Docket: T-2243-12
Citation:
2014 FC 439
Ottawa, Ontario, May 7, 2014
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Boivin
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BETWEEN:
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PETER COLLINS
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Applicant
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and
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THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an application for judicial review of a
decision of the Parole Board of Canada, Appeal Division, which upheld a
decision of the Parole Board of Canada denying Peter Collins (the applicant)
day and full parole for deportation.
I.
Factual background
[2]
Peter Collins (the applicant) is a fifty-two (52)
year-old citizen of the United Kingdom (UK). The applicant has been living in Canada since his early childhood, but has never acquired Canadian citizenship (Applicant’s
Record, Vol 1 at 22-23).
[3]
The applicant is serving a life sentence for the
first degree murder of a police officer (Applicant’s Record, Vol 1 at 13).
[4]
The murder occurred in 1983, while the applicant
was unlawfully at large after having escaped from custody at the Ottawa-Carleton
Detention Centre, where he was detained for various robberies. The applicant
entered a shopping mall with the intention of robbing a bank. He noticed a
police officer in the food court. The applicant told the officer to stand up
and fired a warning gunshot in the air. When the officer walked towards him,
the applicant shot him in the chest, killing him. The applicant took the
officer’s handgun, fired two (2) additional shots in the air and in the food
court’s crowd. The applicant was arrested shortly thereafter at a residence,
where the police found the officer’s handgun, two (2) loaded guns and a
sawed-off shotgun (Applicant’s Record, Vol 1 at 13).
[5]
Since 1991, the applicant has been subject to a
deportation order to the UK (Applicant’s Record, Vol 1 at 65-66).
[6]
The applicant became eligible for day parole on
October 14, 2005, and for full parole on October 14, 2008.
[7]
Upon his release, whether for day parole, full
parole or unescorted temporary absences (UTAs), the applicant will be detained
by the immigration authorities and deported to the UK (Immigration and
Refugee Protection Act, SC 2001, c 27, s 50(b) [IRPA]; Corrections
and Conditional Release Act, SC 1992, c 20, s 128(3) [CCRA]).
[8]
The applicant appeared for a hearing before the
Parole Board of Canada (the Board) – previously called the National Parole
Board – in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010 and was denied parole each time because he
was found to pose undue risk.
[9]
On May 31, 2011, the Board conducted an
in-office review of the applicant’s case. On November 21, 2011, the Parole
Board of Canada, Appeal Division (Appeal Division), affirmed this decision.
[10]
On May 18, 2012, the Board denied once again the
applicant day and full parole.
[11]
On November 14, 2012, the Appeal Division upheld
the Board’s decision.
[12]
On December 14, 2012, the applicant filed a
notice of application for judicial review of the Appeal Division’s decision.
II.
Impugned decision
A.
Board’s decision
[13]
In its decision to deny both day and full
parole, the Board recalled the circumstances surrounding the 1983 murder.
[14]
The Board noted that the applicant described his
difficult childhood. It also mentioned that the applicant remembers his actions
on the day of the murder, recognizes that his decisions were flawed and
expresses remorse for the tragic consequences to the victim’s family, his own
family and the community at large.
[15]
The victim’s widow and one of her sons were
present at the hearing. A statement was read mentioning that the dying wish of
the victim’s mother was that the applicant remained in prison for the murder of
her son.
[16]
The Board also noted that the applicant has
previously been convicted for assault of a peace officer, theft, possession of
stolen property, mischief and failure to appear. The applicant also admitted to
have committed seven (7) bank robberies.
[17]
The Board observed that while the applicant
completed his correctional plan to address his dynamic risk factors, he still
requires a moderated need for intervention regarding community functioning and
personal/emotional orientation. The applicant scored +4 on the Statistical
Information on Recidivism, which usually indicates that two (2) out of three
(3) similar offenders will not commit an indictable offence within three (3)
years of their release.
[18]
The Board mentioned that in a recent psychological
report, the applicant was qualified as having a “low moderate” to “low risk”
for general and violent recidivism. The psychologist who authored the report
supports the transfer of the applicant to a minimum-security prison and highly
structured escorted temporary absences (ETAs). A more recent psychological
opinion assesses the applicant as a “low risk” for future violence. The
clinician who wrote the opinion nevertheless recommends constant counselling
due to persisting anti-authoritarian and oppositional characteristics. The
Board observes that these assessments are an improvement over the applicant’s
previous assessments and that “there has been a very gradual lessening of risk
over the years” (Applicant’s Record at 14).
[19]
The Board acknowledged the commendable
applicant’s involvement in various educational and volunteering activities. The
applicant is also recognized as an accomplished artist and used his talents to
assist charitable organizations.
