information that
Mr. Al Telbani may possibly be linked to criminal and terrorist
activities. The information in question is appended to the letter. xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxx x
[82]
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxx xxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx x
[83]
Relying on the testimony of the witness for the
Service, the Attorney General asserted three reasons to protect xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxx xxx xxxx xxx xxx xxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxx xx
[84]
However, the amici raised several
arguments against these justifications. First they argued that the Service xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx by going to Mr.
Al Telbani’s home on June 2, 2008, and by calling him by his pseudonym Mujahid
Taqni. Xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Mr.
Al Telbani apparently confirmed that he had used this pseudonym to participate
in discussions on Internet forums. Xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx x xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Mr. Al
Telbani with this information and by relying xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxx to thus encourage him to stop his activities, the Service ended up
implicitly revealing to him their interest in him and the scope of their
investigation. This seems to be a convincing argument to me.
[85]
The amici add that the Service also xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxx In this regard, the amici’s argument
seems less convincing. xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxx
[86]
Last, the amici argue xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx
xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx. xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx
xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
[87]
However, xx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx is undeniably important information in the context
of the underlying judicial review. It should not be forgotten that Mr. Al
Telbani is challenging the Minister’s decision to put his name on the Specified
Persons List (SPL) on the grounds that he posed a
threat to aviation safety. Xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx .
[88]
It is true that Mr. Al Telbani is aware of some
of the information relied upon to add his name to the SPL, as the Attorney
General contended. The letter that the Assistant Deputy Minister of Safety and
Security of Transport to his counsel on June 10, 2009, set out the factors that
would be considered in Mr. Al Telbani’s request for reconsideration:
[TRANSLATION]
• That your client has
technical training in Information Systems security
• That your client provided
technical support to participants on the Al Ekhlas Internet site to maintain
the security of their communications by evading surveillance systems.
• That your client, using
the pseudonym “Mujahid Taqni”, participated in discussions on various Internet
sites regarding the protection of communications from surveillance systems.
• That the purpose of the
discussions and activities of the Internet discussion forums is to support
“mujahedeen” terrorists who fight against European and North American
countries.
• That your client created
and managed an electronic journal “Mujahid Taqni”, published on the Al Ekhlas
site, specialized in sharing information on important topics for “mujahedeen”
terrorists such as how to protect communications against surveillance systems
and how to commit terrorist acts especially in relation to aviation safety.
[89]
This information, which stems largely from the
interview that the Service had with Mr. Al Telbani a year earlier, does not
clearly link Mr. Al Telbani to a threat to aviation
safety. The only link to this concern in the public evidence can be
found in an article published in the February 20, 2007, edition of the magazine
Al-mujahid taqni, which the respondent is the editor of, entitled “Smart
weapons: Short-range ground-to-air missiles” (Respondent’s Record, page
244.12).
[90]
It goes without saying that the fact xxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxxx is not enough to say that
the principle of procedural fairness was respected and to enable him to advance
all the arguments likely to help him succeed in his challenge to the legality
of Transport Canada’s decision. We cannot require the respondent to speculate
on the grounds that resulted in the decision to put his name on the SPL or
insist that he blindly try to rebut all the facts that could be raised against
him.
[91]
Thus, I believe that xxx xx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx is not only relevant information but
potentially extremely significant information to establish the legality of the
decision challenged by Mr. Al Telbani. It is quite possible, as the
Attorney General argued, that the information on the public record is enough to
establish that Transport Canada’s decision was reasonable. It is also possible
that the information sought to be excluded may in the end be more damaging to
the respondent than the applicant in the context of the judicial review. It is
not for me to rule on these issues. For the purposes of the application in
these proceedings, I merely have to find that non‑disclosure xx xxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxx could materially affect
the outcome of the judicial review and deprive Mr. Al Telbani of an
important argument.
[92]
The amici brought to the Court’s
attention a decision by the European Court of Justice on the compatibility of a
control order (similar to our security certificates) with the guarantee of
procedural fairness set out in article 6 of the European Convention on Human
Rights. In that case, the Court observed that the
issue of whether the evidence provided to the individual was sufficiently
detailed to permit the applicant effectively to challenge the order must be
decided on a case-by-case basis. Nevertheless, the Court expressed the
opinion that the requirements of procedural fairness would not be met where the
open material consisted purely of general assertions and
the decision to uphold the certification was based solely or to a decisive
degree on closed material: A. and Others v the United Kingdom
(application No 3455/05), February 19, 2009, at para 220.
[93]
Although this decision obviously does not bind
our Court and it applies to a very different legal context, it still makes some
interesting observations. As the Court pointed out, an individual does not need
to know the detail or sources of the evidence which
formed the basis of the decision. It is necessary, however, for the
individual to have enough information about the allegations against him to be
able to raise arguments that may refute the allegations. In this case,
Mr. Al Telbani does not have any idea of the allegations against him
involving aviation safety other than the very vague allegation in the
above-mentioned letter from the Assistant Deputy Minister stating that he “created and managed an electronic journal ... specialized in
sharing information on important topics for “mujahedeen” terrorists such as ...
how to commit terrorist acts especially in relation to aviation safety”.
