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Supreme Court of Canada upholds contested Amanda Todd pre-trial publication ban

The highest court in Canada has upheld provisions in the criminal code for blanket publication bans for matters when a jury is not in place, something media outlets and civil liberty advocates say stifle freedom of the press. 

Lawyers representing media outlets said ban on 15 months of pre-trial applications stifled freedom of press.

A man walks by the Supreme Court of Canada building in Ottawa.

Canada’s highest court has upheld interpretations of the Criminal Code that apply automatic publication bans for matters when a jury is not in place — which media outlets and civil liberty advocates argued stifles freedom of the press.

The unanimous 47-page ruling was delivered Friday morning by the seven Supreme Court of Canada judges, who considered the matter after hearing oral submissions in Ottawa in May.

The ruling involved two separate jury-trial cases, one of them the high-profile trial in British Columbia of the Dutch man ultimately sentenced to 13 years in prison for his role in the death of Amanda Todd, a 15-year-old from Port Coquitlam, B.C.

Supreme Court of Canada justices were asked to weigh public interest with protecting the accused’s rights, considering most media stories live online forever and are easy to distribute widely.

‘Intent to protect’

They ruled unequivocally over two parts of the Criminal Code: one that puts in place blanket publication bans for information during jury trials that would normally be before the jury if they are not in place at the time; and another giving judges jurisdiction over any matters that would be decided if a jury was in place.

“Parliament’s intent to protect the fundamental interest of the accused in being tried by jurors who are not exposed to, and biased by, the content of and rulings on matters heard in their absence is immediately apparent from the wording of the provisions,” reads the ruling, written by Chief Justice Richard Wagner.

“Parliament aimed to shield the jury from information about any portion of the trial from which it was absent … this objective is relevant with respect to both the existent jury and the jury yet to be empanelled.”

There was significant interest in the ruling from media outlets and others as a decision supporting their challenge could have influenced future cases over how courts implement section 648 (1) of the Criminal Code and whether or not the code’s blanket publication ban for jury trials applies to pretrial matters before a jury is even selected.

Section 648 (1) of the Criminal Code says, “no information regarding any portion of the trial at which the jury is not present shall be published in any document or broadcast or transmitted in any way before the jury retires to consider its verdict.”

A middle-aged woman with black hair stands next to a teenage girl with long brown hair and feather earrings. Their heads are close together and they are smiling while standing in a yard with a lattice fence in the background.

In 2012, Todd died by suicide after she posted a YouTube video using flashcards describing how she sank into depression after she was exploited online.

Lawyers for CBC News, along with co-appellants Global News, Postmedia, CTV News, Glacier Media, CityNews, the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star, argued that being unable to report the details of pre-trial court proceedings, which took place over a 15-month period, limited the freedom of the press.

They wanted the courts to clarify the ban and only apply it after a jury was selected. That was dismissed.

Lawyers behind the challenges argued that the wording of the section was ambiguous, but Wagner wrote that taken in context with other sections of the Criminal Code, including 645(5), there is no confusion.

“The plain meaning of the text is not in itself determinative and must be tested against the other indicators of legislative meaning — context, purpose and relevant legal norms,” the ruling reads.

The B.C. Civil Liberties Association, an intervenor in the case at the Supreme Court of Canada, said in court in Ottawa in May that blanket publication bans resulting from section 648 (1) could harm trial fairness by not allowing public scrutiny of the criminal process.

Lawyers representing Coban and the Crown said in May that section 648 (1) is a “safeguard” against any potential miscarriage of justice and that any matters heard during pre-trial should be considered part of the trial.

The other case which formed the substance of Friday’s ruling involved a pre-trial publication ban in Quebec involving Frédérick Silva. The former mafia hitman was charged with four counts of murder and one count of attempted murder between 2017 and 2018 and was convicted on four counts in 2022.

In recent years 648 (1) has been questioned in several cases for being too narrowly interpreted, including another high-profile case involving an RCMP officer who had an affair with a key witness in the deadliest gang-related shooting in B.C.’s history.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Chad Pawson is a CBC News reporter in Vancouver. You can contact him at chad.pawson@cbc.ca.

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Credit belongs to : www.cbc.ca

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