[20]
The Board mentioned that the applicant has
explored a transfer to the UK under the International Transfer Agreement, but
decided it would not be in his best interest to pursue this avenue because the
procedures appeared uncertain.
[21]
The Board observes that the applicant does not
have a specific day parole release plan, but has provided a full parole plan in
the case of a return to the UK. This plan includes living with his aunt,
letters of support from friends and relatives in Canada and in the UK, as well as from members of his Circle of Support and Accountability in the UK. He also has secured employment with an agency in Canada who would employ him in the UK. The applicant explored supervision options, but none are confirmed.
[22]
The Board noted that the applicant’s case
management team (CMT) was initially supportive of a transfer to a
minimum-security institution, but recent security intelligence information
indicated that the applicant was a person of interest in a significant ongoing
criminal investigation. Because of that information, the CMT has withdrawn their
support for the transfer.
[23]
The Board insisted on the fact that the
applicant’s CMT is not supportive of release at this juncture and recommends
that day and full parole be denied.
[24]
The Board agreed that a typical plan for a
person serving a life sentence would include UTAs, followed by day and full
parole. However, such a plan is not available to the applicant, as he would be
detained and deported by the immigration authorities at his first UTA. The
Board was satisfied that a transfer to a minimum-security facility would be an
attempt to fulfill the requirement for a gradual and structured release. A
period at such a facility would enable the applicant to demonstrate that he can
integrate a new environment and follow rules in a much less restrictive
setting. Since minimum-security prisons are not fenced, it would also test the
applicant’s ability to resist escaping. The Board rejected the applicant’s
argument that, because minimum-security facilities might be fenced soon, it
would negate any potential benefit of a transfer to such facilities, as there
was no evidence to support the allegation.
[25]
Finally, the Board considered that the applicant
was a person of interest in a significant ongoing criminal investigation and
that it resulted in the CMT’s withdrawal of their support for a transfer to a
minimum-security prison. This led the Board to conclude that it was not
satisfied that the applicant’s risk was manageable in the community, given that
no supervision will be possible in another country (Applicant’s record, at 15).
B.
Appeal Division’s decision
[26]
The Appeal Division denied the appeal and
affirmed the Board’s decision of May 18, 2012.
[27]
First, the Appeal Division found that the Board
did not fail in its duty to act fairly as it did not base its decision on
incomplete information nor did it preclude the applicant from making informed
representations.
[28]
The Appeal Division notes that the Board erred
when it told the applicant that it had no duty to share support letters with
him. It appears that the Board received some support documents at the last
minute which were not shared with the applicant. The Appeal Division noted that
the Board informed the applicant about the existence of these documents at the
hearing and the applicant did not request to see the letters and agreed to
proceed with the hearing. The applicant was able to elaborate on the support he
received and the Board expressly considered this aspect before rendering its
decision.
[29]
The Appeal Division also rejects the applicant’s
argument that the Board failed to share documents concerning a potential
international transfer of prisoners, since it consulted them for the sole
purpose of asking the applicant whether he considered this option.
[30]
Second, the Appeal Division found that the
Board’s decision was fair, reasonable and well supported by available evidence.
[31]
The Appeal Division was of the view that the
applicant had not satisfied the onus of demonstrating that there was a
reasonable apprehension of bias on the part of the Board. The Appeal Division
found that as a reasonable, informed person, viewing the matter realistically
and having thought the matter through, would not conclude that the Board
pre-determined the applicant’s case because the Correctional Services of Canada
(CSC) never had the intention of transferring him to a minimum-security
facility. The Board, however, did note that the CMT ultimately withdrew its
support for the transfer and that the applicant himself did not recognize the
value of such a transfer as part of a gradual release process.
[32]
The Appeal Division also determined that the
Board’s decision was otherwise reasonable. The Board considered all available
information, including the positive elements of the applicant’s case, but
ultimately concluded that before his risk could be deemed manageable without
supervision in another country, the applicant needed to demonstrate his ability
to operate in a less structured setting such as a minimum-security prison.
Given the seriousness of his past violence, the Board reasonably determined
that the applicant’s risk to society, despite a progressive improvement,
remains undue. The Board did not give any weight to the fact that the applicant
was a person of interest in an ongoing investigation, but noted that this
information resulted in his CMT’s withdrawal of its support for a transfer,
which denied him the opportunity to enjoy gradual release.
III.
Relevant provisions
[33]
The following provisions from the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act and the Corrections and Conditional Release
Act provide that a removal order against a foreign national who has been
sentenced to a term of imprisonment in Canada is stayed until it is completed.
