SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation: United States of
America v. Ferras; United States of America v. Latty, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 77, 2006 SCC 33
|
Date: 20060721
Docket: 30211,
30295
|
Between:
Shane Tyrone Ferras
Appellant
and
United
States of America, Her Majesty the Queen
and
Irwin Cotler, Minister of Justice
Respondents
and between:
Leroy Latty
and Lynval Wright
Appellants
and
United
States of America, Minister of Justice and
Attorney
General of Canada
Respondents
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Major,* Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella
and Charron JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 94)
|
McLachlin C.J. (Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps,
Fish, Abella and Charron JJ. concurring)
|
* Major J. took no part in the judgment.
______________________________
United States of America v. Ferras; United States of America v.
Latty, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 77, 2006 SCC 33
Shane Tyrone Ferras Appellant
v.
United States of America, Her Majesty The Queen
and Irwin Cotler, Minister of Justice Respondents
- and -
Leroy Latty and Lynval Wright Appellants
v.
United States of America, Minister of Justice and
Attorney General of Canada Respondents
Indexed as: United States of America v. Ferras;
United States of America v. Latty
Neutral citation: 2006 SCC 33.
File Nos.: 30211, 30295.
2005: October 17; 2006: July 21.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Constitutional law — Charter of
Rights — Liberty and security of person — Fundamental
justice — Extradition — Committal
hearings — Whether provisions of extradition legislation relating to
evidence at committal hearing infringe principles of fundamental justice
applicable to extradition — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
s. 7 — Extradition Act, S.C. 1999, c. 18,
ss. 29(1) , 32(1) (a), (b), 33 .
Extradition — Committal
hearings — Evidence — Powers of extradition
judge — Whether extradition judge can weigh evidence and refuse to
extradite if evidence unreliable or unavailable for trial — Sufficiency
of evidence for extradition purposes — Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, s. 7 — Extradition Act, S.C. 1999, c. 18,
s. 29(1) .
Constitutional law — Charter of
Rights — Mobility — Right to remain in
Canada — Extradition — Whether provisions of extradition
legislation relating to evidence at committal hearing infringe right of
Canadian citizens to remain in Canada — Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms, s. 6 — Extradition Act, S.C. 1999,
c. 18, ss. 32(1) (a), 33(3) .
Constitutional law — Charter of
Rights — Fundamental
justice — Extradition — Whether surrender of accused to US,
where they could receive sentences of 10 years to life without parole if
convicted, “shocks conscience” of Canadians — Whether Minister of
Justice’s refusal to seek assurances for enhanced credit for time served in pre‑trial
custody offends fundamental justice — Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, s. 7 .
The US sought the extradition of the accused under the
“record of the case” method provided for in ss. 32(1) (a)
and 33 of the Extradition Act . The records of the case submitted
at their committal hearings consist of unsworn statements from law enforcement
agents summarizing the evidence expected to be presented at each trial.
The US certified that the evidence is available for trial and is sufficient to
justify prosecution under the law of the US. The accused alleged that
ss. 32(1) (a) and 33 infringe s. 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms because they allow for the possibility that
a person might be extradited on inherently unreliable evidence. In both cases,
the extradition judges rejected the constitutional objection and committed the
accused for extradition. The Court of Appeal upheld the decisions.
Held: The
appeals should be dismissed and the accused should be committed to extradition.
The provisions of the Extradition Act governing
the admission of evidence at a committal hearing are consistent with the
guarantee in s. 7 of the Charter that no one may be deprived of
liberty except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
Section 7 does not guarantee a particular type of process for all
situations where a person’s liberty is affected; it guarantees a fair process,
having regard to the nature of the proceedings. The principles of
fundamental justice applicable to an extradition hearing require that the
person sought for extradition receive a meaningful judicial determination of
whether the case for extradition prescribed in s. 29(1) of the Act has
been established — that is, whether there is sufficient evidence to
permit a properly instructed jury to convict. This requires a meaningful
judicial hearing before an independent, impartial judge and a judicial decision
based on an assessment of the evidence and the law. A person cannot be
extradited upon demand, suspicion or surmise. Here, the Extradition Act
offers two protections to the person whose liberty is at
risk: first, admissibility provisions aimed at establishing threshold
reliability; and second, a requirement that the judge determine the
sufficiency of the evidence to establish the legal requirement for
extradition. These dual protections, considered together, offer a fair process
that conforms to the fundamental principles of
justice. [1] [14] [17] [26] [34]
Under s. 29(1), the extradition judge is required
to determine what evidence is admissible under the Act, and whether the
admissible evidence is sufficient to justify committal. The inquiry into
admissibility of the evidence depends on the nature of the evidence. Under the
record of the case method, the inquiry is whether the certification
requirements of the Act have been met. Under the treaty method, the inquiry is
whether the evidence meets the requirements of the relevant extradition
treaty. The inquiry into the sufficiency of the evidence involves an
evaluation of whether the conduct described by the admissible evidence would
justify committal for trial in Canada. While pre‑Charter jurisprudence
held that an extradition judge may not refuse to order extradition where there
is some evidence of every element of the parallel Canadian crime, even if the
judge believes that the evidence from the foreign state is unreliable or
otherwise inadequate, a fair extradition hearing that accords with the Charter
requires that the extradition judge must be able to decline to commit on
evidence that is unavailable for trial or manifestly unreliable.
Section 29(1) can be interpreted in such a way that the extradition judge
may provide the factual assessment and judicial process necessary to conform to
the Charter . Section 29(1) requires the extradition judge to
assess whether the admissible evidence shows the justice or rightness of
committing a person to extradition. The evidence must be demonstrably able to
be used by a reasonable, properly instructed jury to reach a verdict of guilty
such that a case could go to trial in Canada. Because the requirements for
committal of s. 29(1) grant the extradition judge a discretion to refuse
to extradite on insufficient evidence, such as where the reliability of
evidence is successfully impeached or where it is not shown that the evidence
is available for trial, ss. 32(1) (a) and (b) and 33
of the Extradition Act do not violate s. 7 of the Charter . [36‑46] [49‑50]
Due to the principles of comity between Canada and the
requesting state, certification under the record of the case method raises a
presumption that the evidence is reliable. Pursuant to s. 32(1) (c),
the person sought for extradition may challenge the sufficiency of the case.
An extradition judge must look at the whole of the evidence and, if it fails to
disclose a case on which a jury could convict or it is so defective that it
would be dangerous or unsafe to convict, the test for committal is not met.
Under the treaty method, showing that the evidence actually exists and is
available for trial is fundamental to extradition. The judge cannot commit for
extradition under s. 29(1) unless a prima facie case has been made
out that evidence exists upon which the person may be tried. Accordingly,
where, as in the companion appeals of Ortega and Fiessel, the
requesting state does not certify or otherwise make out a prima facie
case that the evidence is available for trial, the case for committal is
incomplete and should be dismissed. If the evidence is certified as available,
that certification results in a presumption of availability for trial, and the
person sought for extradition could challenge the presumption. Lastly, since
the extradition judge has the discretion to give no weight to unavailable or
unreliable evidence when determining whether committal is justified under
s. 29(1), the person sought for extradition need not seek a remedy under
s. 24(2) of the Charter . However, evidence may be excluded under
s. 24(2) for reasons other than the availability and reliability concerns
addressed by s. 29(1) . [52-60]
The accused were properly committed for extradition.
The records submitted by the US against the accused contained sufficient
admissible evidence that a reasonable jury, properly instructed, could convict
had the conduct occurred in Canada. The certifications by the US in compliance
with s. 33(3) make the records presumptively reliable and no evidence
discloses any reason to rebut the presumption of reliability. With respect to
the surrender to the US, the possibility that two of the accused would receive
sentences of 10 years to life without parole in the US does not shock the
conscience of Canadians, nor does the Minister of Justice’s refusal to seek
assurances concerning enhanced credit for pre‑sentence
custody. [69-70] [75-79] [87] [90]
Section 6(1) of the Charter is not engaged
at the committal stage of the extradition process, only at the surrender
stage. Since the Minister is not required to base a surrender decision on
evidence submitted at the committal hearing, s. 6(1) cannot be infringed
by ss. 32(1)(a) and 33(3) of the Act. [82‑83]
Cases Cited
Modified: United States of America v. Shephard,
[1977] 2 S.C.R. 1067; referred to: United
Mexican States v. Ortega, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 120, 2006 SCC 34, rev’g
(2005), 253 D.L.R. (4th) 237, 2005 BCCA 270; United
States of America v. Yang (2001), 56 O.R. (3d) 52; Idziak
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [1992] 3 S.C.R. 631; R.
v. Rodgers, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 554, 2006 SCC 15; Canada
v. Schmidt, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 500; Kindler v. Canada
(Minister of Justice), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 779; Glucksman v.
