:
I call the meeting to order.
This is meeting number 29 of the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights. For the record, today is Tuesday, October 19, 2010.
You have before you the agenda for today. Before we go to the main part of the agenda I just want to mention that at the end of today's meeting I'm hoping to leave 15 minutes for some in camera committee business to discuss Mr. Dechert's motion that was left on the table after our last meeting. That's the motion on organized crime.
We're beginning our review today of Bill , an act respecting the mandatory reporting of Internet child pornography by persons who provide an Internet service. To assist us with our review, we have with us Minister of Justice and Attorney General for Canada Rob Nicholson. Accompanying him are senior officials from the Department of Justice. We welcome back Catherine Kane, who's the director general and senior general counsel, and Normand Wong, counsel, both from the criminal policy section. We'll also have Jean-François Noël, who's a counsel from the criminal policy section, joining our committee meeting after the minister leaves.
Please turn off your cellphones or put them on vibrate. Those of you here at the table, make sure you have your BlackBerrys removed from proximity to the microphone so they don't interfere with reception.
Monsieur Lemay.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. It's good to be back.
Before I begin my formal remarks I would like to address the committee's request to receive a copy of a report on the consultative round-table discussions I had across the country on the youth criminal justice system. I want to thank the committee for the work they've done on this bill and indeed all our justice legislation. I assure you that I will be tabling the report with this committee before the end of next week.
Mr. Chairman, I'm pleased to speak to the committee about Bill , the Protecting Children From Online Sexual Exploitation Act. It proposes to require those providing Internet services to the public to report online child pornography.
[Translation]
Bill will help Canada increase its ability to protect children from sexual exploitation in a number of ways.
[English]
First, it will strengthen our ability to detect potential child pornography offences. Second, reports generated by this bill will help block child pornography sites through the existing Project Cleanfeed Canada initiative. Third, this act will facilitate the identification, apprehension, and prosecution of child pornography offenders. And most importantly, this act will help identify the victims so that they may be rescued from sexual predators.
While this bill builds upon and complements our existing comprehensive Criminal Code prohibitions against child pornography, the focus of this bill is on child pornography on the Internet and those who provide Internet services to the public, for two reasons. First, the growth in child pornography sites in recent years is largely due to the proliferation of the Internet. Second, those persons or entities that provide Internet services to the public are uniquely placed to discover incidents occurring on their networks or to have such incidents brought to their attention by users.
With respect to the scope of this bill, I would like to use this opportunity to clarify a few areas. First, I would like to stress that this legislation would cover more than just ISPs. The term ISP, or Internet service provider, usually refers to those who provide access to the Internet--in other words, the wires and signals that go into our homes. This bill would apply to everyone who provides an Internet service to the public. As defined in this bill, this would include ISPs and other access providers as well as those who provide electronic mail services such as web-based mail and those who host Internet content such as social networking sites.
Furthermore, this bill would apply not only to persons who provide Internet services as their main business activity, but also to those who provide complementary Internet services to the public, such as cyber cafés, hotels, restaurants, and public libraries. I should also point out, of course, that individuals who commit child pornography offences are already liable to prosecution under the Criminal Code, and they have been in that position since 1993.
This bill would impose new duties on those who provide Internet services to the public. Their first duty will be to report to a designated agency any Internet address that is brought to their attention that points to a website where child pornography may be found. By reporting the Internet addresses, the designated agency will have sufficient information to fulfill its duties under this bill. Upon receipt of a report, the designated agency would first determine if the Internet address information actually leads to child pornography as defined by the Criminal Code, and second, determine the actual geographic location of the web servers hosting the material. Once it has confirmed its assessment of the illegal nature of the material and its location, the designated agency would refer the report to the appropriate law enforcement agency for action.