It also provided that a sentence will deemed to be completed following release
on unescorted temporary absence, day parole or full parole:
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
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Loi sur l’immigration et la protection des
réfugiés
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Stay
50. A
removal order is stayed
…
(b) in the case of a foreign
national sentenced to a term of imprisonment in Canada, until the sentence is
completed;
…
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Sursis
50. Il y a
sursis de la mesure de renvoi dans les cas suivants :
…
b) tant que
n’est pas purgée la peine d’emprisonnement infligée au Canada à l’étranger;
…
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|
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Corrections and Conditional Release Act
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Loi sur le système correctionnel et la mise
en liberté sous condition
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EFFECT
OF PAROLE, STATUTORY RELEASE OR
UNESCORTED
TEMPORARY ABSENCE
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CONSÉQUENCES
DE LA LIBÉRATION CONDITIONNELLE
OU
D’OFFICE ET PERMISSION DE SORTIR SANS
ESCORTE
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Continuation of sentence
128. (1)
An offender who is released on parole, statutory release or unescorted
temporary absence continues, while entitled to be at large, to serve the
sentence until its expiration according to law.
…
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Présomption
128. (1) Le
délinquant qui bénéficie d’une libération conditionnelle ou d’office ou d’une
permission de sortir sans escorte continue, tant qu’il a le droit d’être en
liberté, de purger sa peine d’emprisonnement jusqu’à l’expiration légale de
celle-ci.
…
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Sentence deemed to be completed
(3) Despite subsection (1), for the
purposes of paragraph 50(b) of the Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act and section 64 of the Extradition Act, the sentence
of an offender who has been released on parole, statutory release or an
unescorted temporary absence is deemed to be completed unless the parole or
statutory release has been suspended, terminated or revoked, the unescorted
temporary absence is suspended or cancelled or the offender has returned to
Canada before the expiration of the sentence according to law.
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Cas particulier
(3) Pour l’application de l’alinéa 50b)
de la Loi sur l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés et de
l’article 64 de la Loi sur l’extradition, la peine d’emprisonnement du
délinquant qui bénéficie d’une libération conditionnelle ou d’office ou d’une
permission de sortir sans escorte est, par dérogation au paragraphe (1),
réputée être purgée sauf s’il y a eu révocation, suspension ou cessation de
la libération ou de la permission de sortir sans escorte ou si le délinquant
est revenu au Canada avant son expiration légale.
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Removal order
(4) Despite this Act, the Prisons and
Reformatories Act and the Criminal Code, an offender against whom a
removal order has been made under the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act is not eligible for day parole or an unescorted temporary absence
until they are eligible for full parole.
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Mesure de renvoi
(4) Malgré la présente loi, la Loi sur
les prisons et les maisons de correction et le Code criminel, le
délinquant qui est visé par une mesure de renvoi au titre de la Loi sur
l’immigration et la protection des réfugiés n’est admissible à la
semi-liberté ou à la permission de sortir sans escorte qu’à compter de son
admissibilité à la libération conditionnelle totale.
|
[34]
The following provisions of the Corrections
and Conditional Release Act set out the duties and powers of the Board that
are relevant to the case at bar:
PURPOSE AND
PRINCIPLES
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OBJET ET PRINCIPES
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Principles guiding parole boards
101. The
principles that guide the Board and the provincial parole boards in achieving
the purpose of conditional release are as follows:
(a) parole boards take into
consideration all relevant available information, including the stated
reasons and recommendations of the sentencing judge, the nature and gravity
of the offence, the degree of responsibility of the offender, information
from the trial or sentencing process and information obtained from victims,
offenders and other components of the criminal justice system, including
assessments provided by correctional authorities;
(b) parole boards enhance their
effectiveness and openness through the timely exchange of relevant
information with victims, offenders and other components of the criminal
justice system and through communication about their policies and programs to
victims, offenders and the general public;
(c) parole boards make decisions
that are consistent with the protection of society and that are limited to
only what is necessary and proportionate to the purpose of conditional
release;
(d) parole boards adopt and are guided
by appropriate policies and their members are provided with the training
necessary to implement those policies; and
(e) offenders are provided with
relevant information, reasons for decisions and access to the review of
decisions in order to ensure a fair and understandable conditional release
process.
