SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Minister of
Justice, Attorney General of Canada,
Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service
and Commissioner
of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Appellants
v.
Omar Ahmed Khadr
Respondent
‑ and ‑
British Columbia
Civil Liberties Association,
Criminal Lawyers’
Association (Ontario),
University of
Toronto, Faculty of Law ‑ International Human Rights Clinic
and Human Rights
Watch
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
Reasons for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 42 )
|
The Court
|
______________________________
Canada (Justice) v. Khadr, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 125, 2008 SCC 28
Minister of
Justice, Attorney General of Canada,
Minister of
Foreign Affairs, Director of the Canadian
Security
Intelligence Service and Commissioner of the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police Appellants
v.
Omar Ahmed Khadr Respondent
and
British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association, Criminal
Lawyers’
Association (Ontario), University of Toronto,
Faculty of
Law — International Human Rights Clinic and
Human Rights Watch Interveners
Indexed as: Canada (Justice) v. Khadr
Neutral citation: 2008 SCC 28.
File No.: 32147.
2008: March 26; 2008: May 23.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Application — Fundamental justice — Duty to disclose — Canadian officials
interviewing detainee in Guantanamo Bay and sharing contents of interviews with
U.S. authorities — Whether principles of international law and comity of
nations precluded application of Charter — Whether process in place at
Guantanamo Bay at that time violated Canada’s binding obligations under
international law — If so, whether detainee entitled to disclosure of records
of interviews and of information given to U.S. authorities as a direct
consequence of conducting interviews — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
s. 7 .
Evidence — Fresh evidence — Admissibility — Fresh
evidence admissible to clarify record — No unfairness to other parties in
admitting evidence.
K, a Canadian, has been detained by U.S. Forces since 2002
at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where he is currently facing murder and other
terrorism‑related charges. He was taken prisoner in Afghanistan when he
was 15 years old. In 2003, Canadian officials, including agents of the
Canadian Security Intelligence Service, questioned K at Guantanamo Bay with
respect to matters connected to the charges he is now facing, and shared the
product of these interviews with U.S. authorities. After formal charges were
laid against him, K, invoking Stinchcombe, sought disclosure in Canada
of all documents relevant to these charges in the possession of the Canadian
Crown, including the records of the interviews. The Federal Court refused the
request, but the Federal Court of Appeal set aside the decision and ordered
that unredacted copies of all relevant documents in the possession of the Crown
be produced before the Federal Court for review under ss. 38 ff. of the Canada
Evidence Act .
Held: The appeal should
be dismissed. The Federal Court of Appeal’s order should be varied as it
relates to the scope of disclosure to which K is entitled as a remedy under
s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
K is entitled to disclosure from the appellants of the
records of the interviews, and of information given to U.S. authorities as a
direct consequence of conducting the interviews. The principles of
international law and comity of nations, which normally require that Canadian
officials operating abroad comply with local law and which might otherwise
preclude application of the Charter to Canadian officials acting abroad,
do not extend to participation in processes that violate Canada’s binding
international human rights obligations. The process in place at Guantanamo Bay
at the time Canadian officials interviewed K and passed on the fruits of the
interviews to U.S. officials has been found by the U.S. Supreme Court, with the
benefit of a full factual record, to violate U.S. domestic law and
international human rights obligations to which Canada subscribes. The comity
concerns that would normally justify deference to foreign law do not apply in
this case. Consequently, the Charter applies. [2-3] [21] [25-26]
With K’s present and future liberty at stake, Canada is
bound by the principles of fundamental justice and is under a duty of
disclosure pursuant to s. 7 of the Charter . The content of this
duty is defined by the nature of Canada’s participation in the process that
violated its international human rights obligations. [3] [29-31]
In the present circumstances, this duty requires Canada
to disclose to K records of the interviews conducted by Canadian officials with
him, and information given to U.S. authorities as a direct consequence of
conducting the interviews, subject to claims for privilege and public interest
immunity. Since unredacted copies of all documents, records and other
materials in the appellants’ possession which might be relevant to the charges
against K have already been produced to a designated judge of the Federal
Court, the judge will now review the material, receive submissions from the
parties and decide which documents fall within the scope of the disclosure
obligation. [3] [39-40]
Cases Cited
Referred to: R. v.