The second duty imposed on those who provide Internet services to the public would be to notify police when they have reason to believe that a child pornography offence has been committed using their Internet service. For example, if an e-mail provider, while conducting routine maintenance of its mail servers, discovers that the mailbox of one of its users contains child pornography, the e-mail provider would then be required to notify the police that they have reason to believe that a child pornography offence has been committed using its system and provide police with the supporting facts. In addition to notifying police, the service provider would be obligated to preserve the evidence for 21 days following the notification. This would provide police with a reasonable period of time to obtain a judicial order for further preservation or production of the evidence without fear that the evidence might be deleted in the interim.
The service provider who notified the police would be required to destroy any information that would not be retained in the ordinary course of business after the expiry of 21 days, unless otherwise ordered by the court.
Any person making a report or a notification under this bill would also be required not to disclose the report or give notification so as to avoid disclosure that could undermine the criminal investigation.
Another feature of Bill is that it has been designed to work in concert with those provincial and foreign jurisdictions that have already introduced legislation for the mandatory reporting of child pornography. The bill has been tailored to limit the possibility of duplicate reporting for those who may already be required to report child pornography in accordance with the laws of the province or a foreign jurisdiction.
It's important to note that Bill C-22 was crafted in accordance with the principle that the legislation should not create new consumers of child pornography or otherwise contribute to the further dissemination of the material. That is why the bill explicitly states that it does not authorize or require any person to seek out the child pornography.
This also means that providers of Internet services will not be required to monitor their networks in order to find child pornography or to otherwise investigate the activities of their users. Nor will they be required to verify an Internet address in order to confirm its content. It's important to understand that while mandatory reporting of child pornography by those who provide Internet services is addressed in this bill, the substantial or actual pornography offences are already addressed in the Criminal Code.
Bill C-22 is about sending a message to those who provide Internet services to the public that they have a social, moral, and now a legal duty to report this heinous material when they encounter it. We believe that the penalties contained in this act strike the balance between this aim and the real focus of the bill, which is compliance.
[Translation]
In order to achieve the bill's objective of improving the protection of children, the government wants to ensure that all those who provide Internet services in Canada comply with the law, and not only the main Internet service providers who already voluntarily report such cases and cooperate with the police.
[English]
Those are the major elements of the bill, Mr. Chairman.
I hope I can count on your support for these very important measures.
Thank you.
:
In the same vein, Minister, when we talk about the predecessor to this bill--I think it was Bill --it seems that the provinces have leap-frogged us, and leap-frogged you in fact, Minister, and the government.
It's a good bill. There is nothing very outrageous in it that we would object to, I don't think. It should be passed, there is no question. We could hear some witnesses, and so on.
But in the time it took to get back here in the fall of 2010--through prorogation and other political agendas that your government was on--the Province of Nova Scotia brought forward its Child Pornography Reporting Act, which came into force in April of 2010. Then the Province of Alberta brought forward its Mandatory Reporting of Child Pornography Act. They even have stronger language than your act, Mr. Minister. It came into force July 1, 2010.
Now that the ribbing is over, I want to get into something substantive; that is, why then do some provinces in Canada have stricter laws? And specifically I'll pick Nova Scotia. Section 3 notes, “ Every person who reasonably believes that a representation or material is child pornography shall promptly report...”. Whereas your bill--or we'll say our bill, because we're in it together here--is strictly for the service providers. It's much more narrow.
I think your statement was that you want to coordinate it with provinces that have already brought in this legislation. But I'm thinking of the federal obligation to have laws across this country that provide the same sort of protection and weed out the child pornography that exists in all provinces. Why wouldn't you consider beefing up your federal law to be more in tune, for instance, with that section I read from the Nova Scotia act? The Alberta act is similar.
I'm not sure that there would be a lot of opposition because there is a mandatory duty. Was there some reason we picked sort of a weaker version?
:
You've covered a number of different areas, Mr. Murphy. You talked about the Alberta bill. It's actually not in effect yet. Nor is the one in Ontario. That being said, there are laws in effect in Manitoba and Nova Scotia, and we of course welcome and encourage any cooperation we get in the regulation of this area at the provincial level.
That being said, I'm not quite sure what you meant by your comment that there's “nothing outrageous” in this bill. This is a good bill. This is a good idea to require Internet service providers to report incidents of child pornography they discover, or to pass on information about child pornography that is given to them or brought to their attention.