It is hard to see how, based on only this information, Mr. Al Telbani
could challenge the decision to put him on the SPL by providing, for example,
explanations about xx xxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxx.
[94]
Does this mean that this information has to be
disclosed to him? Far from it. The courts have stated many times that
procedural fairness does not always require complete disclosure of the evidence
and the requirements of the principles of fundamental justice should be
interpreted according to the context and do not require that the applicant have
the most favourable proceedings: see Ruby v Canada (Solicitor General),
[2002] 4 S.C.R. 3, at paragraphs 39 et seq. In the instant case, the issue of the
underlying proceeding is not of the same magnitude as the deprivation of
liberty following a criminal conviction or the issuance of a security
certificate. Although I am not playing down the impact of a ban on taking a
commercial flight and I do not exclude the possibility that such a ban could
engage section 7 of the Charter, nevertheless, it seems to me that the public
interest in disclosure in that situation should be secondary to the public
interest in not revealing information that could have devastating repercussions
on national security. As Justice McKay stated in Singh (J.B.) v Canada (Attorney General), [2000] FCJ No 1007 (at paragraph 32), “The public interest served by maintaining secrecy in the
national security context is weighty. In the balancing of public interest here
at play, that interest would only be outweighed in a clear and compelling case
for disclosure”. It seems to me that this finding is even more
applicable since the role of the judge ruling on an application for judicial
review is quite different from the role of a judge hearing a criminal case or a
claim for civil relief. I will return to this aspect of the issue later.
[95]
Several of the documents that are requested to
be redacted contain a summary of the document xx
or refer to the fact xxxxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx The amici suggested partially removing
the redaction of those passages, such that the fact that Mr. Al
Telbani xxxxx xx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxx xxx xxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx would
be redacted. It seems to me that this option should be avoided to the extent
that Mr. Al Telbani xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx
xxx xxxxx.
[96]
The amici stated that this information
could have been obtained xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxx But since Mr. Al Telbani was interviewed by the
Service, xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx x xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxx xxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx
xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxx
[97]
The second category of information that is
sought to be protected, xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxx
xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxx xx xxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxx
xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxx xx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx x x x xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx
[98]
The grounds raised for non‑disclosure of
that information is based on the same logic as that given for excluding
document xx. In both cases disclosing the
information would enable Mr. Al Telbani xx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
Given the importance of protecting the Service’s investigative
techniques, and despite the relevance of this information in determining the
legality or illegality of Transport Canada’s decision to put his name on the
SPL, I am of the opinion that this information should be protected and that no
summary could minimize the injury to national security. Consequently, I find
that the redaction of this information in documents 6, 8, 9, 14, 16, 18, 23,
27, 28, 29 and 30 should be maintained.
[99]
The last two pieces of information that the
Attorney General seeks to protect come from third parties. The first was
apparently sent to the Service by xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxx. The second piece of information was
provided to the Service by xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
[100]
The witness for the Service conceded that the key points of this
information appeared in various places in the public record, particularly in
the letter signed by the Assistant Deputy Minister of Safety and Security of
Transport the relevant excepts of which I reproduced above (paragraph 88). This
information can also be found, although in a different form, in the summary of
the Service’s interview with Mr. Al Telbani, as well as in one of the
on-line magazines that is part of the public record, The Technical Mujahid,
published by the Al-Fajr Media Center, described as “Al-Qaida’s
official online logistical network”. However, it was argued that the
information for which non‑disclosure is sought is xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
[101]
It is true that the name of the third parties
involved do not appear anywhere in the excerpts that are sought to be protected.
Moreover, the witness for the admitted that they had not tried to ask the third
parties to consent to the disclosure of this information. Last, Mr. Al Telbani
is aware of the information and it is not different from information that is
already in the public domain; indeed the letter from the Assistant Deputy
Minister of Safety and Security of Transport Canada essentially repeats this
information. Xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx Moreover, the non-disclosure of this
information would not be injurious to Mr. Al Telbani and would not prevent him
from effectively challenging the decisions that are the object of the two
applications for judicial review underlying this proceeding, since he is now
aware of this through other sources (particularly following the letter from the
Assistant Deputy Minister). Under these circumstances, and given the importance
to Canada’s national security of protecting the confidentiality of information
provided to the Service by third parties, I believe that the application for
non-disclosure of this information should be allowed.
[102]
Xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xx xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx x xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx x xxx xxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx
xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxx xxxxx xx x xxxxx xxxxxxxxxx. For all these reasons, I believe
that the injury to national security in disclosing information provided by
third parties outweighs the injury to the open court principle and a person’s
right to fully present his or her case.