Stinchcombe, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 326; Khadr v. Canada, [2006] 2 F.C.R.
505, 2005 FC 1076; R. v. Hape, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 292, 2007 SCC 26; Rasul
v. Bush, 542 U.S. 466 (2004); Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 126 S. Ct. 2749
(2006); Suresh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 1; United States v. Burns, [2001] 1 S.C.R.
283, 2001 SCC 7.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
10 U.S.C. § 836.
Canada Evidence Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑5, ss. 38 , 38.06 .
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 7 .
Geneva Conventions Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. G‑3 .
Treaties and Other International Instruments
Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the
Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the Field, 75 U.N.T.S. 31, Can. T.S. 1965 No. 20, p. 25.
Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the
Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea, 75 U.N.T.S. 85, Can. T.S. 1965 No. 20, p. 55.
Geneva Convention Relative to the Protection of
Civilian Persons in Time of War, 75 U.N.T.S. 287,
Can. T.S. 1965 No. 20, p. 163.
Geneva Convention Relative to the
Treatment of Prisoners of War, 75 U.N.T.S. 135,
Can. T.S. 1965 No. 20, p. 84.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal
(Desjardins, Létourneau and Ryer JJ.A.), [2008] 1 F.C.R. 270, 280 D.L.R.
(4th) 469, 362 N.R. 378, 220 C.C.C. (3d) 20, 47 C.R. (6th) 399, 156 C.R.R. (2d)
220, [2007] F.C.J. No. 672 (QL), 2007 CarswellNat 1132, 2007 FCA 182,
amended June 19, 2007, reversing a decision of von Finckenstein J. (2006),
290 F.T.R. 313, [2006] F.C.J. No. 640 (QL), 2006 CarswellNat 1090, 2006 FC
509. Appeal dismissed.
Robert J. Frater,
Sharlene Telles‑Langdon and Doreen Mueller, for the
appellants.
Nathan J. Whitling
and Dennis Edney, for the respondent.
Joseph J. Arvay,
Q.C., Sujit Choudhry and Paul Champ, for the intervener
the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.
John Norris and Brydie C.
M. Bethell, for the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario).
Audrey Macklin, Tom A.
Friedland and Gerald Chan, for the interveners the University of
Toronto, Faculty of Law — International Human Rights Clinic and Human Rights
Watch.
The following is the judgment delivered by
[1]
The Court — This appeal raises the issue of the relationship between Canada’s
domestic and international human rights commitments. Omar Khadr
currently faces prosecution on murder and other charges before a U.S. Military
Commission in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Mr. Khadr asks for an order under s. 7 of
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that the appellants be
required to disclose to him all documents relevant to these charges in the
possession of the Canadian Crown, including interviews conducted by Canadian
officials with him in 2003 at Guantanamo Bay. The Minister of Justice opposes
the request, arguing that the Charter does not apply outside Canada and
hence did not govern the actions of Canadian officials at Guantanamo Bay.
[2]
We conclude that Mr. Khadr is entitled to disclosure from the
appellants of the records of the interviews and of information given to U.S.
authorities as a direct consequence of conducting the interviews. The
principles of international law and comity of nations, which normally require
that Canadian officials operating abroad comply with local law, do not extend
to participation in processes that violate Canada’s international human rights
obligations.
[3]
The process in place at the time Canadian officials interviewed
Mr. Khadr and passed the fruits of the interviews on to U.S. officials has been
found by the United States Supreme Court to violate U.S. domestic law and
international human rights obligations to which Canada is party. In light of
these decisions by the United States Supreme Court that the process at
Guantanamo Bay did not comply with either U.S. domestic or international law,
the comity concerns that would normally justify deference to foreign law do not
apply in this case. Consequently, the Charter applies, and Canada is
under a s. 7 duty of disclosure. The content of this duty is defined by the
nature of Canada’s participation in the process that violated Canada’s
international human rights obligations. In the present circumstances, this duty
requires Canada to disclose to Mr. Khadr records of the interviews conducted by
Canadian officials with him, and information given to U.S. authorities as a
direct consequence of conducting the interviews, subject to claims for
privilege and public interest immunity.
[4]
We thus uphold the Federal Court of Appeal’s conclusion that Mr.
