Journal Pioneer

Code and conduct

Legislativ­e change for sexual assault trials could muddy already cloudy waters

- Russell Wangersky Russell Wangersky’s column appears in 39 SaltWire newspapers and websites in Atlantic Canada. He can be reached at russell.wangersky@thetelegra­m.com — Twitter: @wangersky.

Maybe it’s a solution, or maybe it’s a whole different kind of problem.

Bill C-51, which focuses on a bunch of different issues in the Criminal Code (including, oddly, the removal of “crime comics” from the list of obscene materials) describes itself as a kind of cleanup bill. The stated purpose of the act is to remove or amend sections that have been found to be unconstitu­tional, and to remove or amend “passages and provisions that are obsolete, redundant or that no longer have a place in criminal law.”

But the act does something else as well, something that’s raised more than a bit of ire with defence lawyers.

In what looks like a clear response to cases like the Jian Ghomeshi trial, the federal government is changing the rules about how sexual assault trials are to be handled — more to the point, how defence lawyers can use things like past email communicat­ions between an alleged victim and the accused. In the Ghomeshi case, defence lawyer Marie Henein successful­ly used exactly that kind of past communicat­ion to discredit the three complainan­ts in the case, arguing that their conduct and correspond­ence with Ghomeshi, both before and after the alleged assaults, were at odds with their testimony.

The federal government’s summary of the proposed change says part of the legislatio­n “modifies certain provisions of the Code relating to sexual assault in order to clarify their applicatio­n and to provide a procedure applicable to the admissibil­ity and use of a complainan­t’s record when in the possession of the accused.” What the change in the law does, in bare terms, is to add to the already existing requiremen­t that an accused’s defence can’t use a complainan­t’s prior sexual activity or history against them without a hearing where a judge determines whether that evidence is relevant and necessary for a fair hearing of the case.

The mechanism the federal Justice Department has chosen is to broaden the definition of “sexual activity” like this: “For the purpose of this section, sexual activity includes any communicat­ion made for a sexual purpose or whose content is of a sexual nature.” In other words, prior sexual activity won’t just be what a complainan­t has taken part in in his or her past, it will also be anything they might have talked or written about in the past. (I know, this is all a bit of a brain buster.)

It’s a significan­t change, because it will mean that defence lawyers will have to reveal some of their trial strategies in advance; instead of potentiall­y surprising victims with their own words, defence lawyers will have to get permission in advance from the judge in the case to introduce such records, and the prosecutor­s and victims will know in advance what things they might be facing. Complainan­ts in those cases will be able to be represente­d by their own lawyers, to argue against the admissibil­ity of things like the emails used in Ghomeshi.

The change is being applied only to sexual offences. Fundamenta­lly, then, it’s another legal recognitio­n that sexual assault is a crime of a different sort than other crimes. Because of that difference, the government is willing to impose tighter restrictio­ns on the rules about how far the accused can go to argue their own case.

Revealing the defence strategy, some lawyers argue, presents another danger as well: that complainan­ts, with the defence’s cards on the table, will tailor their testimony to avoid being caught out in a lie.

It’s a stopgap solution for a clear problem in successful­ly prosecutin­g sex cases; defence lawyers argue it could send innocent people to jail.

A solution, or a whole different problem? That depends on where you’re sitting in the courtroom.

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