Henkel, 221 U.S. 508 (1911); Application under
s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re),
[2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42; Bonham’s Case
(1610), 8 Co. Rep. 113b, 77 E.R. 646; Valente v.
The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 673; Wewaykum Indian Band v.
Canada, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 259, 2003 SCC 45; Baker
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 817; McVey (Re),
[1992] 3 S.C.R. 475; R. v. Arcuri,
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 828, 2001 SCC 54; United States of
America v. Cobb, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 587, 2001 SCC 19;
United States of America v. Kwok, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 532,
2001 SCC 18; United States of America v. Shulman,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 616, 2001 SCC 21; Perka v. The
Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 232; R. v. L. (D.O.),
[1993] 4 S.C.R. 419; United States of America v. Cotroni,
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 1469; United States v. Burns,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 283, 2001 SCC 7; R. v. Wust,
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 455, 2000 SCC 18; United States of
America v. Adam (2003), 174 C.C.C. (3d) 445.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
18 U.S.C. § 3585(b).
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 6 , 7 ,
24 .
Constitution
Act, 1982, s. 52 .
Extradition Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E‑23, s. 13.
Extradition Act, S.C. 1999, c. 18,
ss. 24(2) , 29(1) , 32 , 33 .
Magna Carta (1215), clause 39.
Treaties and Other International Instruments
Extradition Treaty between
Canada and the United States of America,
Can. T.S. 1976 No. 3, art. 10.
Second Protocol amending the
Treaty on Extradition between the Government of Canada and the Government of
the United States of America, Can. T.S. 2003
No. 11.
Treaty of Extradition between
the Government of Canada and the Government of the United Mexican States, Can. T.S. 1990 No. 35, art. VIII.
Authors Cited
Botting, Gary.
Extradition Between Canada and the United States. Ardsley,
N.Y.: Transnational, 2005.
Concise Oxford Dictionary of
Current English, 9th ed.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995, “justify”.
La Forest, Anne Warner.
“The Balance Between Liberty and Comity in the Evidentiary Requirements
Applicable to Extradition Proceedings” (2002), 28 Queen’s L.J. 95.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(Feldman and Sharpe JJ.A. and McCombs J. (ad hoc)) (2004),
237 D.L.R. (4th) 645, 184 O.A.C. 306,
183 C.C.C. (3d) 119, 117 C.R.R. (2d) 183,
[2004] O.J. No. 1089 (QL), affirming an order of committal
and an order of surrender. Appeal dismissed.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(Feldman and Sharpe JJ.A. and McCombs J. (ad hoc)) (2004),
237 D.L.R. (4th) 652, 185 O.A.C. 1,
183 C.C.C. (3d) 126, 116 C.R.R. (2d) 368,
[2004] O.J. No. 1076 (QL), affirming an order of committal
and an order of surrender. Appeal dismissed.
Brian H. Greenspan, for the appellant Ferras.
Edward L. Greenspan, Q.C., and Vanessa V. Christie, for the
appellants Latty and Wright.
Robert J. Frater and Janet Henchey, for the respondents.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
The Chief Justice —
1. Introduction
1
These appeals (the “Ferras appeals”), together with the
appeals by Ortega, Shull, Shull and Fiessel (United
Mexican States v. Ortega, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 120, 2006 SCC 34 (the “Ortega appeals”)),
raise the question of whether the provisions of the Extradition Act, S.C.
1999, c. 18 , for the admission of evidence on a hearing for committal for
extradition violate the guarantee in s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms that no one may be deprived of liberty except in accordance
with the principles of fundamental justice. I conclude that, properly
construed, the provisions of the Act are constitutional and that these
appeals should be dismissed.
2
The appellants in the Ferras appeals have been ordered extradited
to the United States to face charges relating to either alleged frauds (Ferras)
or trafficking in cocaine (Latty and Wright). The extradition proceedings
against them were brought by the “record of the case” method under ss. 32(1) (a)
and 33 of the Extradition Act . The appellants in the Ortega
appeals, by contrast, were ordered extradited for alleged fraud offences under
the “treaty” method provided for in s. 32(1)(b) of the Act, Ortega to
Mexico and the Shulls and Fiessel to the United States.
3
The appellants in the Ferras appeals argue that the record of the
case method does not pass constitutional muster because it allows for the
possibility that a person might be extradited on inherently unreliable
evidence. More specifically, they argue that the “safeguards” in s. 33 of the
Act are inadequate to ensure threshold reliability of evidence in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice as stipulated by s. 7 of
the Charter .
4
The appellants in the Ortega appeals argue that the treaty
method does not pass constitutional muster because it does not contain even the
safeguards of the “record of the case” method, in particular a requirement that
the requesting state certify that the evidence is available for trial.
5
In the Ferras appeals, the extradition judges and the Ontario
Court of Appeal ((2004), 237 D.L.R. (4th) 645 and (2004), 237 D.L.R. (4th) 652)
rejected constitutional objections to ss. 32(1) (a), 32(1) (c) and
33 of the Extradition Act , relying on previous decisions, most notably United
States of America v. Yang (2001), 56 O.R. (3d) 52 (C.A.). In the Ortega
appeals, the extradition judge presiding over Ortega’s committal hearing
accepted his constitutional objection to s. 32(1) (b) and Article
VIII(1)(b)(iii) of the Treaty of Extradition between the Government of
Canada and the Government of the United Mexican States, Can. T.S. 1990 No.
35 ((2004), 237 D.L.R. (4th) 281, 2004 BCSC 210). The extradition judge
presiding over Fiessel and the Shulls’ committal hearings applied the decision
in Ortega to exclude evidence submitted by the United States ([2004]
B.C.J. No. 1434 (QL), 2004 BCSC 908). These decisions were reversed by the
British Columbia Court of Appeal, Donald J.A. dissenting ((2005), 253 D.L.R.
(4th) 237, 2005 BCCA 270). The appellants in both sets of cases have appealed
to this Court, contending that the courts of appeal below erred in rejecting
their constitutional challenges to ss. 32(1) (a), 32(1) (b) and 33 .
2. Analysis
2.1 The
Issue
6
The Extradition Act (Appendix A) provides a two-stage process for
extradition of a person to face charges in a foreign country. We are not here
concerned with extradition to serve a foreign sentence.
7
At the first stage, an extradition judge must examine the request
for extradition and supporting material to determine whether sufficient
evidence exists to justify committal for trial in Canada. If the extradition
judge finds that this test is met, the case moves to the second stage, where
the Minister, in the exercise of his or her discretion, decides whether to
order extradition (see Idziak v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [1992] 3
S.C.R. 631). The first stage is judicial, the second executive. These cases
concern the first, the judicial, stage of the process.
8
Section 29(1) (a) of the Extradition Act provides
that a “judge shall order the committal of the person into custody to await
surrender if ... there is evidence admissible under this Act of conduct that,
had it occurred in Canada, would justify committal for trial in Canada”.
9
The extradition judge’s role and the test for committal have been
described in a variety of ways, including a “prima facie” case, a
“sufficient” case, a “good” case, an “adequate” case, a case providing
“reasonable grounds” for extradition, and a case “justifying” extradition.
But the basic premise has remained constant. A judge cannot order extradition
unless there is evidence of conduct that would justify committal for trial in
Canada. In United States of America v. Shephard, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 1067,
this Court said the test for committal for extradition is the same as that
employed by a trial judge in deciding whether to withdraw a case from the jury
— “whether or not there is any evidence upon which a reasonable jury properly
instructed could return a verdict of guilty” (p. 1080). If such evidence is
shown, the person sought can be extradited to face prosecution elsewhere. If
not, the judge must refuse extradition.