|
Principes
101. La
Commission et les commissions provinciales sont guidées dans l’exécution de
leur mandat par les principes suivants :
a) elles doivent
tenir compte de toute l’information pertinente dont elles disposent,
notamment les motifs et les recommandations du juge qui a infligé la peine,
la nature et la gravité de l’infraction, le degré de responsabilité du
délinquant, les renseignements obtenus au cours du procès ou de la
détermination de la peine et ceux qui ont été obtenus des victimes, des
délinquants ou d’autres éléments du système de justice pénale, y compris les
évaluations fournies par les autorités correctionnelles;
b) elles
accroissent leur efficacité et leur transparence par l’échange, au moment
opportun, de renseignements utiles avec les victimes, les délinquants et les
autres éléments du système de justice pénale et par la communication de leurs
directives d’orientation générale et programmes tant aux victimes et aux
délinquants qu’au grand public;
c) elles
prennent les décisions qui, compte tenu de la protection de la société, ne
vont pas au-delà de ce qui est nécessaire et proportionnel aux objectifs de
la mise en liberté sous condition;
d) elles
s’inspirent des directives d’orientation générale qui leur sont remises et
leurs membres doivent recevoir la formation nécessaire à la mise en oeuvre de
ces directives;
e) de manière à
assurer l’équité et la clarté du processus, les autorités doivent donner aux
délinquants les motifs des décisions, ainsi que tous autres renseignements
pertinents, et la possibilité de les faire réviser.
|
Criteria for granting parole
102. The
Board or a provincial parole board may grant parole to an offender if, in its
opinion,
(a) the offender will not, by
reoffending, present an undue risk to society before the expiration according
to law of the sentence the offender is serving; and
(b) the release of the offender will
contribute to the protection of society by facilitating the reintegration of
the offender into society as a law-abiding citizen.
|
Critères
102. La
Commission et les commissions provinciales peuvent autoriser la libération
conditionnelle si elles sont d’avis qu’une récidive du délinquant avant
l’expiration légale de la peine qu’il purge ne présentera pas un risque
inacceptable pour la société et que cette libération contribuera à la
protection de celle-ci en favorisant sa réinsertion sociale en tant que
citoyen respectueux des lois.
|
Jurisdiction of Board
107. (1)
Subject to this Act, the Prisons and Reformatories Act, the International
Transfer of Offenders Act, the National Defence Act, the Crimes
Against Humanity and War Crimes Act and the Criminal Code, the
Board has exclusive jurisdiction and absolute discretion
(a) to grant parole to an
offender;
…
|
Compétence
107. (1) Sous
réserve de la présente loi, de la Loi sur les prisons et les maisons de
correction, de la Loi sur le transfèrement international des
délinquants, de la Loi sur la défense nationale, de la Loi sur
les crimes contre l’humanité et les crimes de guerre et du Code
criminel, la Commission a toute compétence et latitude pour :
a) accorder une
libération conditionnelle;
…
|
Appeal to Appeal
Division
|
Appel
auprès de la Section d’appel
|
Right of appeal
147. (1)
An offender may appeal a decision of the Board to the Appeal Division on the
ground that the Board, in making its decision,
(a) failed to observe a principle
of fundamental justice;
(b) made an error of law;
(c) breached or failed to apply a
policy adopted pursuant to subsection 151(2);
(d) based its decision on
erroneous or incomplete information; or
(e) acted without jurisdiction or
beyond its jurisdiction, or failed to exercise its jurisdiction.
|
Droit d’appel
147. (1) Le
délinquant visé par une décision de la Commission peut interjeter appel
auprès de la Section d’appel pour l’un ou plusieurs des motifs suivants :
a) la Commission
a violé un principe de justice fondamentale;
b) elle a commis
une erreur de droit en rendant sa décision;
c) elle a contrevenu
aux directives établies aux termes du paragraphe 151(2) ou ne les a pas
appliquées;
d) elle a fondé
sa décision sur des renseignements erronés ou incomplets;
e) elle a agi
sans compétence, outrepassé celle-ci ou omis de l’exercer.
|
IV.
Issues
[35]
The Court is of the view that this application
raises three (3) issues:
1.
Was the Board’s decision to deny the applicant
day parole and full parole reasonable?
2.
Does the Board’s decision infringe section 7 of
the Charter?
3.
Was the Appeal Division’s decision to uphold the
Board’s decision reasonable?
V.
Standard of review
[36]
Both parties submit and the Court agrees that,
while the decision under review is technically the decision of the Appeal
Division, the Court ultimately has to assess the Board’s decision (Cartier v
Canada (Attorney General), 2002 FCA 384 at para 10, [2002] FCJ No 1386 (QL)
[Cartier]; Scott v Canada (Attorney General), 2010 FC 496 at para
20, 35, [2010] FCJ No 595 (QL) [Scott]; Latimer v Canada (Attorney
General), 2010 FC 806 at paras 19-20, [2010] FCJ No 970 (QL)). If the
Board’s decision is found to be reasonable, the Appeal Division’s decision
affirming it will also be reasonable, absent any separate error on its part (Scott,
at para 35).
[37]
The parties also agree that the reasonableness
standard applies to questions of fact and questions of mixed fact and law (Dunsmuir
v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, at paras 53-54, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 [Dunsmuir];
Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, at
paras 44-46, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 339 [Khosa]).
