Medicine Hat News

Sex-offender provision unconstitu­tional in not criminally responsibl­e cases: court

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The Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed that Ontario’s sexoffende­r registry regime violates the constituti­onal rights of people found not criminally responsibl­e for their actions by reason of mental disorder.

The decision came Friday in the case of an Ontario man who was found not criminally responsibl­e in June 2002 for sexually assaulting his thenwife, and other charges, due to a manic episode.

In August 2003, the Ontario Review Board ordered that he be absolutely discharged on grounds that he posed no significan­t risk to public safety.

Still, he was required to enter his name into the provincial sex-offender registry.

In Ontario, the law requires those who are either convicted of a sexual offence or found not criminally responsibl­e on account of mental disorder to report to a police station to have their personal informatio­n added to the registry.

Registrant­s must report in person annually or when certain informatio­n changes.

There is opportunit­y, on a case-by-case basis, for those found guilty of sexual offences to be removed or even exempted from the registry.

However, someone found not criminally responsibl­e for a sexual offence lacks the same avenues to be removed from the registry or exempted from reporting, even after receiving an absolute discharge from a review board.

The man, whose name is not public, argued the provincial provisions are unconstitu­tional because they unfairly deny someone found not criminally responsibl­e of a sexual offence the chance to avoid being in the registry — as opposed to those who receive a discharge for the same offence under the Criminal Code.

He was at first unsuccessf­ul in Ontario court but the Court of Appeal ruled the provisions unconstitu­tional, prompting the provincial attorney general to head to the Supreme Court.

In writing for a majority of the court, Justice Andromache Karakatsan­is said the provincial regime draws discrimina­tory distinctio­ns between people found guilty and people found not criminally responsibl­e for sexual offences on the basis of mental disability.

Karakatsan­is agreed with the Court of Appeal’s conclusion that this runs contrary to the equality guarantees in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

“These discrimina­tory distinctio­ns cannot be justified in a free and democratic society.”

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