Again, this complements what is being done. It complements, quite frankly, what is being done in foreign jurisdictions as well. I had long conversations with my counterparts at the attorneys general level from the United States, Britain, Australia, and New Zealand earlier this year. They pointed out to me that the sophistication of child pornography has been growing rapidly or proliferating around the world. It's becoming more sophisticated, and I indicated to them, as you might guess, that we will be cooperative, as we have been, and that there will be sharing of information and that we will work together.
So my suggestion to you is that, no, the provinces haven't taken over the field, but we certainly welcome their initiatives on this. Not only is this not “outrageous” legislation, to use your term, but it's legislation that is very much needed and very much welcomed by the people of this country. So I'm urging you to set aside whatever reservations you may have about this or indeed any other criminal legislation we have or will be bringing in. Let's get this thing passed. This is the next step in the fight against child pornography in this country. It will be welcomed at home; it will be welcomed by all our provincial counterparts, whether or not they have passed regulations or legislation in this area; and it will certainly be welcomed by our international partners, who have the same goal that we have, which is the protection of children.
:
Just to follow up, I have only have opposition resources, which are meagre compared with your mighty resources at the Department of Justice, but my records say that the Alberta law has been in effect since July 1, 2010. But let's get on common ground.
Mr. Minister, we agree with this bill. We'd like to pass it. What I'm suggesting, if I can make it any clearer, and I don't know how I can, is that the Nova Scotia law, for instance, that you and I referred to and that has been in force since April 13, 2010, has a wider reporting duty. It states that “Every person who reasonably believes” they've seen child pornography “shall report to a reporting entity”. I think that's reasonable. The fines for not doing so when you should have are just fines, not jail terms. This is the kind of positive obligation that we need our citizens to engage in, because this is so widespread.
To be clearer, Mr. Minister, why didn't we go that far and suggest something like section 3 in the Nova Scotia act?
:
I sometime qualify the Internet in the same way Socrates qualified languages: it's the greatest thing out there because it enables us to say and communicate so many good things, but it's also the most dreadful thing out there because of its capacity to breed hate.
The Internet is extremely useful and beneficial for the modern society we live in, but it can magnify our afflictions. Child pornography is not the only reprehensible aspect of the Internet. There are also websites that hint at serial murders. Among others, I am referring to what happened in Quebec. It is almost certain that had the website of Montreal's Dawson College mass murderer been discovered, his weapons could have been confiscated.
Just recently, the police arrested someone in Montreal whose website clearly indicated a predisposition to commit murder. There are probably other problems as well. We are talking about child pornography, but pornography as a whole is generally degrading to women.
Do you think that this agency could possibly investigate the many dangerous attitudes being spread on the Internet?
:
As far as the exact status of that, I know there are advances by the RCMP, and they're probably better directed toward public safety.
My investigation of this in preparation of this bill was to look at what is being done. I mentioned the Cybertip organization and what is being done in terms of reporting. I mentioned Project Cleanfeed and the cooperation that exists now between Internet service providers.
That's one of the things I made clear. The major Internet service providers do provide this information now. This is an ongoing matter. As I've said before, it's not just a question of it being a good idea; it's the moral thing, the right thing to do. There has to be a legal responsibility. We have as many as 300 Internet service providers, other than the large ones, who already undertake this kind of activity.
We're all moving in the right direction, Mr. Comartin. Again, I'm appreciative and pleased that it looks like you may be prepared to support this bill.
:
Mr. Chair, I will split my time with my colleague Brent.
Thank you for joining us today, minister.
I attended the 19th annual meeting of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which was held from July 6 to 10, 2010, in Oslo, Norway. I had the honour to introduce, on behalf of Canada, a resolution that was the core of Bill . The core I'm talking about is the obligation Internet service providers have to report child pornography on the Internet.