[38]
Both parties submit that issues involving
alleged Charter violations are reviewable under the correctness standard
(Dunsmuir, above at para 55; and Khosa, above at para 44).
VI.
Arguments
A.
Applicant’s arguments
[39]
The applicant argues that the Board erred in law
and fettered its discretion in holding that a “gradual and structured release”
was a “requirement” or a pre-condition to the granting of parole. While being
desirable and part of the policy of the Board (PBC Policy Manual, Vol 1, no.29,
section 4.2, online: <http://www.pbc-clcc.gc.ca/infocntr/policym/polman-eng.shtml>),
a gradual and structural release is not a legal requirement. The Board is
authorized to adopt policies concerning conditional release, but the latter do
not have the status of delegated legislation and remain “soft law” (Latimer,
above at paras 42-48). By applying this policy preference as a rigid
requirement, the Board unlawfully fettered its discretion. Instead of examining
the abundant evidence showing that the applicant did not pose a genuine risk to
public safety, the Board focused on the requirement of gradual release that is
not part of the statutory scheme.
[40]
The applicant submits that the Board erred by
deferring to the CMT’s withdrawal of support for a transfer to a
minimum-security institution instead of undertaking its own risk analysis. The
Board accepted the recommendations made by CSC, through the applicant’s CMT,
when it should have made its own decision (Steele v Canada (Attorney General), 2012 FC 380 at para 14, [2012] FCJ No 535 (QL) [Steele])
and explained how a transfer to a minimum-security prison relates to the
management of the applicant’s perceived risk in the community. This error is
even more serious given that the CMT’s recommendations are based on outdated
psychological reports.
[41]
Third, the applicant contends that the Board
acted arbitrarily and contrary to section 7 of the Charter in concluding
that the applicant must be transferred to a minimum-security institution before
obtaining parole. Exercise of statutory discretion in an arbitrary manner
violates section 7 of the Charter (R v Gill, 2012 ONCA 607 at
para 64, [2012] OJ No 4332 (QL); (Chaoulli v Quebec (Attorney General),
2005 SCC 35 at para 130, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 791 [Chaoulli]; Sfetkopoulos
v Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FC 33 at para 11, [2008] FCJ No 6 (QL)).
[42]
The applicant alleges that his deportable status
bars him from any mean to attain a gradual and structured release. He cannot
participate in UTAs, work releases and day parole because he would be
automatically detained and deported to the UK. Moreover, even if ETAs are not
prohibited in his case, CSC has denied every attempt by the applicant to
participate in non-medical or non-compassionate ETAs based on his deportable
status (Collins Affidavit at paras 19-20, 41-65, 148-157), despite having
support in that regard (Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 72-79).
[43]
After originally not recommending the transfer
of the applicant to a minimum-security facility and suggesting participations
in ETAs, the Board changed his position and started to raise the possibility of
a transfer to a minimum- security prison (Applicant’s Record, Vol 2 at 329).
The applicant applied for voluntary transfer to minimum-security, but was
denied because of his “medium” Security Reclassification Scale (SRS) with a
score of 17.5, which indicates that a transfer is unlikely “without override”
from CSC (Applicant’s Record, Vol 2 at 337). The applicant notes that, at this
point, because of static factors due to his past actions, his SRS will never be
lower than 17.5, regardless of his recent and future behaviour. He will thus
never attain 17.0, which would allow him to be transferred to minimum-security facility
without the need of an “override” (Applicant’s Record, Vol 2 at 359). As a
result of these elements beyond the applicant’s control, his transfer to
minimum-security is completely dependant on CSC exercising its discretion to
override his SRS (Applicant’s Record, Vol 1 at 98-99). Because he was denied a transfer
to minimum-security several times over the recent years, despite having the
support of various members of CSC personnel, the applicant is concerned that CSC
will never use its discretion in his favour. The applicant describes his
situation as a “Catch-22”: no form of official conditional release in Canada is available to him in law, and their purported substitutes, such as ETAs and a
transfer to minimum-security, are unavailable to him in practice. This
“Catch-22” is arbitrary as it is the result of blind adherence to the policy of
gradual release and the practical unavailability of all alternatives to
traditional conditional release due to CSC’s own decisions (Applicant’s
Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 80-100).
[44]
Fifth, the applicant claims that the Board erred
in failing to take into account the fact that CSC has opposed his efforts to
pursue the gradual and structured release that it requires of him. By imposing
requirements but preventing the applicant from effectively seeking them, CSC’s
real purpose appears to be the prolongation of the applicant’s incarceration
(Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 101-121). CSC required the
applicant to demonstrate his ability to function in community, by working or
volunteering, yet it is fully aware that the applicant will never be able to
fulfil this requirement as he is ineligible to any form of conditional release
in Canada (Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 103-104). The
applicant also contends that, by recommending a gradual and structural release
while denying every demand made by the applicant to participate in ETAs, CSC
has been capricious (Applicant’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 105-101).