[103]
Before concluding these reasons, we should
discuss the option raised by the amici and the Attorney General to
minimize the injury to Mr. Al Telbani caused by the non-disclosure of
information under this application by authorizing its disclosure to the judge
who will be hearing the two applications for judicial review. Although they
recognize that such a process may have some support in the case law, the amici
contended that the Court probably does not have the jurisdiction to order such
a measure. The Attorney General, clearly stated that he preferred to obtain a
solid non-disclosure order but that he was not opposed to allowing a designated
judge who was hearing the applications for judicial review to consult the
secret evidence and even having the support of an amicus to help him or
her in this task.
[104]
This is the first time that such an approach has
been considered quite simply because it is the first time that an application
for non-divulgation based on section 38 of the CEA is linked to a legal
proceeding that will be heard on its merits by a judge of our Court. Unlike the
situation of a criminal or civil proceeding heard by a provincial court
(superior or inferior) whose judges are not allowed to access information that
is potentially injurious to national security, there is nothing preventing a
judge hearing an application for judicial review of a decision by a “federal board, commission or other tribunal”
within the meaning of section 18.1 of the Federal
Courts Act from being a designated judge under section 38 of the CEA.
Does this mean that this could be a measure to minimize injury that can be
considered in the balancing exercise prescribed in Ribic?
[105]
In criminal matters, section 38.14 of the CEA
authorizes a court to make any order deemed appropriate in the circumstances to
protect the right of the accused to a fair trial. This provision, which no
doubt was necessary to maintain the constitutionality of the regime established
under sections 38 et seq of the CEA, allows the trial judge to dismiss
specified counts of the indictment or information or order a stay of the
proceedings. However, to prevent such measures from being taken for no reason
and prevent judges from wrongly ruling that the fairness of the trial would be
compromised because he or she is dealing with an incomplete file, Parliament
provided a mechanism allowing disclosure of information that could be useful to
ensure a fair trial to the trial judge. As the Supreme Court stated in R v Ahmad,
at para 31:
We must presume that Parliament was aware of
the possibility that proceedings would be needlessly stayed if the trial judge
was denied access to material that could not be disclosed for valid reasons of state
secrecy. In light of the vast resources expended in investigating
and prosecuting offences that implicate national security and the injustice to
society that would result if such prosecutions were needlessly derailed, this
cannot have been Parliament’s intention.
[106]
The mechanism that provides some flexibility in
the application of section 38 can be found at subsection 38.06(2) of the CEA,
which reads as follows:
If the judge concludes that the disclosure
of the information or facts would be injurious to international relations or
national defence or national security but that the public interest in
disclosure outweighs in importance the public interest in non-disclosure, the
judge may by order, after considering both the public interest in disclosure
and the form of and conditions to disclosure that are most likely to limit any
injury to international relations or national defence or national security
resulting from disclosure, authorize the disclosure, subject to any conditions
that the judge considers appropriate, of all or part of the information or
facts, a summary of the information or a written admission of facts relating to
the information.
[107]
Furthermore, this approach was borrowed in Canada (Attorney General) v Khawaja, 2007 FC 490. In this case, my colleague
Justice Mosley exceptionally provided counsel for the parties with a summary of
the material being withheld pursuant to section 38 and ordered that its use be limited to the criminal proceedings as
required and that it be made available to the prosecutor and to the trial judge
if necessary for the trial court to rule on the fairness of the trial.
This approach received implicit approval from the Supreme Court in Ahmad
(at para 44).
[108]
The Supreme Court placed considerable emphasis
on the flexibility of the section 38 scheme in Ahmad and even raised the
possibility of providing the trial judge with information subject to a non‑disclosure
order in the following passage:
[45] The problems created by the division of
judicial responsibilities may be addressed in different ways. For example,
a Federal Court judge exercising the discretion conferred by s. 38.06(2) might
find that the only condition required in order to authorize disclosure to the criminal
court judge without risking injury to national security is that he or
she not reveal the information to the accused, or a condition that the
information be reviewed in a designated secure facility. Disclosure of
the information to the trial judge alone, as is the norm in other
jurisdictions, and for the sole purpose of determining the impact of
non-disclosure on the fairness of the trial, will often be the most appropriate
option. This is particularly true in light of the minimal risk of
providing such access to a trial judge, who is entrusted with the powers and
responsibilities of high public office.
[109]
I would further note that the Supreme Court also
raised the possibility of having the trial judge appoint a special advocate opposed in interest to the prosecution who could be adequately informed of the matters in issue by
authorization of the Attorney General under section 38.03. Thus, the
Supreme Court’s decision in Ahmad indicates that the broad discretion
conferred by section 38 should be interpreted to seek an appropriate balance
between the public interest in secrecy and the public interest in the effective
administration of a fair system of justice.