The assembly consists of 57 countries, each of which sends, on average, two parliamentarians to the meeting. The resolution I had the honour to introduce on Canada's behalf was approved by your department. It was submitted to the OSCE's committee that deals with justice issues and was unanimously agreed upon. Then, it was introduced to the 57 member countries of the Parliamentary Assembly, and it was also unanimously adopted.
This resolution was the crux of Bill . At this time, Canada is seen as a leader in this highly technical field. Some countries do not have this kind of technology and find that we are very good leaders in the field.
People who accompanied me, especially Bloc Québécois and Liberal members, helped us with the presentation. I would like to thank you, minister, personally, and especially on behalf of the children. They are the ones we must protect. I thank you for your support. I have noticed that throughout your career, you have fought relentlessly to protect the children.
I will now give my colleague Brent the opportunity to ask questions.
:
I'd be pleased to respond to Monsieur Petit.
Monsieur Petit, thank you for your kind words, but I want to congratulate you. I was aware of and followed your efforts in that regard. I want you to know that they're very much appreciated. And I believe they're appreciated outside of this country, because part of the challenge we have is to make sure we get everyone on board with these issues.
In my conversations with my counterparts at the Organization of the American States meeting earlier this year and at the last Commonwealth justice ministers meeting I attended, this was one of the issues they asked about. They wanted to make sure they had laws on the books that addressed these concerns and that the laws were up to date. Because that is the challenge we have. The technology changes very quickly. The sophistication of these crimes is changing all the time. Our job and our responsibility is to make sure that we are continuously involved in the fight to protect children.
Again, it's not just a Canadian problem or an American problem or a British problem. These are problems that transcend international boundaries. To the extent we work with other countries to do this, we're moving in the right direction. This is why I was particularly pleased that your resolution has been so widely accepted. Again, I thank you for your efforts in this regard.
Thank you, Mr. Minister, for your attendance here today. Thank you to your departmental officials, as well.
I would like to congratulate you, not only on this bill but on the government's entire history on the safe communities agenda. As you know, there is , ending house arrest, , ending the faint hope clause, and sentencing for fraud. And the list goes on and on.
Minister, I know that you frequently consult with interest groups that have an interest in these particular pieces of legislation. I'm curious, with respect to this bill that's before this committee, about who some of those interest groups might be and what they've been telling you about it and if there's any opposition. Quite frankly, I can't see any. I can't imagine why anybody would be opposed to this bill, but I might be wrong.
:
Well, thank you very much, Mr. Rathgeber, and thank you very much for your interest and concern and participation on this committee.
You're quite correct. In my travels across this country, when I discuss this with constituents in my riding of Niagara Falls, Fort Erie and Niagara-on-the-Lake, when I talk to law enforcement agencies. and particularly when I talk to victims groups, they are unanimous in their support of initiatives like this to better protect children from sexual exploitation, children who are the victims of child pornography.
When I listen to the suggestions, when I hear the stories of victims groups.... You mentioned a couple of pieces of legislation. The faint hope clause is an excellent example. It's victims groups who tell me that they don't want to be victimized over and over again, and that's what happens on something like the faint hope clause. That being said, we try to give some voice to those victims across this country who want their voices heard in Ottawa. They want to see changes that will better protect them.
When I talk to them about better protecting children from sexual exploitation, they are very supportive of those measures. I've said this over the years as justice minister. When people go back to their constituencies, as I do, and tell people that this is what they're thinking of doing in Ottawa, I think overwhelmingly people will say yes, you're on the right track; we have to do these things.
Thank you again for your question.
:
Yes, I am. We have five minutes, so two and a half for me and two and a half for him.
Thank you, Minister.
As my colleague Brian Murphy stated, Liberals do support this bill. We support the aims of this bill.
We do have a couple of concerns. One is concerning the agency to which any person would report if they suspected or had reasonable belief. Have you determined yet which agency that will be? Will it be Cybertip.ca, as it is in Manitoba, and if that is the case, is any funding going to be flowing from the federal government to Cybertip.ca to handle the work?