Moreover, the applicant submits that CSC is holding two (2) contradictory
positions: it states that a very gradual and structural release is required and
opposes on that basis full parole; at the same time, because the applicant is
deportable, it presents no actual plan for his gradual release and oppose any
application for ETAs or transfer to a minimum-security facility (Applicant’s
Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 112-116).
B.
Respondent’s arguments
[45]
First, the respondent submits that the Board
reasonably found that the applicant poses an undue risk.
[46]
The respondent argues that the applicant
mischaracterizes the Board’s reasoning by claiming that the Board held that a
gradual and structural release was a legal pre-condition for granting parole.
On the contrary, the Board conducted an appropriate analysis of the risk to
society posed by the applicant. The Board considered the seriousness of the
applicant’s offence, his background and prior violence, the progress he made in
programming and counselling, the psychological assessments, the applicant’s
release plan for the UK and the fact that he would be released without
mandatory supervision in the UK. The Board also discussed the applicant’s
submissions.
[47]
In addition, the Board considered the CMT’s
Assessment for Decision, issued on April 11, 2012 (Applicant’s Record, Vol 1 at
168-174) (Steele, above at para 14). In its assessment, the CMT
considered the applicant’s history, his risk of recidivism and the parole
officer’s observations and recommended that the applicant be transferred to a
minimum-security institution before he can apply for parole. The CMT’s
recommendation was mostly based on the fact that the applicant spent most of
his adult life in prison and would benefit from spending some time in the
community, as opposed to the restrictive environment of his present medium
security facility, before he is set free. After considering all this
information, the Board determined that, because he would be under no mandatory
supervision in the UK, the applicant poses a risk that is not undue. As a
result, the Board decided that the applicant needed to demonstrate that he can
integrate into a new environment and follow rules in a less restrictive
setting.
[48]
The respondent argues that the Board arrived to
its own conclusion and did not blindly follow the CMT’s recommendations. The
Board never suggested that a gradual and structured release was a requirement.
Rather, the Board found that, in the applicant’s specific case and taking all
the information into account, the Board might have been satisfied that the
applicant would not pose an undue risk to society if he had previously spent
time at a minimum-security prison. The respondent submits that it is not the
role of this Court on judicial review to reweigh the information before the
Board (Pimparé v Canada (Attorney General), 2012 FC 581 at para 33,
[2012] FCJ No 589 (QL) [Pimparé]).
[49]
Second, the respondent submits that the Board’s
decision does not infringe section 7 of the Charter. The respondent
further submits that a refusal to grant parole does not amount, in and of
itself, to a deprivation of a liberty interest protected by section 7 of the Charter.
Parole is merely a change in the form of a sentence and, as such, is a
privilege, not a right (Scott, above at paras 62-63; Pearce v Canada (Parole Board), 2012 FC 923 at para 39, [2012] FCJ No 1059 (QL)). Even if a
Board’s decision to deny parole was characterized as a deprivation of liberty
contrary to section 7 of the Charter, such a deprivation would not be
contrary to the principles of fundamental justice because it was necessary for
the protection of the public in accordance with section 102 of the CCRA
(Scott, above at 70).
[50]
The respondent contends that the mere suggestion
that a transfer to a minimum-security facility could satisfy the Board, that
the applicant does not pose an undue risk to society, suggests that parole is
not an impossibility. The respondent argues that the fact that ETAs were denied
to the applicant in the past and that CSC refused to transfer him to a
minimum-security prison does not mean that the same decisions will be made in
the future. As the situation of the applicant evolves and his risk of
recidivism lowers, CSC’s decisions might be different in the future. It is
worth noting that the CMT withdrew its support for a transfer only because the
applicant was named as a person of interest in an ongoing police investigation.
The Board did see this withdrawal as a temporary setback, and not a permanent
situation (Respondent’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 54-58).
[51]
The respondent adds that as long as an inmate’s
release poses an undue risk to society, his detention can justifiably be maintained
for a lifetime (Pimparé, above at 31). The applicant’s contention that
because he was denied ETAs and a transfer to minimum-security in the past and
should therefore be released without restriction to the UK is untenable (Respondent’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at paras 59-60)
[52]
Third, the respondent contends that the Board
does not have jurisdiction over CSC’s decisions (Respondent’s Memorandum of
Fact and Law at paras 62-66). Since the Board does not have jurisdiction over
CSC’s decisions regarding an inmate’s correctional plan (Collier v Canada
(Attorney General), 2006 FC 728, [2006] FCJ No 924 (QL) [Collier]),
any complaint the applicant might have should be addressed to the CSC through
the relevant grievance process (ASR v Canada (National Parole Board),
2002 FCT 741 at para 21, [2002] FCJ No 978 (QL)). The Board only had to
determine whether the applicant’s release would constitute an undue risk to
society, and not to conduct a grievance assessment or a judicial review of
CSC’s decisions.