[110]
The amici maintained that the options
provided to the trial judge to reduce the impact of the non-disclosure and
order remedies are not available in non-criminal trials, since section 38.14
only applies to criminal trials. This restricted reading of section 38 does not
seem justified to me. It is true that Ahmad applied to a criminal
context and determined whether it was constitutional for Parliament to remove
from judges hearing criminal trials the power to determine whether information
tied to national security concerns should be disclosed and confer this power on
Federal Court judges. However, a careful reading of this decision reveals that
the Court did not intend to restrict its statements on the flexibility of the
scheme to just the criminal context as is evidenced by the excerpts cited
above. It is quite true that section 38.14 only applies to criminal matters.
However, the presence of this section can be explained by Parliament’s need to
explicitly provide that the established scheme would not in any way infringe on
the right to a fair trial guaranteed under paragraph 11(d) of the
Charter.
[111]
As mentioned above, this Court is considering
for the first time whether information subject to a non-disclosure order under
section 38.06 may nevertheless be provided, in one form or another, to the
judge hearing the application for judicial review underlying this proceeding.
The only related precedent is Mikail v Attorney General of Canada, 2011
FC 674, in which Justice Noël had to rule on an application for leave to intervene from the Security Intelligence
Review Committee (SIRC) for the purpose of filing confidentially and under seal
the materials received by SIRC ex parte the complainant with the
judge hearing the judicial review.
In this case, Justice Noël clearly envisaged the possibility that the judge
hearing the judicial review could hold an ex parte and in camera
hearing to review documents subject to a non‑disclosure order, without
going into detail about the terms and conditions of such a hearing. The judge
who then heard the application for judicial review did hold an ex parte and
in camera hearing but did not say much about the protected documents
since they were not relevant for deciding the application for judicial review.
[112]
Moreover, I would note that Justice Mosley, in Almaki,
gave explicit directions to the amici appointed in that case to identify
the documents that could be included in an order authorizing the disclosure to
the trial judge in one of the forms provided in subsection 38.06(2) of the CEA.
The underlying proceedings in this case were civil actions brought by several
plaintiffs in the Superior Court of Justice of Ontario seeking compensatory damages from the Government of Canada for, among
other things, alleged complicity in their detention and torture in Syria and
Egypt and breach of their constitutional rights: see DES-1-11, dated
September 19, 2011. This order clearly gives the idea that in the view of
Justice Mosley, subsection 38.06(2) gives the designated judge the authority to
provide a judge hearing a civil case with the information for which he or she
had ordered non-disclosure.
[113]
It seems to me that we can take the same
approach in this case. Even though Mr. Al Telbani is not facing criminal
charges, the repercussions of his name remaining on the SPL are not any less
serious. It is even possible that the judge who will hear the application for
judicial review may find that his constitutional rights have been infringed. In
this context, it is essential that the application for judicial review be
decided based on all the information that was before the original
decision-maker. Administrative decisions cannot be sheltered from review by
superior courts, and the legality and constitutionality of decisions that can
have a considerable impact on individuals must be assessed in consideration of
all the relevant information as is possible. This is not just in the interest
of the person before the court but also in the public interest. In the same way
that we cannot allow a person to be subject to an illegal administrative
decision, or worse a decision that infringes fundamental rights and freedoms,
it would be just as damaging for our institutions if the legitimate exercise of
a delegated authority were overturned because the reviewing judge did not have
all the information that the decision-maker had access to.
[114]
In short, I believe that the option of
appointing a designated judge to hear an application for judicial review when
that application involves a federal administrative decision increases the
options under subsection 38.06(2) when the conditions for disclosure most
likely to limit the injury to national security are being considered. If it is
possible to consider disclosing sensitive information to a provincial court
judge, it must a fortiori be desirable to provide such information to a
designated judge under the appropriate context. In doing so, this ensures that
the application for judicial review will be heard on its merits and will not be
dismissed or allowed for lack of information. It would also be damaging for the
administration of justice and the rule of law for a decision to be deemed
reasonable or unreasonable solely on the fact that a judge did not have all the
information that the decision-maker had.
CONCLUSION
[115]
In the pages above, I reviewed the information
that the Attorney General wishes to protect in light of the Ribic
criteria. I found that, other than the information that could identify
employees of the Service or that describes administrative details, the redacted
information is relevant to the two underlying applications for judicial review.
I also believe that the applicant met his burden of proving that disclosure of
the redacted information would be injurious to national security. Last, I
believe that the public interest in non-disclosure outweighs, to differing
degrees, the public interest in disclosure.
[116]
That being said, it seems crucial to me in this
case that the judge hearing the judicial review be able to see the redacted
information in order to be able assess the legality of the impugned decisions,
or at least determine whether it is possible to rule on this issue despite Mr.