10
The appellants acknowledge this fundamental safeguard. However, they
argue that it is undermined by the Extradition Act ’s provisions for the
admission of evidence on the record of the case and treaty methods, which in
their view may require the extradition judge to order committal for extradition
on the basis of unreliable or unavailable material. The appellants in the Ferras
appeals emphasize the lack of guarantees of reliability in the record of the
case method prescribed by s. 32(1) (a). The appellants in the Ortega
appeals focus on the lack of an assurance that the evidence will be available
for trial under the treaty method prescribed by s. 32(1)(b) of the Act.
11
The argument of the appellants may be summarized as follows. Section 7
of the Charter guarantees the “life, liberty and security of the person”
of every individual, and the right not to be deprived of them “except in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice”. Extradition to face
charges in another country constitutes a denial of liberty and security of the
person. Therefore a person cannot be extradited except in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice. It is a fundamental principle of justice,
they say, that judges must proceed on reliable and available evidence. They
say the record of the case and treaty methods of adducing evidence before the
extradition judge do not meet this requirement, and therefore violate s. 7 of
the Charter . This violation, they argue, is not saved by s. 1 of the Charter
because it is not “demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society”.
12
The Crown accepts that extradition constitutes a serious denial of
liberty and security of the person. A person is taken from Canada and forcibly
removed to another country to stand trial according to that other country’s
rules. It follows that the principles of fundamental justice must be
respected. The Crown takes issue, however, with the assertion that the
principles of fundamental justice require that the extradition judge proceed on
reliable evidence that is proven to be available for trial. The Crown also
suggests that the claims of unreliability and unavailability are overblown and
do not reflect the reality of extradition practice.
13
These arguments, at first glance, suggest that the basic issue that
divides the parties is whether it is a principle of fundamental justice that
only reliable evidence that is available for trial be placed before the
extradition judge. However, the matter is more complex.
14
Section 7 of the Charter does not guarantee a particular type of
process for all situations where a person’s liberty is affected: R. v.
Rodgers, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 554, 2006 SCC 15, at para. 47. It guarantees a
fair process, having regard to the nature of the proceedings at issue. It
follows that the evidentiary provisions of the Extradition Act cannot be
considered in isolation but must be viewed in the context of the provisions for
extradition as a whole. It also follows that the rules of evidence applicable
to a criminal trial in Canada do not necessarily apply to the extradition
process.
15
Thus, the real issue is whether the provisions of the Extradition Act ,
for the admission of evidence, render the extradition process unfair when
considered together with the other provisions of the Act and the nature of
extradition proceedings. In other words, do these provisions raise a real risk
that a person may be committed for extradition where the evidence does not
establish conduct which, had it occurred in Canada, would justify committal for
trial: s. 29(1) ?
2.2 Reliability:
a Two-Stage Concern
16
This inquiry into the justification for committal raises two evidentiary
concerns: the admissibility of evidence, and the evaluation of evidence to
determine whether it establishes the case for committal. Theoretically, these
are discrete steps, although in practice the extradition judge may consider
them simultaneously. The theoretical distinction becomes important in this
case because the appellants’ complaints are grounded in the admissibility
of evidence, while the answer to their complaints is found in a judge’s
assessment of the sufficiency of evidence to justify committal.
17
In short, the Extradition Act offers two protections to the
person whose liberty is at risk: first, admissibility provisions aimed at
establishing threshold reliability; and second, a requirement that the judge
determine the sufficiency of the evidence to establish the legal requirement
for extradition. The question is whether these dual protections, considered
together, offer a fair process that conforms to the fundamental principles of
justice.
18
This brings us to the main inquiry: what constitutes fair process in
the extradition context? Or to put it another way, what are the principles of
fundamental justice for extradition?
2.3 Fair
Judicial Process in the Extradition Context
19
Extradition law requires that the “basic demands of justice” be
observed: Canada v. Schmidt, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 500, at p. 523. The
true principle that emerges from the history of extradition and the test for
committal is that a person is not to be extradited without a fair process,
having regard to the history, purposes and policies that underlie extradition:
see Kindler v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 779, at p.
848. Fair process in this context means the requesting state must establish
that there are reasonable grounds to conclude that the person sought may have
committed the offence. As stated in Glucksman v. Henkel, 221
U.S. 508 (1911), at p. 512:
For while of course a man is not to be sent from the country merely
upon demand or surmise, yet if there is presented, even in somewhat untechnical
form according to our ideas, such reasonable ground to suppose him guilty as to
make it proper that he should be tried, good faith to the demanding government
requires his surrender.
Here we find
the basic requirements of justice in the extradition context. A person cannot
be sent from the country on mere demand or surmise. The case for extradition
need not be presented in a particular technical form. But it must be shown
that there are reasonable grounds to send the person to trial. A prima
facie case for conviction must be established through a meaningful judicial
process. It is an ancient and venerable principle that no person shall lose
his or her liberty without due process according to the law, which must involve
a meaningful judicial process. The idea is as old as the Magna Carta (1215),
Clause 39 of which provided: “No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or
stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of
his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or
send others to do so, except by the lawful judgement of his equals, or by the
law of the land.”
20
It follows that before a person can be extradited, there must be a
judicial determination that the requesting state has established a prima
facie case that the person sought committed the crime alleged and should
stand trial for it.
21
These propositions capture not only the history of extradition, but its
dual purposes. The first purpose is to foster efficient extradition
where such a case is made out, in accordance with Canada’s international
obligations. This requires a flexible, non-technical approach. The second
purpose is to protect an individual in Canada from deportation in the absence
of at least a prima facie case that he or she committed the offence
alleged, which must also be an offence in Canada: Schmidt. The
two purposes are complementary. International comity does not require the
extradition of a person on demand or surmise. Nor does basic fairness to the
person sought for extradition require all the procedural safeguards of a trial,
provided the material establishes a case sufficient to put the person on
trial.
22
The meaningful judicial process just described involves three related
requirements: a separate and independent judicial phase; an impartial judge or
magistrate; and a fair and meaningful hearing.
23
The need for a separate and independent judicial phase recognizes that
extradition involves both executive and judicial acts. The judicial aspect of
the process provides a check against state excess by protecting the integrity
of the proceedings and the interests of the “named person” in relation to the
state process (see Application under s. 83.28 of the
Criminal Code (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, 2004 SCC 42, discussing the need
for a separate and independent judicial role in relation to investigative
procedures under the Anti-terrorism Act, S.C. 2001, c. 41 , which
permits compelled statements for investigative purposes under judicial
supervision). The judicial and ministerial phases prescribed by the Extradition
Act reflect this requirement. However, as emphasized in Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re), the judicial phase must be
independent both in appearance and in substance. This is also essential for
extradition. The judicial phase must not play a supportive or subservient role
to the executive. It must provide real protection against extradition in the
absence of an adequate case against the person sought.
24
The need for an independent judicial hearing incorporates the right to
have one’s case heard by a neutral magistrate — a right first articulated by
Sir Edward Coke, one of England’s most famous lawyers and judges, in Bonham’s
Case (1610), 8 Co. Rep. 113b, 77 E.R. 646, at pp. 657-58. Section 7 of the
Charter , almost four centuries later, incorporates that principle in
stipulating the right not to be deprived of liberty except in accordance with
the principles of fundamental justice. A neutral magistrate is an independent
and impartial magistrate (see Valente v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 673,
at p. 685, per Le Dain J.). The essence of impartiality “lies in the
requirement of [a] judge to approach [a] case to be adjudicated with an open
mind” (see Wewaykum Indian Band v. Canada, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 259,
2003 SCC 45, at para. 58).
25
An independent judicial phase and an impartial judge are elements of the
third and ultimate right — the right to a “hearing”. The right to a hearing
engages procedural guarantees appropriate to the context: see Baker v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817.
