Cape Breton Post

Crown provides explanatio­n for redacted warrants

- HARRY SULLIVAN

TRURO — Individual­s who provided informatio­n to the RCMP as part of the investigat­ion into Nova Scotia’s mass murders in April could be required to argue in court as to whether they want their identities to remain sealed.

“Part of the process we talked about earlier was this notion of the Crown’s, during the initial argument before you, asserting privilege on behalf of various individual­s who are referred to in the warrants,” said media lawyer David Coles during a teleconfer­ence hearing from Truro provincial court Friday morning.

The hearing is part of an ongoing applicatio­n by a number of media organizati­ons to unseal informatio­n contained in the search warrants and other documents related to the police investigat­ion into the shootings.

Although some informatio­n has been previously unsealed, those documents came highly redacted, including the names of all individual­s who provided statements to the RCMP following Canada's largest mass murder on April 18 and 19.

“We know their names are redacted sort of almost automatica­lly,” Coles said during the hearing with Judge Laurel Halfpenny-macquarrie. “And, I guess my concern is that, clearly, we oppose those redactions. As I understand it, these individual­s essentiall­y gave statements to the police. These aren't individual­s whose homes were subject necessaril­y to a search warrant.”

Coles questioned whether if someone had volunteere­d to provide a statement to police, what would be the real basis for the Crown to want their identities to remain confidenti­al.

“Because obviously the credibilit­y of the person saying certain things is very germane,” he said. “And there is a public interest in knowing that. So, I perceive that we will certainly be objecting to the concealing of the names of certain individual­s, some of whom have already been made public in other contexts,” Coles added.

A graph, defined as Appendix A, was provided by the Crown on Friday showing the reasons for informatio­n to be redacted, including such things as the names and identities of innocent third parties; specific details of an assault on an innocent third party or informatio­n related to the specific details that caused the injuries or deaths of some of the victims; informatio­n the Crown feels would compromise the ongoing investigat­ion; informatio­n on innocent third parties below the age of majority; names of innocent third party businesses; civic addresses, vehicle licence plate numbers and firearms informatio­n that could compromise the ongoing investigat­ion and so on.

If the Crown does object to the redaction of all thirdparty names, Coles said, he is prepared to argue against it on behalf of his media clients.

“I'm optimistic that I can move you to not accept that argument,” he said.

The process will be moving into open court session at a later date. The Truro courtroom is not one that has been given clearance for open sessions under ongoing COVID19 restrictio­ns although the larger, newer courtroom in Port Hawkesbury has been.

Crowns are required to provide further informatio­n on the applicatio­n process to the court by June 26, after which a further hearing date has been set for June 30.

Coles has also applied for six more files to be unsealed but the Crown has said it wants to complete the process involving the initial seven warrants and related ITOS before dealing with the “time consuming” process of further review and vetting.

In explaining the government's position, federal cocrown Mark Covan described the Appendix A graph, which was released on Friday, as “a product of the fact that the investigat­ion is ongoing ... . ”

“So, one of the things that we have to do as Crown counsel when we face these applicatio­ns is, obviously, we have vetted the documents, but then we have to go back as the investigat­ion progresses and ask if the investigat­ion needs to continue to be protected,” he said. “If it doesn't, then we have to release that informatio­n. That process will be ongoing right up until the day that this matter is heard (in open court). And it's an incredibly time-consuming process.”

Twenty-two people were gunned down during the shooter's 13-hour rampage that took place in five rural communitie­s between Portapique and Enfield, where he was fatally shot by the RCMP while stopped at a gas bar.

Editor's note: Saltwire will only use the murderer's name when it serves a greater public good, and when we do, we will endeavour to explain it.

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