[53]
Fourth, the respondent submits that the Appeal
Division’s decision was reasonable (Respondent’s Memorandum of Fact and Law at
paras 67-69). Since the Board’s decision was reasonable, the decision of the
Appeal Division affirming it should also be reasonable unless it committed a
separate error (Scott, above at para 35). As the applicant does not
allege any separate error by the Appeal Division, the Court should not
intervene in its decision.
VII.
Analysis
A.
Was the Board’s decision to deny the applicant
day and full parole reasonable?
[54]
In substance, the applicant makes three (3) main
submissions attacking the reasonableness of the Board’s decision. He first
claims that the Board unlawfully fettered its own discretion by reading in the
requirement of a gradual and structured release prior to granting parole.
Second, he submits that the Board did not conduct its own analysis of the
applicant’s situation and unduly deferred to the CSC’s recommendations. Third,
he argues that CSC deliberately prevented him from participating in any form of
gradual and structured release, which the Board considered as a requirement to
parole.
[55]
First, the Court agrees with the respondent that
the applicant mischaracterized the Board’s reasoning. While the Board’s use of
the word “requirement” to designate the “gradual and structured release” plan
(Applicant’s Record at 15) recommended by the CMT might not have been the most
fortunate, it is not fatal and nothing in its decision suggests that it
unlawfully fettered its discretion.
[56]
Section 102 of the Corrections and
Conditional Release Act provides the criteria for granting parole:
Criteria for granting parole
102. The
Board or a provincial parole board may grant parole to an offender if, in its
opinion,
(a) the offender will not, by
reoffending, present an undue risk to society before the expiration according
to law of the sentence the offender is serving; and
(b) the release of the offender
will contribute to the protection of society by facilitating the
reintegration of the offender into society as a law-abiding citizen.
|
Critères
102. La
Commission et les commissions provinciales peuvent autoriser la libération
conditionnelle si elles sont d’avis qu’une récidive du délinquant avant
l’expiration légale de la peine qu’il purge ne présentera pas un risque
inacceptable pour la société et que cette libération contribuera à la
protection de celle-ci en favorisant sa réinsertion sociale en tant que
citoyen respectueux des lois.
|
[57]
Paragraphs 101(a) and (c) of the Corrections
and Conditional Release Act provide that, while applying the criteria
above, the Board must take into consideration all relevant information and make
decisions that are consistent with the protection of society and are limited to
what is necessary and proportionate for the purposes of conditional release:
Principles guiding parole boards
101. The
principles that guide the Board and the provincial parole boards in achieving
the purpose of conditional release are as follows:
(a) parole boards take into
consideration all relevant available information, including the stated
reasons and recommendations of the sentencing judge, the nature and gravity
of the offence, the degree of responsibility of the offender, information
from the trial or sentencing process and information obtained from victims,
offenders and other components of the criminal justice system, including
assessments provided by correctional authorities;
…
(c) parole boards make decisions
that are consistent with the protection of society and that are limited to
only what is necessary and proportionate to the purpose of conditional
release;
…
|
Principes
101. La
Commission et les commissions provinciales sont guidées dans l’exécution de
leur mandat par les principes suivants :
a) elles doivent
tenir compte de toute l’information pertinente dont elles disposent,
notamment les motifs et les recommandations du juge qui a infligé la peine,
la nature et la gravité de l’infraction, le degré de responsabilité du
délinquant, les renseignements obtenus au cours du procès ou de la
détermination de la peine et ceux qui ont été obtenus des victimes, des
délinquants ou d’autres éléments du système de justice pénale, y compris les
évaluations fournies par les autorités correctionnelles;
[…]
c) elles
prennent les décisions qui, compte tenu de la protection de la société, ne
vont pas au-delà de ce qui est nécessaire et proportionnel aux objectifs de
la mise en liberté sous condition;
[…]
|
[58]
In its decision, the Board reviewed, among other
things, the circumstances of the murder, the applicant’s violent history, his
volunteering activities, the numerous psychological and risk assessments made
by the authorities and the recommendations of the CMT. The Board noted that the
risk to society posed by a release of the applicant, has slowly decreased over
time but it is such that full parole is not warranted at this point. While the
applicant contends that his risk to society is now low, he does not allege that
the Board made an error on this point. Since this is a highly factual determination
made by the Board in its area of expertise, the Court finds that this
conclusion should not be disturbed (Pimparé, above at para 33).
