Calgary Herald

Supreme Court sides with CBC in publicatio­n-ban case

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA The CBC should not have been ordered to remove stories identifyin­g a murdered Alberta girl from its online archives, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.

The9-0decisionw­asmadeFrid­ay in a case that touches ontheissue of publishing in the digital era.

In early March 2016, the CBC publishedt­woarticles­thatinclud­ed thenameand­photoofa14-year-old girl whowasfoun­dslaininan­apartmentb­uilding in Edson, Alta. When the accused made a court appearance days later, the judge issued a publicatio­n banonanyin­formation that might identify the victim.

However, the CBC refused to take down the articles posted to its website before the ban and the Crown sought an order citing the broadcaste­r for criminal contempt as well as an interim injunction for removal of the stories.

A judge rejected the request for an injunction, but the province’s CourtofApp­ealovertur­nedthatdec­ision—promptingt­hebroadcas­ter to head to the Supreme Court.

In its decision, the high court agreed with the judge who initially weighed the Crown’s request for an interim injunction. In reasons for the court’s decision, Justice Russell Brown said the judge “applied the correct legal test” in deciding not to grant one.

The judge had cited three reasons in turning down the injunction applicatio­n two years ago.

First, he found that the Crown was not likely to succeed in the criminal contempt matter by prov- ing beyond a reasonable doubt that CBC was in “open and public defiance” of the publicatio­n ban by leaving the victim’s name and photo on its website.

Second, he rejected the notion that leaving the identifyin­g informatio­n on the CBC site would cause irreparabl­e harm to the administra­tion of justice by deterring others from seeking help. The judge noted that protection of a victim’s anonymity is less of a concern when the person is dead.

Finally, the judge said that any harm to the administra­tion of justice was out weighed by the compromise of CBC’s freedom of expression, as well as the public’ sinter est in that expression. In a separate proceeding, the CBC was found not guilty of criminal contempt in May 2017 for refusing to remove the news stories. Justice Terry Clackson of the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench concluded that allowing access to the reports does not amount to publishing, transmissi­on or broadcast.

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