Second, and very briefly, on the issue of the kind of information the ISP or other person providing Internet services must report to the police, subclause 2(1) of the bill talks about computer data, and it's quite broadly defined, whereas in the United States it is very specific. I'm wondering exactly what information is to be reported, and if it is identical or if you are expecting it to be similar to what's required in the United States, why has that not been specified in the bill?
:
With respect to the designated agency, as I indicated to Mr. Comartin, I have made no announcement on that.
You asked whether there was funding or whether there would be funding to a group like Cybertip. They do get federal funding right now. They do get funding from the federal government on a regular basis, and my experience with that organization—I'll say it publicly—has been that this is money well spent by the people of this country in support of that organization.
I take note of the fact that you have some concerns about the bill. Again, the drafting of this was very careful. And yes, we look at what our counterparts in other jurisdictions do, but in the end we drafted according to our needs and the requirements we have, and I think those have been addressed.
Did you want to add anything to that, Mr. Wong?
:
You've covered a number of areas, Monsieur Lemay. I'm encouraged by your opening comment. The translation was that nobody can be against virtue. I'm happy to hear that. I'm going to remember that quote and I thank you for it.
You said we can take it for granted that we'll get this bill passed. I can tell you that in now almost four years as justice minister, believe me, I take nothing for granted to get through Parliament. Whether it's the House of Commons or the Senate, we watch them very carefully. And I want to make very clear that on this or on any piece of legislation in the criminal justice area, I do not take anything for granted.
In terms of implementing this, yes, we do want to implement this, proclaim these sections into effect. We do want to designate the agency that would be designated. And if the agency that was suggested to me by one of your colleagues is used, federal moneys are already in place to go to these organizations.
Again, with respect to the policing in this country, whether it be the RCMP or municipal, our regional police forces are already in place. They do receive this information and they will continue to get it.
Minister, thank you for being here this afternoon and for putting this bill before the House. I want to thank you as well for your leadership in the many pieces of legislation in our government's criminal justice agenda that you have brought to the House and that will, in my opinion, help make our communities and our families safer.
I'm also encouraged by what I've heard today from our friends on the other side of this table about their support for this bill. I hope they will move expeditiously to the clause-by-clause review of this bill so that we can send it back to the House for final approval.
Every time the government comes forward with new legislation, Minister, there is inevitably the question of why. In my opinion, it's extremely important that government continue to look at ways to improve our criminal justice system and to ensure the safety of law-abiding Canadians, especially our most vulnerable and our youth. However, in the case of this bill, some people would ask whether or not Internet service providers are currently neglecting to report incidences of Internet child pornography.
Minister, can you please inform this committee on how this bill will make a difference?
:
Well, I think you're correct in one sense with respect to Internet service providers. The major ones report this information on a voluntary basis right now. But it's not just the major ones that are involved with this. As I indicated in my testimony, there are about 300 other Internet service providers that are also in the business of providing Internet services to people.
Again, it seems to me that it's not good enough that somebody has a moral obligation to do this. It's not enough that somebody should do this because it's the right thing. They should do it, and people do have a moral obligation to support the investigation of Internet pornography. But I believe there should be a legal duty, and I believe this is the next step in updating and modernizing our child pornography laws.
We have to do that. The level of sophistication of this type of business is astounding. In my trip to Washington, as I mentioned, I heard a presentation from the Attorney General of the United States and those who work with him, and I was blown away by the fact that people are becoming so sophisticated in their pursuit of exploiting children. Again, it underlies the message to all of us in the world that we have to continuously be looking at our laws to make sure they respond to this type of plague and that law enforcement agencies have the tools at their disposal to help thwart this terrible crime.
So in answer to your question of why, it's because it's the right thing to do. It's the moral thing to do. We should be doing this to better protect the children of this country and better protect children from around the world. What they tell me is that very often these images of child sexual exploitation are not being filmed in Canada; very often these are outside of Canada's borders. We want to work with law enforcement agencies outside of this country to get the protection to those children that they so desperately need.
Again, this is a step forward in the right direction. I don't take this bill for granted. I get concerned when people say there are concerns about it. This is straightforward. It gets the job done. It should be supported as quickly as possible.