Khadr is entitled to a remedy under s. 7 of the Charter . However,
because we reach this conclusion on different grounds than those relied on by
the Court of Appeal, we vary the Court of Appeal’s order as it relates to the
scope of disclosure to which Mr. Khadr is entitled as remedy. Like the Court of
Appeal, we make this order subject to the balancing of national security and
other considerations as required by ss. 38 ff. of the Canada Evidence Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. C-5 .
1. Factual Background
[5]
Omar Khadr is a Canadian citizen who has been detained by U.S.
forces at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for almost six years. Mr. Khadr was taken
prisoner on July 27, 2002 in Afghanistan, as part of military action taken
against Taliban and Al Qaeda forces after the September 11, 2001 attacks in New
York City and Washington. He was 15 years old at the time. The United States
alleges that near the end of the battle at which he was taken prisoner, Mr.
Khadr threw a grenade which killed an American soldier. The United States also
alleges that Mr. Khadr conspired with members of Al Qaeda to commit acts of
murder and terrorism against U.S. and coalition forces. Mr. Khadr is currently
facing charges relating to these allegations, which are being tried by a U.S.
Military Commission at Guantanamo Bay.
[6]
The Guantanamo Bay detention camp was established by Presidential
Military Order in 2001 (66 FR 57833) for the detention and prosecution of
non-U.S. citizens believed to be members of Al Qaeda or otherwise involved in
international terrorism. The Order conferred exclusive jurisdiction upon
military commissions for the trial of “any and all offences triable by military
commission”, and stipulated pursuant to 10 U.S.C. § 836 that applying
normal rules of criminal procedure to such trials “is not practicable”. The
Order further provided that an individual subject to the order “shall not be
privileged to seek any remedy or maintain any proceeding . . . or to have any
such remedy or proceeding sought on the individual’s behalf, in (i) any court
of the United States, or any State thereof, (ii) any court of any foreign
nation, or (iii) any international tribunal”. Subsequent orders purported to
remove protections of the Geneva Conventions of 1949
(75 U.N.T.S. 31, 85, 135 and 287) and established procedural rules for the
military commissions that departed from normal rules of criminal procedure as
to the type of evidence that may be admitted, the right to counsel and
disclosure of the case to meet, and judicial independence.
[7]
On several occasions, including in February and September of
2003, Canadian officials, including agents of the Canadian Security
Intelligence Service (CSIS), attended at Guantanamo Bay and interviewed Mr.
Khadr for intelligence and law enforcement purposes. The CSIS agents
questioned Mr. Khadr with respect to matters connected to the charges he is now
facing, and shared the product of these interviews with U.S. authorities.
[8]
After formal charges were laid against Mr. Khadr in November
2005, he sought disclosure of all documents relevant to these charges in the
possession of the Canadian Crown, including the records of the interviews,
invoking R. v. Stinchcombe, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 326.
The appellants formally refused Mr. Khadr’s request in January 2006. Mr. Khadr
then applied for an order of mandamus in the Federal Court, which was
dismissed, per von Finckenstein J. ((2006), 290 F.T.R. 313, 2006 FC
509). The Federal Court of Appeal allowed Mr. Khadr’s appeal ([2008] 1 F.C.R.
270, 2007 FCA 182), and ordered that unredacted copies of all relevant
documents in the possession of the Crown be produced before the Federal Court
for review under ss. 38 ff. of the Canada Evidence Act . The Minister of
Justice now appeals to this Court, asking that the order of the Federal Court
of Appeal be set aside.
2. The Fresh
Evidence Applications
[9]
Mr. Khadr has filed two applications to admit fresh evidence
before this Court. We deal with the applications to admit fresh evidence at
the outset.
[10]
The first application concerns primarily evidence that is part of
a related proceeding brought by Mr. Khadr in the Federal Court (file T-536-04),
in which Mr. Khadr is seeking a remedy for alleged violations of his Charter
rights at Guantanamo Bay. This evidence relates primarily to the general
situation at Guantanamo Bay, Mr. Khadr’s particular circumstances, and Canadian
participation in interviewing Mr. Khadr at Guantanamo Bay. It includes
affidavits filed as part of that proceeding from Canadian officials at CSIS and
the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, and from Muneer
Ahmad, who was counsel for Mr. Khadr in habeas corpus proceedings taking
place in the United States. The record includes the exhibits that were attached
to these affidavits.