Substantially, it entails, at a minimum, a meaningful judicial assessment of
the case on the basis of the evidence and the law. A judge
considers the respective rights of the litigants or parties and makes findings
of fact on the basis of evidence and applies the law to those findings. Both
facts and law must be considered for a true adjudication. Since Bonham’s
Case, the essence of a judicial hearing has been the treatment of facts
revealed by the evidence in consideration of the substantive rights of the
parties as set down by law. It follows that the extradition judge must
judicially consider the facts and the law and be satisfied that they justify
committal before ordering extradition. The judge must act as a judge, not a
rubber stamp.
26
I conclude that the principles of fundamental justice applicable to an
extradition hearing require that the person sought for extradition must receive
a meaningful judicial determination of whether the case for extradition prescribed
by s. 29(1) of the Extradition Act has been established — that is,
whether there is sufficient evidence to permit a properly instructed jury to
convict. This requires an independent judicial phase, an independent and
impartial judge and a judicial decision based on an assessment of the evidence
and the law.
2.4 Do the Provisions of the Extradition Act
Comply With the Principles of Fundamental Justice?
27
The question is whether s. 32(1) (a) and (b) and s. 33 of
the Extradition Act , which permit the extradition judge to act on the
record of the case or evidence adduced pursuant to a treaty, violate the
appellants’ constitutional right to a fair judicial hearing when considered
together with the judge’s duty to determine the case for extradition under s.
29(1) .
28
The Act provides that evidence is admissible if it is either properly
certified pursuant to s. 33(3) in the case of proceedings on the record of the
case or in accordance with the treaty in proceedings under the treaty method of
submitting evidence. The evidence may be hearsay, and under the treaties at
issue in the Ortega appeals, the evidence need not include certification
that it is available for trial.
29
The Act recognizes the requirement that evidence put before the
extradition judge must possess indicia of threshold reliability. The former
Act required either that the evidentiary provisions of the relevant extradition
treaty be followed or, in the absence of provisions in a treaty, that the
requesting country attest to the reliability and availability of its evidence
by affidavits based on first-hand knowledge. The current Act grounds threshold
reliability in conformity to treaty, or alternatively, certification by the
requesting state that the evidence either justifies prosecution in the
requesting state or was gathered according to the law of that state: s. 33(3) (a).
30
“Certification” means the requesting state provides its good word that
the evidence meets the requirements set out in s. 33(3) . The Act requires
that certifications under the record of the case method be made by “a judicial
or prosecuting authority of the extradition partner” (s. 33(3) (a)).
Under the treaty method of seeking extradition, admissibility of evidence is
subject to extradition agreements, which also often provide indicia of
reliability through some form of certification. The treaties here at issue do
in fact provide for the admission of evidence pursuant to a certificate (see
Appendix B).
31
The requesting state’s certificate is intended to provide a threshold
indicator of reliability by reference to the requesting state’s standards. If
the requesting state permits prosecution on evidence that would be considered
unreliable in Canada, or if it does not but nevertheless permits gathering of
unreliable evidence, the evidence is admissible in Canada on the extradition
hearing. This deferral to the processes and rules of the requesting state is
said to be justified by the principle of comity and the ability of Canada to
determine who it will accept as extradition partners.
32
While certification may provide a general indication of reliability,
given Canada’s reliance on the good faith and diligence of its extradition
partners, it only indicates that the rules in the requesting state have been
complied with, and does not preclude the possibility of error or
falsification. Moreover, in the case of extradition under the treaties at
issue in the Ortega appeals, there is no requirement even to certify the
availability of the evidence for trial.
33
The absence of particular indicia of reliability or availability of
evidence in itself does not violate the principles of fundamental justice
applicable to extradition hearings. No particular form or quality of evidence
is required for extradition, which has historically proceeded flexibly and in a
spirit of respect and comity for extradition partners. It is thus difficult to
contend that the provisions of the Act for the admissibility of evidence, in
and of themselves, violate the fundamental norms of justice applicable to
extradition.
34
What fundamental justice does require is that the person sought for
extradition be accorded an independent and impartial judicial determination on
the facts and evidence on the ultimate question of whether there is sufficient
evidence to establish the case for extradition. This basic requirement must
always be respected; a person cannot be extradited upon demand, suspicion or
surmise: Glucksman. If the combined provisions of the Act reduce
the judicial function to “rubber stamping” the submission of the foreign state
and forwarding it to the Minister for committal, then s. 7 is violated.
35
The Extradition Act states:
29. (1) A judge shall order the committal of the
person into custody to await surrender if
(a) in the case of a person sought for prosecution, there is evidence
admissible under this Act of conduct that, had it occurred in Canada, would
justify committal for trial in Canada on the offence set out in the
authority to proceed and the judge is satisfied that the person is the person
sought by the extradition partner;
36
As noted above, this requires the judge to determine two matters: (1)
what evidence is admissible under the Act; (2) whether the admissible evidence
is sufficient to justify committal.
37
The inquiry into admissibility of the evidence depends on the nature of
the evidence. In the Ferras appeals, the question is whether the
“record of the case” meets the certification requirements of s. 33 . If so, it
is admissible. In the Ortega appeals, the inquiry is whether the
evidence meets the requirements of the treaties. Again, if so, it is
admissible. The Act is silent on whether the judge has a residual discretion
to exclude evidence that is unreliable or dangerous.
38
The inquiry into sufficiency of the evidence to commit for extradition
involves an evaluation of whether the conduct described by the admissible
evidence would justify committal for trial in Canada: s. 29(1) . Evidence that
would justify committal in Canada requires at least some evidence on every
element of the parallel Canadian crime — the double criminality requirement.
The judge’s inquiry is focused on “conduct” — whether the acts disclosed in the
admissible evidence are criminal in Canada (see McVey (Re), [1992] 3
S.C.R. 475, at p. 526).
39
On current jurisprudence, both inquiries appear to leave little or no
room for the judge to evaluate the evidence from the foreign state and decline
to extradite if the judge finds it unreliable or otherwise inadequate. This was
the view taken by the majority of this Court in Shephard. At issue was
whether an extradition judge could refuse to order committal for extradition
where there was some evidence on every element of the offence, but the judge
was nevertheless of the view that the evidence was so weak that reasonable
grounds for extradition had not been made out and that it would be dangerous to
commit for extradition. Ritchie J., for a five to four majority, stated that
whether evidence is “manifestly unreliable” is not the test for removing
evidence from a jury (p. 1087). Rejecting the test of the extradition judge
and the dissenting minority, the majority in Shephard held that an extradition
judge has no discretion to reject evidence on the ground that it is so dubious
as to be dangerous and must commit if there is any evidence on all the
necessary elements of the offence. Shephard was decided before the Charter .
It has never been overruled or altered, except to permit a judge to
engage in limited weighing of circumstantial evidence to ensure that inferences
from the evidence are reasonably supportable to establish some evidence on all
the required elements of the offence (see R. v. Arcuri, [2001] 2 S.C.R.
828, 2001 SCC 54).
40
On this view of the law, the combined effect of the relevant provisions
(ss. 29, 32 and 33 of the Act) may be to deprive the person sought of
the independent hearing and evaluation required by the principles of
fundamental justice applicable to extradition. If the extradition judge
possesses neither the ability to declare unreliable evidence inadmissible nor
to weigh and consider the sufficiency of the evidence, committal for
extradition could occur in circumstances where committal for trial in Canada
would not be justified. I take as axiomatic that a person could not be
committed for trial for an offence in Canada if the evidence is so manifestly
unreliable that it would be unsafe to rest a verdict upon it. It follows that
if a judge on an extradition hearing concludes that the evidence is manifestly
unreliable, the judge should not order extradition under s. 29(1) . Yet, under
the current state of the law in Shephard, it appears that the judge is denied
this possibility. Similarly, I take it as axiomatic that a person could not be
committed to trial for an offence in Canada if the evidence put against the
person is not available for trial. As Donald J.A., dissenting in Ortega
stated, at para. 51:
If evidence is not available for trial it should not be used as a basis
for committal. The concern goes well beyond modalities and rules of evidence,
it goes to the heart of the question for the judge: whether there is enough
evidence to put the requested person on trial.