As I look at the definition of Internet service, and I'm just using the words “electronic mail” that are in the definition section of the bill, Internet service includes other things, but one of them is electronic mail. So if you go down to clause 3, one of the charging sections, and exchange the words “electronic mail” for “Internet service” and I read it, it says, “If a person is advised in the course of providing electronic mail...”—e-mail—“...to the public of an IP address...”, etc.
As I read that, the charging section seems to implicate a person who, in the course of sending out an e-mail to the public, becomes aware of this information. They would then become subject to the provisions of this snitch law. And I use the term “snitch law” because that's what it is. As much as the objective of the bill is a noble one, this is a perfectly simple snitch law, like the kind they had in East Germany after the Second World War.
Anyway, could I ask you to please confirm to me that an individual in that circumstance, sending out an e-mail to the public, would be charged with the obligation in this clause, and if he or she did not report, he or she would be subject to a charge and conviction under this law?
I'm going to try to restrain myself in response to Mr. Lee, but in fact it doesn't talk about e-mail. It does talk about “in the course of providing an Internet service to the public”. So I would hope that if Mr. Lee is sending out mass e-mails and discovers that his e-mails include an Internet protocol address or uniform resource locator where child pornography may be available, he wouldn't mind reporting that.
However, I have other fish to fry here, and I'd like to direct the witnesses' attention to clause 10, which simply states that a person who has reported information in compliance with the “laws of a province or foreign jurisdiction is deemed to have complied with this Act”. And I have a concern that simply reporting information pursuant to the laws of a province or another jurisdiction may not be adequate if those laws do not contain a preservation section such as this act does, which requires the person who reports to preserve computer data.
I'm wondering if perhaps you might go back and give some thought to whether or not clause 10 is overbroad in that it may remove our ability to preserve the evidence simply because it is law of another jurisdiction that has been complied with. Could I ask you to just take that back to the shop and think about it for me, please?
:
Exactly. So if one were going to consider amending it, one might replace the phrase “this act” with the phrase “section 3 of this act”, but I will leave that to wiser minds than mine.
I also have one or two technical questions regarding clause 4. The Criminal Code, the last I checked, and I regret I didn't bring it with me, frequently refers simply to peace officers, and I notice that you're using an entirely different phrase in clause 4 to talk about “officer, constable or other person employed for the preservation and maintenance of the public peace”. I wondered if there was some reason why you were adopting that particular phraseology rather than what I think is still the simpler practice, which is found in the Criminal Code.
I also have a second question about that, and it is whether the phrase “reasonable grounds” in clause 4 in your view is equivalent to reasonable and probable grounds or just articulable cause.
So there are two questions, if I may. I don't care who answers them.
:
Currently, in the four provinces that have enacted legislation--two are in force and two are not--that is all very similar. They're all based on the provincial jurisdiction on child welfare. So they're broad-based and require any person residing in the province to report to a designated agency or to police when they encounter child pornography.
They do not have an evidence-gathering or protection provision that the federal legislation has. On the flip side of that--and this is part of the point that I tried to address earlier--under the criminal law power, it's a broad power, but it's a narrow power at the same time. It has to serve a criminal law purpose, and one of the issues about approaching it as.... We looked at the possibility of applying this to society broadly, and there was no real nexus between the average citizen and child pornography. We could create that nexus between ISPs and child pornography, since the proliferation of child pornography has taken place over the Internet.
So it was easy to create a duty, and, after creating the duty, an offence for breaching that duty. So targeting ISPs under the criminal law power was appropriate, whereas targeting the public in general under the criminal law power was not.
I have only one question to ask Mr. Wong about the wording in clause 8:
A civil proceeding cannot be commenced against a person for making a report in good faith under section 3 or for making a notification in good faith under section 4.
Even if someone reported a URL address containing child pornography—and this is the type of address we're talking about—in bad faith, it would still be reported. So I'm wondering what good or bad faith have to do with this issue?