[59]
The Board noted that because of the applicant’s
deportable status, day parole would result in his deportation to the UK and unconditional release. And since other forms of gradual release such as UTAs are not
available to him, the only option that could render the applicant’s risk in the
community more manageable would be a transfer to a minimum-security prison. The
Board found that such a transfer would enable the applicant to demonstrate his
ability to follow rules in a less restrictive environment.
[60]
It is the Court’s view that the Board’s decision was
based on the CCRA criteria, namely the protection of the public by not
releasing the applicant while he still presents an undue risk and by
facilitating his reintegration to society. Throughout its decision, the Board
applied the CCRA principles by considering all available evidence and
striving to strike a balance between the paramount importance of protecting
society and making the least restrictive determination for the applicant. The
applicant failed to convince the Court that in doing so, the Board unlawfully
fettered its discretion in any way.
[61]
The Court is also of the view that the Board’s decision
was based on the relevant statutory criteria and principles, was well reasoned
and based on all the information that was before it. It gave weight to the
CMT’s withdrawal of support for the applicant’s transfer to a minimum-security
facility, but nevertheless conducted its own analysis of the issue before it,
which was whether or not to grant the applicant day or full parole. Both
options would, because of the applicant’s deportable status, result in his
deportation to the UK, where he would essentially be unconditionally released.
It found that such an outcome is not in the interest of society’s protection,
as his risk is not yet manageable in the community.
[62]
The Board discussed the possibility of a transfer to a minimum-security
facility, because it could demonstrate the applicant’s ability to function in a
community and follow rules in a less controlled setting, eventually alleviating
the remaining concerns regarding his risk to society. However, since the Board
does not have the power to order such a transfer, the CMT’s recommendation was,
in practice, determinative regarding the prospect of a transfer at the time of
the hearing. The Board’s decision to deny parole was ultimately based on its
assessment of the applicant’s risk. The Court therefore finds no merit to the
applicant’s second submission.
[63]
The applicant failed to convince the Court that it was
unreasonable for the Board to require a gradual and structured release while
failing to consider CSC’s deliberate attempts to block all means to attain such
a gradual release. Even if the record indicates that several applications for
ETAs and for transfers to minimum-security have been denied in the past,
nothing suggests that all future demands will have such a fate. Indeed, the
applicant’s CMT was initially open to a transfer – which is indicative of the
improving prospect for the applicant – but the CMT withdrew its support at the
last minute due to an ongoing significant criminal investigation. The CMT’s
last minute withdrawal translated into a genuine set-back for the applicant.
However peculiar or unfortunate it may have been for the applicant to become a
person of interest as part of a significant criminal investigation at the very
last stage of the process, this issue falls outside the scope of the present
application for judicial review (Collier, above at para 46).
B.
Did the Board’s decision infringe section 7 of
the Charter?
[64]
The Court has found that the Board did not
unlawfully fetter its discretion, reasonably applied the statutory criteria and
principles to the facts of this case and committed no reviewable error in its
handling of the evidence before it. Accordingly, in these circumstances, the
applicant’s argument that the Board’s decision is arbitrary and deprived him of
his liberty contrary to section 7 of the Charter is not convincing.
[65]
The Court agrees with the respondent that
denying parole is merely a modification of an existing sentence and does not
constitute, in and of itself, a deprivation of liberty guaranteed by the Charter
(Scott, above at para 70).
[66]
The Court cannot accept the applicant’s argument
that, because all his attempts to attain a gradual and structured release have
been denied so far and are likely to be denied in the future, he is deprived of
his right to liberty in violation of the Charter. It is trite law to
find that, should his unconditional release continue to threaten society, his
detention could be justifiably maintained for a lifetime (Pimparé, above
at 31). However, as mentioned above, the Court cannot accept the applicant’s
argument that he has no means to achieve the kind of incremental release that
would alleviate the remaining risk he poses to society. For instance, the
record suggests that, but for the ongoing police investigation, that the CMT
would not have opposed his transfer to minimum-security. The applicant’s
situation seems to be evolving positively. Nothing allows this Court to find,
at this juncture, that he will never be put in a less restrictive setting that
in turn might allow him to convince the Board that he does not present a risk
to public security.
C.
Was the Appeal Division’s decision to uphold the
Board’s decision reasonable?
[67]
The Court is satisfied that the Board, in
accordance with the relevant statutory criteria and principles, reasonably
denied the applicant day and full parole. The Court also concludes that the
Board’s decision does not infringe the Charter. Since the applicant did
not allege any separate error on the part of the Appeal Division, the Court’s
intervention in its decision is not warranted.
[68]
For all of these reasons, the application is
dismissed. The Court, in exercising its discretion, has decided that there will
be no costs awarded.