Al Telbani’s ignorance of certain facts. The applications for judicial review should
thus be heard by a designated judge. It will be up to that judge to decide
whether ex parte and in camera hearings should be held and
whether an amicus curiae or a special advocate should be appointed to
help him or her in this task.
[117]
Counsel for the Attorney General and the amici
should file written submissions to the Court by October 3, 2014, if, in
their opinion, these reasons and the confidential order attached (see appendix
B) contain sensitive or potentially injurious information that should not be
made public and, as necessary, they must indicate what parts should be
redacted. These submissions should indicate the nature of the injury to
international relations, defence or national security that public disclosure
would likely cause.
“Yves de Montigny”
Ottawa, Ontario
September 19, 2014
APPENDIX A
Canada Evidence Act
RSC, 1985, c
C-5
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Loi sur
la preuve au Canada
LRC (1985),
ch C-5
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38.01 (1) Every participant who, in connection with a proceeding, is
required to disclose, or expects to disclose or cause the disclosure of,
information that the participant believes is sensitive information or
potentially injurious information shall, as soon as possible, notify the
Attorney General of Canada in writing of the possibility of the disclosure,
and of the nature, date and place of the proceeding.
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38.01 (1) Tout participant qui, dans le cadre
d’une instance, est tenu de divulguer ou prévoit de divulguer ou de faire
divulguer des renseignements dont il croit qu’il s’agit de renseignements
sensibles ou de renseignements potentiellement préjudiciables est tenu
d’aviser par écrit, dès que possible, le procureur général du Canada de la
possibilité de divulgation et de préciser dans l’avis la nature, la date et
le lieu de l’instance.
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[…]
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…
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(3) An
official, other than a participant, who believes that sensitive information
or potentially injurious information may be disclosed in connection with a
proceeding may notify the Attorney General of Canada in writing of the
possibility of the disclosure, and of the nature, date and place of the
proceeding.
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(3) Le
fonctionnaire — à l’exclusion d’un participant — qui croit que peuvent être
divulgués dans le cadre d’une instance des renseignements sensibles ou des
renseignements potentiellement préjudiciables peut aviser par écrit le
procureur général du Canada de la possibilité de divulgation; le cas échéant,
l’avis précise la nature, la date et le lieu de l’instance.
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38.02 (1) Subject to subsection 38.01(6), no person shall disclose in
connection with a proceeding
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38.02 (1) Sous réserve du paragraphe 38.01(6),
nul ne peut divulguer, dans le cadre d’une instance :
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(a)
information about which notice is given under any of subsections 38.01(1) to
(4);
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a) les renseignements qui font l’objet d’un
avis donné au titre de l’un des paragraphes 38.01(1) à (4);
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(b)
the fact that notice is given to the Attorney General of Canada under any of
subsections 38.01(1) to (4), or to the Attorney General of Canada and the
Minister of National Defence under subsection 38.01(5);
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b) le fait qu’un avis est donné au
procureur général du Canada au titre de l’un des paragraphes 38.01(1) à (4),
ou à ce dernier et au ministre de la Défense nationale au titre du paragraphe
38.01(5);
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(c)
the fact that an application is made to the Federal Court under section 38.04
or that an appeal or review of an order made under any of subsections
38.06(1) to (3) in connection with the application is instituted; or
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c) le fait qu’une demande a été présentée à
la Cour fédérale au titre de l’article 38.04, qu’il a été interjeté appel
d’une ordonnance rendue au titre de l’un des paragraphes 38.06(1) à (3)
relativement à une telle demande ou qu’une telle ordonnance a été renvoyée
pour examen;
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(d)
the fact that an agreement is entered into under section 38.031 or subsection
38.04(6).
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d) le fait qu’un accord a été conclu au
titre de l’article 38.031 ou du paragraphe 38.04(6).
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38.03 (1) The
Attorney General of Canada may, at any time and subject to any conditions
that he or she considers appropriate, authorize the disclosure of all or part
of the information and facts the disclosure of which is prohibited under
subsection 38.02(1).
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38.03 (1) Le
procureur général du Canada peut, à tout moment, autoriser la divulgation de
tout ou partie des renseignements ou des faits dont la divulgation est
interdite par le paragraphe 38.02(1) et assortir son autorisation des
conditions qu’il estime indiquées.
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(2) In the
case of a proceeding under Part III of the National Defence Act, the
Attorney General of Canada may authorize disclosure only with the agreement
of the Minister of National Defence.
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(2) Dans le
cas d’une instance engagée sous le régime de la partie III de la Loi sur
la défense nationale, le procureur général du Canada ne peut autoriser la
divulgation qu’avec l’assentiment du ministre de la Défense nationale.
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(3) The
Attorney General of Canada shall, within 10 days after the day on which he or
she first receives a notice about information under any of subsections
38.01(1) to (4), notify in writing every person who provided notice under
section 38.01 about that information of his or her decision with respect to
disclosure of the information.