[11]
Also included in the first application is an affidavit from Lt.
Cdr. William Kuebler, Mr. Khadr’s defence counsel in the military commission
proceedings, updating the Court on developments in relevant U.S. law.
[12]
The second application relates to an additional affidavit from
Lt. Cdr. Kuebler, as well as exhibits filed under seal with the consent of the
U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Detainee Affairs.
[13]
The appellants’ primary argument against admitting the fresh
evidence is that the evidence from the related proceeding was filed as part of
an interlocutory motion in which the appellants chose not to lead certain
evidence in response: Khadr v. Canada, [2006] 2 F.C.R. 505, 2005 FC
1076. The appellants maintain that the nature of the evidence they led was
tailored to the specific context of that motion and that this evidence should
not be imported into the different context of this proceeding. Furthermore, the
T-536-04 proceeding has not yet gone to trial, and so the appellants have not
yet had an opportunity to present a complete evidentiary record. The appellants
argue that it would be unfair to admit the fresh evidence, because, the
appellants allege, they were not given an adequate opportunity to respond to
it.
[14]
We find that the fresh evidence is admissible. The fresh evidence
amplifies and significantly clarifies the record as it relates to Canadian
officials’ interviews with Mr. Khadr and Canada’s participation in handing over
the products of these interviews to U.S. authorities. As the
basic facts are not contested, the appellants are not disadvantaged by the
admission of the material.
3. The Application for Disclosure
(i) Does the Charter Apply?
[15]
As discussed, CSIS, a Canadian government organization,
interviewed Mr. Khadr at his prison in Guantanamo Bay and shared the contents
of these interviews with U.S. authorities. Mr. Khadr seeks an order that the
appellants be required to disclose to him all documents in the possession of
the Canadian Crown relevant to the charges he is facing, for the purpose of his
defence.
[16]
Had the interviews and process been in Canada, Mr. Khadr would
have been entitled to full disclosure under the principles in Stinchcombe,
which held that persons whose liberty is at risk as a result of being
charged with a criminal offence are entitled to disclosure of the information
in the hands of the Crown under s. 7 of the Charter . The Federal Court
of Appeal applied Stinchcombe to Mr. Khadr’s situation and ordered
disclosure.
[17]
The government argues that this constituted an error, because the
Charter does not apply to the conduct of Canadian agents operating
outside Canada. It relies on R. v. Hape, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 292, 2007 SCC 26,
where a majority of this Court held that Canadian agents participating in an
investigation into money laundering in the Carribean were not bound by Charter
constraints in the manner in which the investigation was conducted. This
conclusion was based on international law principles against extraterritorial
enforcement of domestic laws and the principle of comity which implies
acceptance of foreign laws and procedures when Canadian officials are operating
abroad.
[18]
In Hape, however, the Court stated an important exception
to the principle of comity. While not unanimous on all the principles
governing extraterritorial application of the Charter , the Court was
united on the principle that comity cannot be used to justify Canadian
participation in activities of a foreign state or its agents that are contrary
to Canada’s international obligations. It was held that the deference required
by the principle of comity “ends where clear violations of international law
and fundamental human rights begin” (Hape, at para. 52, per LeBel
J.; see also paras. 51 and 101). The Court further held that in interpreting
the scope and application of the Charter , the courts should seek to
ensure compliance with Canada’s binding obligations under international law
(para. 56, per LeBel J.).
[19]
If the Guantanamo Bay process under which Mr. Khadr was being
held was in conformity with Canada’s international obligations, the Charter
has no application and Mr. Khadr’s application for disclosure cannot succeed: Hape.
However, if Canada was participating in a process that was violative of
Canada’s binding obligations under international law, the Charter
applies to the extent of that participation.
[20]
At this point, the question becomes whether the process at
Guantanamo Bay at the time that CSIS handed the products of its interviews over
to U.S. officials was a process that violated Canada’s binding obligations
under international law.