Yet on the
majority view in Shephard, committal may be ordered in the absence of
certification that the evidence is available for trial. This raises particular
concerns in an extradition context because the committal becomes the final
judicial determination that sends the subject out of the country.
41
This raises the possibility that, notwithstanding the efforts of
Parliament and the Executive to provide guarantees of reliability in the Extradition
Act and the treaties Canada enters into with other states, cases may arise
where a judge would have no choice but to commit a person for extradition
notwithstanding the judge’s conclusion that it is dangerous or unreasonable to
commit on the evidence adduced. Indeed, Shephard was just such a case.
The combination of the ruling in Shephard that the judge possesses no
residual discretion to decline to commit on dubious, yet admissible, evidence
and the evidentiary provisions of the 1999 Extradition Act , which
effectively removed much of an extradition judge’s former discretion to not admit
evidence, have led commentators to state that extradition judges have nothing
left to do: see A. W. La Forest, “The Balance Between Liberty and Comity in the
Evidentiary Requirements Applicable to Extradition Proceedings” (2002), 28 Queen’s
L.J. 95, at p. 172; and G. Botting, Extradition Between Canada and the
United States (2005), at p. 8. The judge becomes a rubber stamp. As we
have seen, this violates the principles of fundamental justice applicable to
extradition hearings and hence violates s. 7 of the Charter . For a
person sought to receive a fair extradition hearing, the extradition judge must
be able to evaluate the evidence, including its reliability, to determine
whether the evidence establishes a sufficient case to commit.
42
This Court has repeatedly confirmed that extradition hearings are
subject to the Charter and that an extradition judge — unlike a
preliminary inquiry judge — has jurisdiction to apply the Charter and to
grant Charter remedies relevant to the committal stage of extradition
(see United States of America v. Cobb, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 587, 2001 SCC 19;
United States of America v. Kwok, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 532, 2001 SCC 18, and United
States of America v. Shulman, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 616, 2001 SCC 21). So, the
next question is whether the provisions of the Extradition Act allow an
interpretation that avoids an unconstitutional result, in so far as
this is possible. If s. 29(1) can be interpreted in a way that allows the
extradition judge to weigh the evidence and refuse to extradite if the case as
a whole is insufficient, then that interpretation should be adopted. If it
cannot, then the Act is inconsistent with the Charter and is void to the
extent of that inconsistency under s. 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982 .
43
As discussed above, admissible evidence alone cannot be sufficient to
justify committal in the extradition context. Admissibility is only one part
of determining whether evidence exists upon which a reasonable jury, properly
instructed, could return a verdict of guilty. Justifying a committal depends
on a combination of admissibility, double criminality, basic fairness and
constitutional guarantees that, together, inform an extradition judge about
whether to order committal. Most fundamentally, it depends on a judicial
process conducted by a judge who has the discretion to refuse to commit the
subject for extradition on insufficient evidence.
44
In my view, the provisions of the 1999 Act can be read to accommodate
these requirements — requirements inherent in the right to a hearing by a
neutral magistrate. Section 29(1) of the Act requires the extradition judge to
determine whether evidence would “justify committal” for trial. This may be
read as permitting the extradition judge to provide the factual assessment and
judicial process necessary to conform to the Charter .
45
To “justify” something means to show the justice or rightness of that
thing: Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English (9th ed. 1995), at
p. 737. In criminal or tort law, a “justification” describes “actions we
consider rightful, not wrongful” because they were taken in circumstances that
reveal their rightness, for example, “[t]he police officer who shoots the
hostage-taker, the innocent object of an assault who use[d] force to defend
himself against his assailant, the Good Samaritan who commandeers a car and
breaks the speed laws to rush an accident victim to the hospital ...” (Perka
v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 232, at p. 246).
46
Section 29(1)’s direction to an extradition judge to determine whether
there is admissible evidence that would “justify committal” requires a judge to
assess whether admissible evidence shows the justice or rightness in
committing a person for extradition. It is not enough for evidence to merely
exist on each element of the crime. The evidence must be demonstrably able to
be used by a reasonable, properly instructed jury to reach a verdict of
guilty. If the evidence is incapable of demonstrating this sufficiency for committal,
then it cannot “justify committal”. The evidence need not convince an
extradition judge that a person sought is guilty of the alleged crimes. That
assessment remains for the trial court in the foreign state. However, it must
establish a case that could go to trial in Canada. This may require the
extradition judge to engage in limited weighing of the evidence to determine,
not ultimate guilt, but sufficiency of evidence for committal to trial.
47
Section 29(1) of the Extradition Act , as discussed, requires the
extradition judge to be satisfied that the evidence would justify committal for
trial in Canada, had the offence occurred here. Canadian courts in recent
decades have adopted the practice of leaving a case or defence to the jury
where there is any evidence to support it, and have discouraged trial judges
from weighing the evidence and refusing to put a matter to the jury on the
basis that the evidence is not sufficiently reliable or persuasive: see Arcuri,
at para. 30; and R. v. L. (D.O.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 419, at pp.
454-55. This may explain the conclusion in Shephard that the
extradition judge has no discretion to refuse to extradite if there is any
evidence, however scant or suspect, supporting each of the elements of the offence
alleged. This narrow approach to judicial discretion should not be applied in
extradition matters, in my opinion. The decision to remove a trial judge’s
discretion reflects confidence that, given the strict rules of admissibility of
evidence on criminal trials, a properly instructed jury is capable of
performing the task of assessing the reliability of the evidence and weighing
its sufficiency without the assistance of the judge. The accused is not denied
the protection of the trier of fact reviewing and weighing the evidence. The
effect of applying this test in extradition proceedings, by contrast, is to
deprive the subject of any review of the reliability or sufficiency of the
evidence. Put another way, the limited judicial discretion to keep evidence
from a Canadian jury does not have the same negative constitutional
implications as the removal of an extradition judge’s discretion to decline to
commit for extradition. In the latter case, removal of the discretion may
deprive the subject of his or her constitutional right to a meaningful judicial
determination before the subject is sent out of the country and loses
his or her liberty.
48
It is important as well to note the differences between extradition
hearings and domestic preliminary inquiries. Both are pre-trial screening
devices and both use the same test of sufficiency of evidence for committal:
whether evidence exists upon which a reasonable jury, properly instructed,
could return a verdict of guilty: Shephard. Previously, the Extradition
Act cemented the analogy between the two proceedings by directing that an
extradition judge “hear the case, in the same manner, as nearly as may be, as
if the fugitive was brought before a justice of the peace, charged with an
indictable offence committed in Canada”: Extradition Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. E-23, s. 13. The new Act, however, does not maintain this close parallel in
proceedings. Section 24(2) of the Act states: “For the purposes of the
hearing, the judge has, subject to this Act, the powers of a justice under Part
XVIII of the Criminal Code , with any modifications that the
circumstances require.” This grants the extradition judge the same powers as a
preliminary inquiry judge, but requires the judge to exercise those powers in a
manner appropriate to the extradition context. The judge no longer follows “as
nearly as may be” the procedure of a preliminary inquiry. A second difference
comes from the different rules for admitting evidence. Evidence is admitted on
a preliminary inquiry according to domestic rules of evidence, with all the
inherent guarantees of threshold reliability that those rules entail. In
contrast, evidence adduced on extradition may lack the threshold guarantees of
reliability afforded by Canadian rules of evidence. A third difference comes
from the ability of extradition judges to grant Charter remedies. These
differences make it inappropriate to equate the task of the extradition judge
with the task of a judge on a preliminary inquiry.
49
I conclude that to deny an extradition judge’s discretion to refuse
committal for reasons of insufficient evidence would violate a person’s right
to a judicial hearing by an independent and impartial magistrate — a right
implicit in s. 7 of the Charter where liberty is at stake. It would
deprive the judge of the power to conduct an independent and impartial judicial
review of the facts in relation to the law, destroy the judicial nature of the
hearing, and turn the extradition judge into an administrative arm of the
executive. The process of assessing whether all the boxes are ticked and then
ordering committal is not an adjudication, but merely a formal validation. In
so far as the majority view in the pre-Charter case of Shephard
suggests a contrary view, it should be modified to conform to the requirements
of the Charter .