For instance, let's assume that a criminal wants to take down another criminal. That person would inform the RCMP of the address, under section 3 or section 4, which would result in the shutting down of the criminal's website and in the person's conviction, and so on. The person reporting the address would be acting in bad faith. So I'm wondering what good or bad faith have to do with clause 8? This is a civilian notion and I understand it, but we can assume good faith is involved at all times.
So, I would like to know why you use the expression “in good faith” in clause 8. Whether the person is acting in good or bad faith, as soon as section 3 or section 4 are involved, the case is closed. Whether we are talking about a criminal making a complaint to take down another criminal, or about an honest person reporting on an activity, under sections 3 and 4, once incriminating information is found, the conclusion is the same.
I'm just trying to understand why you use the expression “in good faith.”
We're at the end of the first full round. We can go to another round and there should be enough time to do at least one full round.
I'd like to address Mr. Lee's point. As you know, Mr. Lee, everyone gets a chance to speak once before we go to another round. And of course if we want to discourage parties from splitting their time, we can discuss that, if you want to bring a motion forward.
I understand you took the position that perhaps because some on the government side had split their time, they had already spoken. We've worked as a very collaborative committee, and I think it's worked reasonably well. I try to treat everyone fairly and in an even-handed manner. I'd prefer to move forward on that basis, but it's always open to you to bring forward a motion that would change the order in which we call people to ask questions.
By the way, if we start another full round we'll go for seven minutes. We probably don't have enough time for that. Is everyone okay with us going five minutes apiece? So we'll do one Liberal, one Bloc, one NDP, and one government.
Is everyone okay with that?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Chair: All right. We'll proceed on that basis.
Mr. Lee.
:
Fine. I have two questions.
Clause 10 of the bill purports to deal with federal-provincial overlap. The minister has said very clearly that this is federal criminal law jurisdiction under section 91. If that's so, why do we have provinces with similar legislation out there? And if this federal bill passes, wouldn't the federal legislation pre-empt the provincial legislation? That's why we have criminal law jurisdiction here, so we don't have ten different little Criminal Code countries, as they have in the U.S.A.
Would you address that, please, in terms of jurisdiction? What happens to provincial laws that are apparently in the same criminal law field? If the minister was right, this is criminal law and the provinces don't have criminal law jurisdiction.
My second question relates to clause 3, in which there are the words “Uniform Resource Locator where child pornography may be available”. Since we are dealing with criminal law legislation here, that is a very low threshold for your average citizen, “where child pornography may be available”. You have not used words like “where child pornography appears to be available”, or “is believed to be available”. Rather, the simple words used are a person becomes aware of a URL where child pornography “may be available”.
Would you please address this? I find the threshold very low, given my earlier question and remarks about an individual who sends out e-mails and who becomes aware of this is implicated in the charging section. They don't even have to know that there is child pornography on that other site. In this case, the child pornography simply “may be” there. To my mind, if this is criminal legislation, if it's a real criminal law snitch law, we have a low threshold and I think the whole thing could be at risk if you were to end up with a weak case.
Those are my two questions: federal-provincial jurisdiction; and the use of the words “may be” instead of something firmer.
:
On the issue of whether there is an overlap with the federal and provincial law, as indicated earlier the provinces are operating in their child protection power. We're operating under the criminal law power with this stand-alone statute.
There are many examples where provincial and federal law is complementary. I'm thinking of impaired driving, for example. We have provisions in the Criminal Code. The provinces also have a whole range of quasi-criminal offences under their highway traffic legislation. And in some cases a person can be liable to both sets of penalties, and in others, not. This is similar to that.
We also see that in terms of domestic violence. The provinces have domestic violence legislation that's complementary to the Criminal Code charges that may be at play with respect to assault, or whatever applies. It's the same here.