[21]
Issues may arise about whether it is appropriate for a Canadian
court to pronounce on the legality of the process at Guantanamo Bay under
which Mr. Khadr was held at the time that Canadian officials participated in
that process. We need not resolve those issues in this case. The United States
Supreme Court has considered the legality of the conditions under which the
Guantanamo detainees were detained and liable to prosecution during the time
Canadian officials interviewed Mr. Khadr and gave the information to U.S.
authorities, between 2002 and 2004. With the benefit of a full factual record,
the United States Supreme Court held that the detainees had illegally been
denied access to habeas corpus and that the procedures under which they
were to be prosecuted violated the Geneva Conventions. Those holdings
are based on principles consistent with the Charter and Canada’s
international law obligations. In the present appeal, this is sufficient to
establish violations of these international law obligations, to which Canada
subscribes.
[22]
In Rasul v. Bush, 542 U.S. 466 (2004), the United States
Supreme Court held that detainees at Guantanamo Bay who, like Mr. Khadr, were
not U.S. citizens, could challenge the legality of their detention by way of
the statutory right of habeas corpus provided for in 28 U.S.C.
§ 2241. This holding necessarily implies that the order
under which the detainees had previously been denied the right to challenge
their detention was illegal. In his concurring reasons, Kennedy J. noted that
“the detainees at Guantanamo Bay are being held indefinitely, and without
benefit of any legal proceeding to determine their status” (pp. 487-88). Mr.
Khadr was detained at Guantanamo Bay during the time covered by the Rasul
decision, and Canadian officials interviewed him and passed on information to
U.S. authorities during that time.
[23]
At the time he was interviewed by CSIS officials, Mr. Khadr also
faced the possibility of trial by military commission pursuant to Military
Commission Order No. 1. In Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, 126 S. Ct. 2749
(2006), the United States Supreme Court considered the legality of this Order.
The court held that by significantly departing from established military
justice procedure without a showing of military exigency, the procedural rules
for military commissions violated both the Uniform Code of Military Justice (10
U.S.C. § 836) and Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.
Different members of the majority of the United States Supreme Court focused on
different deviations from the Geneva Conventions and the Uniform Code of
Military Justice. But the majority was unanimous in holding that, in the
circumstances, the deviations were sufficiently significant to deprive the
military commissions of the status of “a regularly constituted court, affording
all the judicial guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized
peoples”, as required by Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.
[24]
The violations of human rights identified by the
United States Supreme Court are sufficient to permit us to conclude that the
regime providing for the detention and trial of Mr. Khadr at the time of the
CSIS interviews constituted a clear violation of fundamental human rights
protected by international law.
[25]
Canada is a signatory of the four Geneva Conventions of
1949, which it ratified in 1965 (Can. T.S. 1965 No. 20) and has incorporated
into Canadian law with the Geneva Conventions Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. G-3 .
The right to challenge the legality of detention by habeas corpus is a
fundamental right protected both by the Charter and by international
treaties. It follows that participation in the Guantanamo Bay process which
violates these international instruments would be contrary to Canada’s binding
international obligations.
[26]
We conclude that the principles of international law and comity
that might otherwise preclude application of the Charter to Canadian
officials acting abroad do not apply to the assistance they gave to U.S.
authorities at Guantanamo Bay. Given the holdings of the United States Supreme
Court, the Hape comity concerns that would ordinarily justify deference
to foreign law have no application here. The effect of the United States
Supreme Court’s holdings is that the conditions under which Mr. Khadr was held
and was liable for prosecution were illegal under both U.S. and international
law at the time Canadian officials interviewed Mr. Khadr and gave the
information to U.S. authorities. Hence no question of deference to foreign law
arises. The Charter bound Canada to the extent that the conduct of
Canadian officials involved it in a process that violated Canada’s
international obligations.
(ii) Participation
in the Process
[27]
By making the product of its interviews of Mr. Khadr available to
U.S. authorities, Canada participated in a process that was contrary to
Canada’s international human rights obligations. Merely conducting interviews
with a Canadian citizen held abroad under a violative process may not
constitute participation in that process. Indeed, it may often be essential
that Canadian officials interview citizens being held by violative regimes to
provide assistance to them. Nor is it necessary to conclude that handing over
the fruits of the interviews in this case to U.S. officials constituted a
breach of Mr. Khadr’s s. 7 rights. It suffices to note that at the time Canada
handed over the fruits of the interviews to U.S. officials, it was bound by the
Charter , because at that point it became a participant in a process that
violated Canada’s international obligations.
(iii) Implications
of Participation in the Process
[28]
Having concluded that the Charter applied to Canadian
officials when they participated in the Guantanamo Bay process by handing over
the fruits of its interviews with Mr. Khadr, the next question concerns what
obligations, if any, this entails.