50
I conclude that s. 32(1)(a) and (b) and s. 33 of the 1999
Act do not violate the right of a person sought under s. 7 of the Charter ,
because the requirements for committal of s. 29(1) , properly construed,
grant the extradition judge discretion to refuse to extradite on insufficient
evidence such as where the reliability of the evidence certified is
successfully impeached or where there is no evidence, by certification or
otherwise, that the evidence is available for trial.
2.5 Evaluating
the Sufficiency of Evidence — Procedural Issues
51
Having described the proper role of the extradition judge under s. 29(1)
of the Extradition Act , I turn to the more concrete procedural
question of how the judge should discharge this role where the case for
extradition consists of a record or summary certified by the requesting state.
Specifically, I use the examples from the cases at bar: how and when do
concerns about reliability or availability of evidence render evidence
insufficient for the purposes of committal?
52
Certification of evidence as set out in s. 33(3) (a) raises a
presumption that the evidence in a record of the case is reliable. This
follows from the principles of comity between Canada and the requesting state.
Certification, as discussed above, is the indicium of reliability that
Parliament has prescribed for evidence in these circumstances. Unless
challenged, certification establishes reliability.
53
The person sought for extradition may challenge the sufficiency of the
case including the reliability of certified evidence. Section 32(1)(c)
of the Act permits the person sought to submit evidence “if the judge considers
it reliable”. This does not require an actual determination that the evidence
presented by the person sought is in fact reliable. The issue is threshold
reliability. In other words, the question is whether the evidence tendered possesses
sufficient indicia of reliability to make it worth consideration by the judge
at the hearing. Once it is admitted, its reliability for the purposes of
extradition is determined in light of all the evidence presented at the
hearing. When viewed in this way, s. 32(1) (c) in effect presents no
greater evidentiary hurdle to the person sought than s. 32(1) (a) or (b)
presents to the requesting state.
54
Challenging the justification for committal may involve adducing
evidence or making arguments on whether the evidence could be believed by a
reasonable jury. Where such evidence is adduced or such arguments are raised,
an extradition judge may engage in a limited weighing of evidence to determine
whether there is a plausible case. The ultimate assessment of reliability is
still left for the trial where guilt and innocence are at issue. However, the
extradition judge looks at the whole of the evidence presented at the
extradition hearing and determines whether it discloses a case on which a jury
could convict. If the evidence is so defective or appears so unreliable that
the judge concludes it would be dangerous or unsafe to convict, then the case
should not go to a jury and is therefore not sufficient to meet the test for
committal.
55
The absence of certification that evidence is available for trial,
raised in the Ortega appeals, presents a different issue. Here the
complaint is not that certification may in some cases be an insufficient
indication of reliability to permit extradition, but that there is no evidence
at all. A showing that the evidence actually exists and is available for trial
is fundamental to extradition. The whole purpose of the extradition is to send
the person sought to the requesting country for trial. To send the person
there to languish in prison without trial is antithetical to the principles
upon which extradition and the comity that supports it are based. It follows
that the extradition judge cannot properly commit a person for extradition
under s. 29(1) unless a prima facie case has been made out that evidence
exists upon which the person may be tried. Some treaties may not require that
availability of evidence be certified. But that does not change the
requirements of s. 29(1) of the Act that the extradition judge be satisfied
that committal for extradition is justified.
56
The Crown in the Ortega appeals contends that availability of
evidence should be presumed to reflect comity and the fact that Canada, through
negotiating a treaty, has already considered whether a treaty partner is likely
to give a person sought a fair trial. However, the concern of the extradition
judge is to provide a fair extradition hearing in Canada: Cobb and Kwok.
If availability of evidence for trial is a crucial factor in determining whether
the test for committal is established (and indeed, on my interpretation of s.
29(1) , it is), neither the executive’s appraisal of a country’s trial practices
nor a presumption of the requesting state’s good faith are sufficient to meet
the sought person’s right to an assessment by a neutral magistrate prior to
extradition.
57
The record of the case provisions, as well as modern treaties such as
the Second Protocol amending the Treaty on Extradition between the
Government of Canada and the Government of the United States of America,
Can. T.S. 2003 No. 11, signed on January 12, 2001, recognize the basic
requirement of “available” evidence. They do so by requiring the requesting
state to certify the availability of evidence. Even where a treaty does not
expressly require the availability of evidence to be certified, it remains a
fundamental element to be established to meet the test for committal. Where
the requesting state does not certify or otherwise make out a prima facie
case that the evidence exists and is available for trial, the case for
committal is incomplete and should be dismissed.
58
This is not an onerous burden. Indeed, where actual first-hand evidence
(e.g., documentary evidence or first-hand affidavits) is put before an extradition
judge, the evidence’s existence is self-evident and its availability for trial
will be presumed. Similarly, where evidence is certified as available by a
requesting state, that certification results in a presumption of availability
for trial. However, cases might arise where a person sought could cogently
challenge the presumption of availability of evidence for trial. For example,
where a person sought can show that a requesting state relies on evidence of a
witness who, prior to the extradition hearing, retracted his or her statement,
the availability of that evidence for trial may be brought into doubt. Another
example is where a state makes only a bare assertion that evidence exists
without providing any description whatsoever of its content or form. In such a
case, the availability of the evidence may be in doubt. Furthermore, an
extradition judge does not make a prediction about the future state of the
evidence. He or she makes a common sense determination about whether the
evidence exists and is available for trial — at the time of the extradition
hearing — based on the evidence itself, any circumstantial guarantees of
availability (such as certification) and any evidence tendered to dispute the
presumption of availability for trial.
59
A further procedural question is whether a person challenging the actual
reliability or availability of evidence adduced at a committal hearing must
seek a remedy under s. 24 of the Charter . In my view, this is not
necessary. Section 29(1) of the Act, properly construed, conforms to both Charter
values and the comity, reciprocity and respect for differences that underlie
extradition. Therefore, no constitutional conflicts arise from the exercise of
an extradition judge’s discretion to order committal. Simply put, the
extradition judge has the discretion to give no weight to unavailable or
unreliable evidence when determining whether committal is justified under s.
29(1) . Thus, the person sought does not need to seek a constitutional remedy.
60
Nevertheless, s. 24(2) of the Charter remains an avenue through
which evidence may be excluded from consideration at an extradition hearing for
reasons of fairness other than the availability and reliability concerns
addressed in these cases. For example, in Cobb, where an American
prosecutor had made public comments subjecting the persons sought to threats
and intimidation, the persons sought could not have a fair extradition hearing
in light of the possibility that they were intimidated and encouraged by the
U.S. prosecutor’s actions to not pursue their legal rights as vigorously as
they were entitled to. An extradition judge may also exclude evidence under s.
24(2) of the Charter if, for example, it was gathered by the foreign
authorities in such an abusive manner that its admission to the committal
hearing would be unfair under s. 7 of the Charter (see discussion in Shulman,
at para. 56).
3. Application
to the Cases at Bar
3.1 Ferras
v. United States of America
61
The United States seeks the appellant Ferras for extradition on charges
of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, securities fraud, and money
laundering. The extradition judge received evidence in three parts: a record
of the case and two supplemental records (collectively the “records”). Each of
these documents bore a certification, sworn before a notary public by Assistant
United States Attorney Tanya Y. Hill, that “the evidence summarized [or
contained] in the attached Record of the Case is available for trial and is
sufficient under the law of the United States to justify prosecution” (A.R., at
pp. 601, 620 and 630).
62
The record of the case and the first supplement were prepared by IRS
Special Agent Joseph Jordan. The second supplement was prepared by FBI Special
Agent Vincent Girardi. The records were written in affidavit format — in the
first person and based on the knowledge of these investigating officers. They
were signed by the officers, but not sworn. The records describe the evidence
expected to be led at the trial of Mr. Ferras, including that of various
witnesses who were either interviewed personally by these officers or whose
interview summaries were reviewed by the officers before preparing the
records. The records also describe documentary evidence reviewed by the
officers and available to the prosecution.