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(3) Dans les
dix jours suivant la réception du premier avis donné au titre de l’un des
paragraphes 38.01(1) à (4) relativement à des renseignements donnés, le
procureur général du Canada notifie par écrit sa décision relative à la
divulgation de ces renseignements à toutes les personnes qui ont donné un tel
avis.
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38.031 (1) The Attorney General of Canada and a person who has given
notice under subsection 38.01(1) or (2) and is not required to disclose
information but wishes, in connection with a proceeding, to disclose any
facts referred to in paragraphs 38.02(1)(b) to (d) or
information about which he or she gave the notice, or to cause that disclosure,
may, before the person applies to the Federal Court under paragraph 38.04(2)(c),
enter into an agreement that permits the disclosure of part of the facts or
information or disclosure of the facts or information subject to conditions.
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38.031 (1) Le procureur général du Canada et la
personne ayant donné l’avis prévu aux paragraphes 38.01(1) ou (2) qui n’a pas
l’obligation de divulguer des renseignements dans le cadre d’une instance,
mais veut divulguer ou faire divulguer les renseignements qui ont fait
l’objet de l’avis ou les faits visés aux alinéas 38.02(1)b) à d),
peuvent, avant que cette personne présente une demande à la Cour fédérale au
titre de l’alinéa 38.04(2)c), conclure un accord prévoyant la
divulgation d’une partie des renseignements ou des faits ou leur divulgation
assortie de conditions.
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(2) If an
agreement is entered into under subsection (1), the person may not apply to
the Federal Court under paragraph 38.04(2)(c) with respect to the
information about which he or she gave notice to the Attorney General of
Canada under subsection 38.01(1) or (2).
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(2) Si un
accord est conclu, la personne ne peut présenter de demande à la Cour
fédérale au titre de l’alinéa 38.04(2)c) relativement aux renseignements
ayant fait l’objet de l’avis qu’elle a donné au procureur général du Canada
au titre des paragraphes 38.01(1) ou (2).
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38.04 (1) The Attorney General of Canada may, at any time and in any
circumstances, apply to the Federal Court for an order with respect to the
disclosure of information about which notice was given under any of
subsections 38.01(1) to (4).
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38.04 (1) Le procureur général du Canada peut,
à tout moment et en toutes circonstances, demander à la Cour fédérale de
rendre une ordonnance portant sur la divulgation de renseignements à l’égard
desquels il a reçu un avis au titre de l’un des paragraphes 38.01(1) à (4).
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(2) If, with
respect to information about which notice was given under any of subsections
38.01(1) to (4), the Attorney General of Canada does not provide notice of a
decision in accordance with subsection 38.03(3) or, other than by an
agreement under section 38.031, does not authorize the disclosure of the
information or authorizes the disclosure of only part of the information or
authorizes the disclosure subject to any conditions,
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(2) Si, en ce
qui concerne des renseignements à l’égard desquels il a reçu un avis au titre
de l’un des paragraphes 38.01(1) à (4), le procureur général du Canada n’a
pas notifié sa décision à l’auteur de l’avis en conformité avec le paragraphe
38.03(3) ou, sauf par un accord conclu au titre de l’article 38.031, n’a pas
autorisé la divulgation des renseignements ou n’en a autorisé la divulgation
que d’une partie ou a assorti de conditions son autorisation de divulgation :
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(a)
the Attorney General of Canada shall apply to the Federal Court for an order
with respect to disclosure of the information if a person who gave notice
under subsection 38.01(1) or (2) is a witness;
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a) il est tenu de demander à la Cour
fédérale de rendre une ordonnance concernant la divulgation des
renseignements si la personne qui l’a avisé au titre des paragraphes 38.01(1)
ou (2) est un témoin;
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(b)
a person, other than a witness, who is required to disclose information in
connection with a proceeding shall apply to the Federal Court for an order
with respect to disclosure of the information; and
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b) la personne — à l’exclusion d’un témoin
— qui a l’obligation de divulguer des renseignements dans le cadre d’une
instance est tenue de demander à la Cour fédérale de rendre une ordonnance
concernant la divulgation des renseignements;
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(c)
a person who is not required to disclose information in connection with a
proceeding but who wishes to disclose it or to cause its disclosure may apply
to the Federal Court for an order with respect to disclosure of the
information.
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c) la personne qui n’a pas l’obligation de
divulguer des renseignements dans le cadre d’une instance, mais qui veut en
divulguer ou en faire divulguer, peut demander à la Cour fédérale de rendre
une ordonnance concernant la divulgation des renseignements.
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(3) A person
who applies to the Federal Court under paragraph (2)(b) or (c)
shall provide notice of the application to the Attorney General of Canada.
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(3) La
personne qui présente une demande à la Cour fédérale au titre des alinéas (2)b)
ou c) en notifie le procureur général du Canada.