[29]
With Mr. Khadr’s present and future liberty at
stake, s. 7 of the Charter required that CSIS conduct itself in
conformity with the principles of fundamental justice. The principles of
fundamental justice are informed by Canada’s international human rights
obligations: Suresh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, 2002 SCC 1, at para. 60; United States v. Burns,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 283, 2001 SCC 7, at paras. 82-92; Hape, at paras. 55-56.
[30]
In the domestic context, the principles of
fundamental justice impose a duty on the prosecuting Crown to provide disclosure
of relevant information in its possession to the accused whose liberty is in
jeopardy: Stinchcombe. In a domestic prosecution, the Crown has put the
accused’s liberty at risk, which engages s. 7 of the Charter and the
attendant duty of disclosure.
[31]
To the extent that Canadian officials operating
abroad are bound by s. 7 of the Charter , as we have earlier concluded
was the case in this appeal, they are bound by the principles of fundamental
justice in an analogous way. Where, as in this case, an individual’s s. 7
right to liberty is engaged by Canada’s participation in a foreign process that
is contrary to Canada’s international human rights obligations, s. 7 of the Charter
imposes a duty on Canada to provide disclosure to the individual. Thus, s.
7 imposes a duty on Canada to provide disclosure of materials in its possession
arising from its participation in the foreign process that is contrary to
international law and jeopardizes the liberty of a Canadian citizen.
[32]
It is not necessary to define for all fact
situations the scope of the duty of disclosure, when the Charter is
engaged by the actions of Canadian officials abroad, but it may differ from the
scope of the duty of disclosure in a domestic criminal prosecution. In this case,
although Canada participated in the U.S. process by giving the product of its
interviews with Mr. Khadr to U.S. authorities, it did not by virtue of that
action step into the shoes of the U.S. prosecutors. The scope of the disclosure
obligation in this context is defined by the nature of Canada’s participation
in the foreign process. The crux of that participation was providing
information to U.S. authorities in relation to a process which is contrary to
Canada’s international human rights obligations. Thus, the scope of the
disclosure obligation must be related to the information provided to U.S.
authorities.
[33]
As noted at the outset, the appellants formally refused Mr.
Khadr’s request for disclosure in January 2006. This refusal of disclosure has
put the appellants in breach of s. 7 of the Charter and entitles Mr.
Khadr to a remedy.
[34]
Canada has an obligation under s. 7 to provide disclosure to Mr.
Khadr to mitigate the effect of Canada’s participation by passing on the
product of the interviews to U.S. authorities. It is not clear from the record
before this Court if all portions of all of the interviews were given to U.S.
authorities. If Mr. Khadr is given only partial disclosure of the interviews
on the ground that only parts of the interviews were shared with U.S.
authorities, it may be impossible for him to evaluate the significance of the
parts of the interviews that are disclosed to him. For example, by analogy
with Stinchcombe, disclosure of an inculpatory statement shared with the
U.S. authorities might require disclosure of an exculpatory statement not
shared to permit Mr. Khadr to know his jeopardy and prepare his defence. It
would seem to follow that fairness requires disclosure of all records in any
form of the interviews themselves — whether or not passed on to U.S.
authorities — including any transcripts, recordings or summaries in Canada’s
possession. For similar reasons, it would seem to follow that Mr. Khadr is
entitled to disclosure of information given to U.S. authorities as a direct
consequence of Canada’s having interviewed him.
[35]
In making these observations, we are acutely aware that the
record before us is incomplete. As this Court does not have the information
given to U.S. authorities before it, we are unable to assess precisely what
information is so connected to the shared information that it in fairness must
be disclosed to Mr. Khadr. The designated judge of the Federal Court who hears
the application under s. 38 of the Canada Evidence Act may be expected
to have a fuller picture of what was shared with the U.S. authorities and what
other material, if any, should be disclosed, bearing in mind the reasons of
this Court and the principles enunciated in Stinchcombe. The ultimate
process against Mr. Khadr may be beyond Canada’s jurisdiction and control.
However, to the extent that Canada has participated in that process, it has a
constitutional duty to disclose information obtained by that participation to a
Canadian citizen whose liberty is at stake.