63
According to the records, Mr. Ferras’ former co-workers and customers
from the brokerage firm HGI will testify that Mr. Ferras engaged in fraudulent
“boiler room” sales practices in order to sell HGI house stocks to customers,
that he trained other brokers to use these fraudulent tactics (which were
company policy), and that he reaped financial benefits of over $800,000 from
these fraudulent sales through commissions and profit from his 2 percent
ownership of HGI. Documentary evidence including trading reports, payroll
documents and banking records will, according to the records, corroborate the
testimony of the witnesses.
64
In the extradition hearing, Mr. Ferras conceded that, if admissible,
sufficient evidence existed to commit him for extradition. I understand this
concession to mean that there are no issues of double criminality or identity
of the person sought. However, as described above, Mr. Ferras challenged the
admissibility of the records on reliability grounds. Since his concession on
sufficiency of the case was likely predicated on the erroneous assumption that
his concerns were ones of threshold reliability for the admission of evidence,
it would seem unfair to hold Mr. Ferras to that concession.
65
Accordingly, we must ask whether the records disclose sufficient
evidence upon which a reasonable jury, properly instructed, could convict. As
discussed, to answer this question in the affirmative, the extradition judge
must consider whether the evidence tendered possesses sufficient indicia of
reliability to justify committal. To put it negatively, the judge should not
commit if, viewing the evidence as a whole, it would be dangerous or unsafe to
do so.
66
Certification by the United States, an extradition partner of Canada,
makes the records presumptively reliable. The Court has been presented with
the good word of an extradition partner that the evidence meets the standards
necessary for trial in the United States. Canada has already evaluated the
likelihood that prosecution in the United States would proceed on reliable
evidence. Unless rebutted, this presumption of reliability will stand and the
case will be deemed sufficient to commit for extradition.
67
The appellant Ferras attempts to rebut the presumption of reliability by
pointing out that the evidence given in the records is mostly hearsay and that
some of the hearsay is about the expected testimony of co-conspirators, one of
whom has been convicted of perjury.
68
Would this evidence justify committal to trial in Canada if the conduct
described had occurred here? The records themselves provide only secondary
evidence of the evidence available for trial. However, the issue is not
whether the information in the record is actually true. The extradition judge
does not determine the guilt or innocence of the person sought. The only issue
is whether evidence exists upon which a reasonable jury, properly instructed,
could convict.
69
The evidence adduced in Ferras supports the conclusion that the
United States has sufficient evidence to justify committal. To begin with, the
records are presumptively reliable due to the requesting state’s certification
in compliance with s. 33(3) of the Act. There is no evidence to suggest that
the investigating officers were incompetent to prepare the records. On the
contrary, they had the ability to observe, record and communicate the evidence
that the United States has collected against Mr. Ferras. The records were
submitted under the seal of the United States and signed by the investigating
officers. The records assert that witnesses will testify under oath and that
actual documents will be shown to the trier of fact. Although some of the
witnesses are alleged co-conspirators, many are not. Some are Mr. Ferras’
former clients; one is an attorney with the Securities and Exchange Commission;
and one is an investigator from the National Association of Securities
Dealers. There is nothing in evidence to impugn the reliability of these
witnesses nor the documentary evidence described in the records.
70
Mr. Ferras had the opportunity to present evidence to the extradition
judge. He chose not to do so. As it stands, the record does not disclose any
reason to rebut the presumption of reliability of the evidence to meet the test
of committal. Instead, the evidence seems to support the presumption that the
evidence presented at trial will indeed exhibit the level of reliability
expected of evidence put to a jury in Canada. This is not a case where, on the
record, it would be unsafe to commit the person sought for extradition.
71
Accordingly, I would dismiss this appeal.
3.2 Latty
and Wright v. United States of America
72
The United States seeks the appellants Latty and Wright for extradition
on charges of conspiracy to traffic in cocaine and conspiracy to possess for
the purposes of trafficking in cocaine. The records of the case were certified
by Assistant United States Attorney Kevin P. Dooley that “the evidence
summarized or contained in the attached documents is available for trial and is
sufficient under the laws of the United States to justify prosecution” (A.R.,
at pp. 153 and 228). Unlike in Ferras, the certifications were not
sworn statements, though they were signed by Mr. Dooley.
73
The records were prepared by Lawrence R. Marsili, an investigator with
the New York State Police. As in Ferras, the records were in affidavit
format and signed by the investigator, but not sworn. The records describe the
evidence expected to be led at the trial of the appellants — both witness
testimony and documents.
74
According to the records, Latty and Wright, who were known respectively
by their aliases “Scabby” and “Frankie”, coordinated a cocaine smuggling
operation which involved transporting cocaine from the United States to England
with the assistance of American Airlines’ flight attendants who flew between
New York and London. Witnesses include several co-conspirators including the
flight attendants (Henry and Gary), and persons involved in the pick-up and
delivery of cocaine. Witnesses also include police officers from the United
States, Canada and England. Documentary evidence includes credit bureau papers
and incorporation papers linking both appellants to a Toronto-based company
called Universal Sports Wear, the telephone number for which members of the
drug ring would call to reach “Scabby” and “Frankie” to make plans for moving
cocaine. Other documentary evidence includes phone records, telephone
subscriber information and vehicle registration information. The records
contain detailed descriptions of police surveillance of the appellants’ meeting
with Henry at the Toronto airport and detailed records of phone conversations
between Henry and the appellants. As well, the records describe the evidence
of several witnesses identifying the appellants by both voice and photo as
Scabby and Frankie, the coordinators of the smuggling operation.
75
At the extradition hearing, the appellants conceded that the records of
the case provided sufficient evidence to warrant their committal. They
challenged the admissibility of the evidence on constitutional grounds. Their
concerns about threshold reliability of the evidence for admission to the
extradition hearing cannot succeed. The more pertinent question — whether the
evidence possesses sufficient indicia of reliability to justify committal —
must be answered positively.
76
Again, the United States’ certifications raise a presumption of
reliability. The appellants raise concerns about the use of hearsay evidence
and the fact that the certifications of the records were not “sworn”. However,
these concerns do not suffice to rebut the presumption of reliability.
77
As in Ferras, the use of hearsay evidence does not detract from
the reliability of the evidence to meet the test for committal. The
extradition judge must be satisfied that there is evidence upon which a
reasonable jury could convict. The records adequately demonstrate that the
United States does indeed have sufficient evidence to put the case before a
jury. The records were prepared by an investigator who had intimate knowledge
— through his participation in the case — of the evidence available. The
investigator signed the records, which were certified by the Assistant District
Attorney and then authenticated by the Secretary of State. There is nothing in
evidence to impugn the competence of the investigator who prepared the record,
nor the reliability of the witnesses expected to testify at trial, nor the
reliability of the documentary evidence described in the records.
78
Unlike the certifications of the records in Ferras, the
certifications here were not sworn by the Assistant United States District
Attorney, merely signed by him. However, the certifications do conform to the
requirements of s. 33(3) of the Act. The American official cannot be
faulted for not providing a sworn certification when the Act does not require
one.
79
In the absence of any evidence submitted by the appellants Latty and
Wright, the record of the case supports the presumption that the evidence
presented at trial will exhibit the level of reliability expected of evidence
put to a jury in Canada. Nothing in the record indicates that it would be
unsafe to commit the appellants for extradition on this evidence.
80
Accordingly, I would dismiss these appeals.
4. Other
Issues
81
Two further issues concerning the Ferras appeals require brief
comment.
4.1 Section
6 of the Charter
82
The appellant Ferras, who is a Canadian citizen, challenges the
constitutionality of ss. 32(1) (a) and 33(3) under s. 6 of the Charter .
Extradition to another country infringes the right of a Canadian citizen under
s. 6(1) of the Charter to remain in Canada: United States of America
v. Cotroni, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1469. However, s. 6 is not engaged at the
committal stage of the extradition process, only at the surrender stage: Cobb,
Kwok and Shulman.