The provinces have called upon the federal government repeatedly for federal legislation in this area. They have also pursued their own approaches, but we believe they will act hand in glove and there won't be any sense of duplication. That's why our legislation also provides for the reporting requirements, that if you report under one statute you have discharged your obligations under the other. So if a person is in Manitoba and reports the tip under that legislation, they're also deemed to have reported under this legislation. But as Mr. Woodworth has noted, we want to make sure that they are also required to preserve the data, so there may be some need to refine clause 10 to make that clear. But to date none of our provincial colleagues have expressed concern that this legislation will impact theirs negatively.
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On the second question, clause 3, we have to remember there are two different obligations under this act. Under clause 3, they're required to report to a designated agency, and under clause 4 it's a requirement to notify the proper police authorities. If they have reason to believe under clause 4, they must preserve the evidence under clause 5.
Under clause 3, you're worried about the standard of “may be available”. When developing the legislation, two principles that the minister articulated were kept in mind: that the legislation shouldn't contribute to the further dissemination of child pornography, nor should it contribute to the creation of further consumers of child pornography. So creating a lower threshold may be available.
This is a standard that the ISP will employ when receiving a tip. If they receive an e-mail from a subscriber that says he or she found child pornography at a website, that's the standard that meets “may be available”. We don't want them to require their personnel to go to the website and confirm there's child pornography; we simply want them to advance that tip to the designated agency to triage and send it on to police if it turns out to be child pornography.
The standard really is for their own recognition of the credibility of the tip and whether it constitutes something that fits under this legislation.
I think that this point where Mr. Woodworth gets caught is a really important one. I'm concerned that clause 10 may also alleviate responsibility to report under clause 4. When you're doing the review of this, if you could look at it being clear that clause 10 does not exempt the responsibility under clauses 4 or 5....
I have a question. You've used a different test in the reporting requirements in clauses 3 and 4. In clause 3, “where child pornography may be available to the public” is the test requiring them to report to the agency, and then in clause 4 it's reporting to a police officer or other designated person. The test there is where they believe the Internet service “is being or has been used to commit a child pornography offence”.
Are you contemplating setting it out more specifically in the regulations? I would assume a lot of the people who will have to make this decision on whether an offence has been committed are not going to be people with legal backgrounds, so how are they going to determine this?
In particular, I'm thinking of the situations where we know it's a problem. You get pieces of art being sent over the Internet that may have the possibility of being defined as child pornography. You get personal pictures being sent--the baby-in-the-bathtub situation. How are you expecting people to comply, in particular with clause 4, where they don't have a legal background in criminal matters? Are they exposing themselves to potential charges, for instance, with the baby in the bathtub or the piece of art, where the police officer decides that they should have reported?
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There are a number of parts to that question.
There are different standards between the two clauses. I addressed the reporting standard in the question from Mr. Lee, but the notification standard applies when a service provider discovers it on their own system or it's brought to their attention by one of their subscribers; when they investigate, it's apparent to them that whatever is there is child pornography. If it's not apparent to them, like the baby in the bathwater, or a piece of art, then they haven't met that standard of belief that there's child pornography.
In many ways, it works. If you're prosecuting this case, there are a number of different hoops the crown would have to jump through in terms of proving that someone had reasonable belief, but the defence is always subjective too.
The baby in the bathwater or the art piece are areas where someone would say they didn't have belief that it was child pornography. The way it was crafted is more along the line that you know it when you see it. So if there's--
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Mine may have been covered, I don't recall. We're talking about Internet service providers, and when I asked for the 30-second question in the interim you mentioned Facebook and that it was American. But Facebook is made available to people through Internet service providing companies in Canada, I would suggest, so would they not be caught by this, number one? I think the answer is yes.
Number two, what Internet service provider consultation have we had? This piece of legislation we agree with. Even the minister, however, said it's really just a first step or it's a step. It strikes me that those witnesses have a huge stake in this: that is, the people who provide Internet services, ISPs, have a huge stake in this. If they're not in this room listening to this, they should be. If they're not willing and able to come quickly as witnesses, they should be--even necessarily, maybe, the thought of demanding that they come, but let's not go there.
But you're our safety blanket here as a department. What kind of consultation did you have with the people who are affected directly by this legislation? Could you give me a relative degree of consultation?