[36]
The Minister of Justice has argued that Mr. Khadr’s right to
disclosure is confined to disclosure from the U.S. authorities who are
prosecuting him. We disagree. The remedy of disclosure being granted to Mr.
Khadr is for breach of a constitutional duty that arose when Canadian agents
became participants in a process that violates Canada’s international
obligations. Whether or not he is given similar disclosure by U.S. officials,
he is entitled to a remedy for the Canadian government’s failure to provide
disclosure to him after having given U.S. authorities access to the product of
the interviews, in circumstances that engaged s. 7 of the Charter .
4. Conclusion
[37]
In reaching its conclusions on disclosure, the Federal Court of
Appeal held that the Stinchcombe disclosure regime should apply, and
consequently held that the scope of disclosure extended to all materials in the
Crown’s possession which might be relevant to the charges against the
appellant, subject to ss. 38 ff. of the Canada Evidence Act . Our
holding is not based on applying Stinchcombe directly to these facts.
Rather, as described above, the s. 7 duty of disclosure to Mr. Khadr is
triggered on the facts of this case by Canadian officials’ giving U.S.
authorities access to interviews conducted at Guantanamo Bay with Mr. Khadr.
As a result, the disclosure order we make is different in scope than the order
of the Federal Court of Appeal. The appellants must disclose (i) all records
in any form of the interviews conducted by Canadian officials with Mr. Khadr,
and (ii) records of any information given to U.S. authorities as a direct
consequence of Canada’s having interviewed him. This
disclosure is subject to the balancing of national security and other
considerations as required by ss. 38 ff. of the Canada Evidence Act .
[38]
As noted above, it is not possible on the record
before this Court to determine what specific records should be disclosed to Mr.
Khadr. In order to assess what specific documents must be disclosed as falling
within the group of documents described in para. 37, a designated judge of the
Federal Court must review the documents. The designated judge will also
consider any privilege or public interest immunity claim that is raised,
including any claim under ss. 38 ff. of the Canada Evidence Act .
[39]
The Federal Court of Appeal ordered that the appellants produce
unredacted copies of all documents, records and other materials in their
possession which might be relevant to the charges against Mr. Khadr to a
designated judge of the Federal Court. In view of the fact that production has
already been made pursuant to the Court of Appeal’s order and this Court’s
order of January 23, 2008, we see no reason to interfere with this order.
[40]
The designated judge will review the material
and receive submissions from the parties, and decide which documents fall
within the categories set out in para. 37 above. In particular, the designated
judge will determine which records fall within the scope of the disclosure
obligation as being (i) records of the interviews conducted by Canadian
officials with Mr. Khadr, or (ii) records of information given to U.S.
authorities as a direct consequence of Canada’s having interviewed Mr. Khadr.
[41]
Pursuant to s. 38.06 of the Canada Evidence Act , the
designated judge will then consider whether disclosure of the records described
in (i) and (ii) to Mr. Khadr would be injurious to international relations or
national defence or national security, and whether the public interest in
disclosure outweighs in importance the public interest in non-disclosure. The designated judge will decide whether to authorize the disclosure
of all the information, a part or summary of the information, or a written
admission of facts relating to the information, subject to any conditions that
the judge considers appropriate. We note that this review is currently ongoing
pursuant to this Court’s order of January 23, 2008.
[42]
Subject to these variations, we would dismiss
the appeal with costs in this Court, and issue an order directing that:
(a) the Minister of
Justice and Attorney General of Canada, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the
Director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and the Commissioner of
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police produce to a “judge” as defined in s. 38 of
the Canada Evidence Act unredacted copies of all documents, records and
other materials in their possession which might be relevant to the charges
against Mr. Khadr;
and
(b) the “judge” as
defined in s. 38 of the Canada Evidence Act shall consider any privilege
or public interest immunity claim that is raised, including any claim under ss.
38 ff. of the Act, and make an order for disclosure in accordance with these
reasons.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellants: Attorney
General of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the respondent: Parlee
McLaws, Edmonton.
Solicitors for the intervener the British Columbia
Civil Liberties Association: Arvay Finlay, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’
Association (Ontario): Ruby & Edwardh, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the University of
Toronto, Faculty of Law — International Human Rights Clinic and Human Rights
Watch: Goodmans, Toronto.