83
Although a surrender order has been made in relation to Mr. Ferras, the
alleged Charter violation concerns statutory provisions that apply to
extradition hearings, at the committal stage, not the surrender stage of the
extradition process. Once an extradition judge has determined that a prima
facie case for extradition exists, the Minister’s surrender decision is of
a “political and/or diplomatic nature”: Kwok, at para. 63. In
exercising ministerial discretion, the Minister has “an obligation flowing from
s. 6(1) to assure [himself] that prosecution in Canada is not a realistic
option”: Cotroni, at p. 1498. However, the Minister is not
required to base the surrender decision on evidence submitted at the committal
hearing. Thus, s. 6(1) of the Charter cannot be infringed by the
impugned provisions.
4.2 The
Surrender Order Pertaining to Latty and Wright
84
The appellants Latty and Wright raise two issues on judicial review of
the Minister’s order to surrender them to the United States. They say that
their surrender to the United States, where they could receive sentences if
convicted of 10 years to life without parole, would “shock the conscience” of
Canadians and thus run afoul of fundamental justice. They also say that the
Minister’s refusal to seek assurances for enhanced credit for time served in
pre-trial custody would offend fundamental justice.
85
This Court has adopted a balancing approach to determine whether
potential sentences in a requesting state would “shock the conscience” of
Canadians. While affirming this approach in United States v. Burns,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 283, 2001 SCC 7, the Court said, at para. 67, that “the phrase
‘shocks the conscience’ and equivalent expressions are not to be taken out of
context or equated to opinion polls. The words were intended to underline the
very exceptional nature of circumstances that would constitutionally limit the
Minister’s decision in extradition cases.”
86
As in Burns, at para. 72, several factors favour
surrendering the appellants Latty and Wright to the United States: bringing
the appellants to trial to determine the truth of the charges; the principle
that justice is best served by a trial in the jurisdiction where the alleged
crime occurred; the principle that Canadians must generally accept the laws and
procedures of the countries they visit; and comity, reciprocity and respect for
differences among states. The factors militating against surrender include:
the harsher sentences that the appellants might receive if convicted in the
United States; and the possibility that evidence used in the United States
might include wiretap evidence that would not be admissible in Canada.
87
In my view, the Minister correctly decided that “[s]urrender to an
extradition partner whose criminal justice system does not have all the
procedural safeguards of the Canadian criminal justice system would not, in
itself, violate the principles of fundamental justice.” The appellants offer
no evidence or case law to back up their assertions that the possible sentences
would shock the conscience of Canadians. Furthermore, the factors favouring
surrender in this circumstance far outweigh those that do not.
88
Concerning credit for pre-surrender custody, the appellants say that the
conditions of pre-surrender custody are particularly harsh (because the persons
are held in maximum security facilities) and therefore deserving of enhanced
credit. They say that in these circumstances the Minister’s refusal to seek
assurances “shocks the conscience” of reasonably informed members of the
public.
89
Section 3585(b) of Title 18 of the United States Code states: “A
defendant shall be given credit toward the service of a term of imprisonment
for any time he has spent in official detention prior to the date the sentence
commences . . .”. The appellants are concerned that while Title 18 gives
credit for pre-trial time, it does not require enhanced credit nor does
it take into account the conditions under which any pre-surrender custody is
served.
90
While this Court has approved of the practice of two for one credit for
pre-trial custody (see R. v. Wust, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 455, 2000 SCC 18, at
para. 45), it made clear that it was not entrenching the practice, preferring
to leave the matter to judicial discretion. The Minister’s refusal to seek
assurances of enhanced credit for pre-surrender custody is not improper,
“[g]iven that we do not guarantee enhanced credit ourselves”: United States
of America v. Adam (2003), 174 C.C.C. (3d) 445 (Ont. C.A.), at para. 34.
91
In addition to the factors militating in favour of surrender, sentencing
is best conducted after trial when all the facts have been aired. The only
factor in favour of the Minister seeking assurances is that the Minister may be
well placed to inform the requesting state about the onerous conditions of
pre-surrender custody in Canada. However, these are issues that the appellants
can themselves raise at sentencing if they are convicted of a crime in the
United States.
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer this
question.
APPENDIX
A
Extradition
Act, S.C. 1999, c. 18
32. (1) Subject to subsection (2), evidence
that would otherwise be admissible under Canadian law shall be admitted as
evidence at an extradition hearing. The following shall also be admitted as
evidence, even if it would not otherwise be admissible under Canadian law:
(a) the contents of the documents contained in the record of
the case certified under subsection 33(3) ;
(b) the contents of the documents that are submitted in
conformity with the terms of an extradition agreement; and
(c) evidence adduced by the person sought for extradition that
is relevant to the tests set out in subsection 29(1) if the judge considers it
reliable.
(2) Evidence gathered in Canada must satisfy the
rules of evidence under Canadian law in order to be admitted.
33. (1) The record of the case must include
(a) in the case of a person sought for the purpose of
prosecution, a document summarizing the evidence available to the extradition
partner for use in the prosecution; and
(b) in the case of a person sought for the imposition or
enforcement of a sentence,
(i) a copy of the document that records the
conviction of the person, and
(ii) a document describing the conduct for which the person was
convicted.
.
. .
(3) A record of the case may not be admitted unless
(a) in the case of a person sought for the
purpose of prosecution, a judicial or prosecuting authority of the extradition
partner certifies that the evidence summarized or contained in the record of the
case is available for trial and
(i) is sufficient under the law of the extradition
partner to justify prosecution, or
(ii) was gathered according to the law of the
extradition partner;
APPENDIX
B
Treaty of
Extradition between the Government of Canada and the Government of the United
Mexican States, Can. T.S. 1990 No. 35
ARTICLE VIII
Documents to be Submitted
1. The following documents shall be submitted in
support of a request for extradition:
(a) in all cases:
(i) information about the
description, identity, location and nationality of the person sought;
(ii) a statement prepared by a
judicial or public official of the conduct constituting the offence for which
the extradition is requested indicating the place and time of its commission,
the nature of the offence and the legal provisions describing the offence and
the applicable punishment. This statement shall also indicate that these legal
provisions, a copy of which shall be appended, were in force both at the time
of the commission of the offence and at the time of the extradition request.
(b) in the case of a person
charged with an offence:
(i) the original or a certified
true copy of the arrest warrant issued by the Requesting Party;
(ii) in the event that the law of
the Requested Party so requires, evidence that would justify committal for
trial of the person sought, including evidence to establish identity;
(iii) for the purpose of
paragraph 1(b)(ii) of this Article, originals of certified true copies of
exhibits, statements, depositions, minutes, reports, appendices or any other
document received, gathered or obtained by the Requesting Party shall be
admitted in evidence in the courts of the Requested Party as proof of the facts
contained therein, provided that a competent judicial authority of the
Requesting Party has determined that they were obtained in accordance with the
law of the Requesting Party.
.
. .
2. All documents submitted in support of a request
for extradition and appearing to have been certified, issued or reviewed by a
judicial authority of the Requesting Party or made under its authority, shall
be admitted in evidence in the courts of the Requested Party without having to
be taken under oath or solemn affirmation and without proof of the signature or
of the official character of the person appearing to have signed them.
3. No authentication or further certification of
documents submitted in support of the request for extradition shall be
required.
4. Any translation of documents submitted in support
of a request for extradition by the Requesting Party shall be admissible for
all purposes in extradition proceedings.
Extradition
Treaty between Canada and the United States of America, Can. T.S. 1976 No.
3
Article 10
.
. .
(2) The documentary evidence in support of a request
for extradition or copies of these documents shall be admitted in evidence in
the examination of the request for extradition when, in the case of a request
emanating from Canada, they are authenticated by an officer of the Department
of Justice of Canada and are certified by the principal diplomatic or consular
officer of the United States in Canada, or when, in the case of a request
emanating from the United States, they are authenticated by an officer of the
Department of State of the United States and are certified by the principal
diplomatic or consular officer of Canada in the United States.
Appeals dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant
Ferras: Greenspan Humphrey Lavine, Toronto.
Solicitors for the appellants Latty and
Wright: Greenspan White, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondents: Attorney
General of Canada, Ottawa.
Major J. took no part in the judgment.