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(4) Subject
to paragraph (5)(a.1), an application under this section is
confidential. During the period when an application is confidential, the
Chief Administrator of the Courts Administration Service may, subject to
section 38.12, take any measure that he or she considers appropriate to
protect the confidentiality of the application and the information to which
it relates.
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(4) Sous
réserve de l’alinéa (5)a.1), toute demande présentée en application du
présent article est confidentielle. Pendant la période durant laquelle la
demande est confidentielle, l’administrateur en chef du Service administratif
des tribunaux judiciaires peut, sous réserve de l’article 38.12, prendre les
mesures qu’il estime indiquées en vue d’assurer la confidentialité de la
demande et des renseignements sur lesquels elle porte.
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(5) As soon
as the Federal Court is seized of an application under this section, the
judge
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(5) Dès que
la Cour fédérale est saisie d’une demande présentée au titre du présent
article, le juge :
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(a)
shall hear the representations of the Attorney General of Canada and, in the
case of a proceeding under Part III of the National Defence Act, the
Minister of National Defence, with respect to making the application public;
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a) entend les observations du procureur
général du Canada — et du ministre de la Défense nationale dans le cas d’une
instance engagée sous le régime de la partie III de la Loi sur la défense
nationale — sur l’opportunité de rendre publique la demande;
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(a.1)
shall, if he or she decides that the application should be made public, make
an order to that effect;
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a.1) s’il estime que la demande devrait être
rendue publique, ordonne qu’elle le soit;
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(a.2)
shall hear the representations of the Attorney General of Canada and, in the
case of a proceeding under Part III of the National Defence Act, the
Minister of National Defence, concerning the identity of all parties or
witnesses whose interests may be affected by either the prohibition of
disclosure or the conditions to which disclosure is subject, and concerning
the persons who should be given notice of any hearing of the matter;
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a.2) entend les observations du procureur
général du Canada — et du ministre de la Défense nationale dans le cas d’une
instance engagée sous le régime de la partie III de la Loi sur la défense
nationale — sur l’identité des parties ou des témoins dont les intérêts sont
touchés par l’interdiction de divulgation ou les conditions dont
l’autorisation de divulgation est assortie et sur les personnes qui devraient
être avisées de la tenue d’une audience;
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(b) shall
decide whether it is necessary to hold any hearing of the matter;
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b) décide s’il est nécessaire de tenir une
audience;
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(c)
if he or she decides that a hearing should be held, shall
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c) s’il estime qu’une audience est
nécessaire :
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(i)
determine who should be given notice of the hearing,
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(i)
spécifie les personnes qui devraient en être avisées,
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(ii)
order the Attorney General of Canada to notify those persons, and
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(ii)
ordonne au procureur général du Canada de les aviser,
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(iii)
determine the content and form of the notice; and
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(iii)
détermine le contenu et les modalités de l’avis;
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(d)
if he or she considers it appropriate in the circumstances, may give any person
the opportunity to make representations.
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d) s’il l’estime indiqué en l’espèce, peut
donner à quiconque la possibilité de présenter des observations.
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(6) After the
Federal Court is seized of an application made under paragraph (2)(c)
or, in the case of an appeal from, or a review of, an order of the judge made
under any of subsections 38.06(1) to (3) in connection with that application,
before the appeal or review is disposed of,
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(6) Après la
saisine de la Cour fédérale d’une demande présentée au titre de l’alinéa (2)c)
ou l’institution d’un appel ou le renvoi pour examen d’une ordonnance du juge
rendue en vertu de l’un des paragraphes 38.06(1) à (3) relativement à cette
demande, et avant qu’il soit disposé de l’appel ou de l’examen :
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(a)
the Attorney General of Canada and the person who made the application may
enter into an agreement that permits the disclosure of part of the facts
referred to in paragraphs 38.02(1)(b) to (d) or part of the
information or disclosure of the facts or information subject to conditions;
and
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a) le
procureur général du Canada peut conclure avec l’auteur de la demande un
accord prévoyant la divulgation d’une partie des renseignements ou des faits
visés aux alinéas 38.02(1)b) à d) ou leur divulgation assortie
de conditions;
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(b)
if an agreement is entered into, the Court’s consideration of the application
or any hearing, review or appeal shall be terminated.
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b) si un accord est conclu, le tribunal
n’est plus saisi de la demande et il est mis fin à l’audience, à l’appel ou à
l’examen.
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(7) Subject
to subsection (6), after the Federal Court is seized of an application made
under this section or, in the case of an appeal from, or a review of, an
order of the judge made under any of subsections 38.06(1) to (3), before the
appeal or review is disposed of, if the Attorney General of Canada authorizes
the disclosure of all or part of the information or withdraws conditions to
which the disclosure is subject, the Court’s consideration of the application
or any hearing, appeal or review shall be terminated in relation to that
information, to the extent of the authorization or the withdrawal.
