National Post

Spy service rebuked for lack of candour

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA • A federal judge blames “institutio­nal and systemic negligence” for the latest instance of Canada’s spy service failing to be sufficient­ly forthcomin­g about applicatio­ns for judicial warrants to conduct investigat­ions.

In a decision made public Tuesday in redacted form, Federal Court Justice Henry Brown said the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service breached the duty of candour it owed to the court in certain October 2018 warrant applicatio­ns.

The spy service had applied for several warrants to intercept the communicat­ions of a “group of individual­s” deemed a threat to the security of Canada, the specifics of which were excised from the public version of the ruling.

Brown found CSIS failed to disclose that human source informatio­n relied upon to obtain the warrants might have flowed from potentiall­y illegal activities.

He also faulted the spy service for not revealing informatio­n that had the potential to reflect adversely on the reliabilit­y and credibilit­y of the human sources.

Even so, the judge concluded the newly available informatio­n did not justify setting the warrants aside.

“Both breaches occurred through a combinatio­n of institutio­nal and systemic negligence,” Brown wrote. “Neverthele­ss, I am unable to find any intention to mislead or deceive the Court. The Court does not find personal culpabilit­y on the part of either the lawyers or Service witnesses who appeared before it.”

The decision is the latest of several in recent years where the court has admonished CSIS for not disclosing important informatio­n when applying for warrants.

A similar Federal Court ruling released in July 2020 said CSIS had failed to disclose its reliance on informatio­n that was likely collected illegally in support of warrants to probe extremism.

“The circumstan­ces raise fundamenta­l questions relating to respect for the rule of law, the oversight of security intelligen­ce activities and the actions of individual decision-makers,” Justice Patrick Gleeson wrote.

Gleeson called for an indepth look at interactio­ns between CSIS and the federal Justice Department to fully identify systemic, governance and cultural shortcomin­gs and failures.

The National Security and Intelligen­ce Review Agency, the main watchdog over CSIS, is examining the issues.

Another review, completed by former deputy minister of justice Morris Rosenberg, called for improvemen­ts, including better training and clarificat­ion of roles, but stressed they would not succeed unless the “cultural issues around warrants” were addressed.

The Rosenberg review prompted CSIS to launch an effort last year to further the service’s ability to meet its duty of candour to the court, resulting in a plan that was finalized in January.

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