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(7) Sous
réserve du paragraphe (6), si le procureur général du Canada autorise la
divulgation de tout ou partie des renseignements ou supprime les conditions
dont la divulgation est assortie après la saisine de la Cour fédérale aux
termes du présent article et, en cas d’appel ou d’examen d’une ordonnance du
juge rendue en vertu de l’un des paragraphes 38.06(1) à (3), avant qu’il en
soit disposé, le tribunal n’est plus saisi de la demande et il est mis fin à
l’audience, à l’appel ou à l’examen à l’égard de tels des renseignements dont
la divulgation est autorisée ou n’est plus assortie de conditions.
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38.06 (1) Unless the judge concludes that the disclosure of the
information or facts referred to in subsection 38.02(1) would be injurious to
international relations or national defence or national security, the judge
may, by order, authorize the disclosure of the information or facts.
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38.06 (1) Le juge peut rendre une ordonnance
autorisant la divulgation des renseignements ou des faits visés au paragraphe
38.02(1), sauf s’il conclut qu’elle porterait préjudice aux relations
internationales ou à la défense ou à la sécurité nationales.
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(2) If the
judge concludes that the disclosure of the information or facts would be
injurious to international relations or national defence or national security
but that the public interest in disclosure outweighs in importance the public
interest in non-disclosure, the judge may by order, after considering both
the public interest in disclosure and the form of and conditions to
disclosure that are most likely to limit any injury to international
relations or national defence or national security resulting from disclosure,
authorize the disclosure, subject to any conditions that the judge considers
appropriate, of all or part of the information or facts, a summary of the
information or a written admission of facts relating to the information.
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(2) Si le
juge conclut que la divulgation des renseignements ou des faits porterait
préjudice aux relations internationales ou à la défense ou à la sécurité
nationales, mais que les raisons d’intérêt public qui justifient la
divulgation l’emportent sur les raisons d’intérêt public qui justifient la
non-divulgation, il peut par ordonnance, compte tenu des raisons d’intérêt
public qui justifient la divulgation ainsi que de la forme et des conditions
de divulgation les plus susceptibles de limiter le préjudice porté aux
relations internationales ou à la défense ou à la sécurité nationales,
autoriser, sous réserve des conditions qu’il estime indiquées, la divulgation
de tout ou partie des renseignements ou des faits, d’un résumé des
renseignements ou d’un aveu écrit des faits qui y sont liés.
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(3) If the
judge does not authorize disclosure under subsection (1) or (2), the judge
shall, by order, confirm the prohibition of disclosure.
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(3) Dans le
cas où le juge n’autorise pas la divulgation au titre des paragraphes (1) ou
(2), il rend une ordonnance confirmant l’interdiction de divulgation.
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(3.01) An
order of the judge that authorizes disclosure does not take effect until the
time provided or granted to appeal the order has expired or, if the order is
appealed, the time provided or granted to appeal a judgment of an appeal
court that confirms the order has expired and no further appeal from a
judgment that confirms the order is available.
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(3.01)
L’ordonnance de divulgation prend effet après l’expiration du délai prévu ou
accordé pour en appeler ou, en cas d’appel, après sa confirmation et
l’épuisement des recours en appel.
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(3.1) The
judge may receive into evidence anything that, in the opinion of the judge,
is reliable and appropriate, even if it would not otherwise be admissible
under Canadian law, and may base his or her decision on that evidence.
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(3.1) Le juge
peut recevoir et admettre en preuve tout élément qu’il estime digne de foi et
approprié — même si le droit canadien ne prévoit pas par ailleurs son
admissibilité — et peut fonder sa décision sur cet élément.
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(4) A person
who wishes to introduce into evidence material the disclosure of which is
authorized under subsection (2) but who may not be able to do so in a
proceeding by reason of the rules of admissibility that apply in the
proceeding may request from a judge an order permitting the introduction into
evidence of the material in a form or subject to any conditions fixed by that
judge, as long as that form and those conditions comply with the order made
under subsection (2).
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(4) La
personne qui veut faire admettre en preuve ce qui a fait l’objet d’une
autorisation de divulgation prévue au paragraphe (2), mais qui ne pourra
peut-être pas le faire à cause des règles d’admissibilité applicables à
l’instance, peut demander à un juge de rendre une ordonnance autorisant la
production en preuve du fait, des renseignements, du résumé ou de l’aveu dans
la forme ou aux conditions que celui-ci détermine, dans la mesure où telle
forme ou telles conditions sont conformes à l’ordonnance rendue au titre du paragraphe
(2).
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(5) For the
purpose of subsection (4), the judge shall consider all the factors that
would be relevant for a determination of admissibility in the proceeding.
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(5) Pour
l’application du paragraphe (4), le juge prend en compte tous les facteurs
qui seraient pertinents pour statuer sur l’admissibilité en preuve au cours
de l’instance.
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