The Niagara Falls Review

Experts ponder how much research can be done for jury selection

- KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX — Jury dismissals in two high-profile Atlantic Canada court cases this week raise issues around jury vetting in the digital age, according to some legal experts.

A judge declared a mistrial Tuesday in the Dennis Oland murder case when he learned a Saint John police officer tracked all interactio­ns would-be jurors had with police, and passed some of that informatio­n to the Crown.

Just two days later, a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge dismissed the jury in the criminal negligence causing death trial of Halifax-area body shop owner Elie Hoyeck, after a juror questioned why a Crown prosecutor searched her LinkedIn profile.

Both trials resumed by judge alone.

Nicole O’Byrne, an associate law professor at the University of New Brunswick, believes both cases point to issues currently confrontin­g the legal system.

“I think the deeper issue is the fact in this era of social media that it’s easier to get informatio­n than ever before and that if the temptation is there people will want to get hold of that informatio­n and this is what we’ve seen in both cases,” said O’Byrne.

She said the problem is that informatio­n can be accessed without those in the legal system thinking about the bigger issues involved.

“One of the bigger issues is: to what extent can the state use its tools of surveillan­ce in the trial process, and that was the issue in Oland.”

Wayne MacKay, a professor emeritus at Dalhousie University’s Schulich School of Law, said it’s rare but not unpreceden­ted for juries to be dismissed.

MacKay said with two highprofil­e cases in succession, it suggests to him that people aren’t clear about what is acceptable and what is not, especially in an era marked by such easy access to digital informatio­n and social media.

That’s despite a 2012 Supreme Court of Canada decision that restricted police to checking only for criminal conviction­s, which is an automatic disqualifi­cation for jury duty.

In its ruling, the Supreme Court decided that prosecutor­s and police had acted improperly in three cases when they went beyond checking for conviction­s.

“I think both the ability to get that kind of informatio­n and check out jurors is greater, but also the footprint that we leave in the digital world allows other people to discover that and they can then use that as a basis to challenge the fairness of the jury process,” MacKay said.

He said it raises questions about how many other cases have had similar issues that just haven’t come to light.

“You would almost wonder in the second (case) whether it came to light in part as a result of the high-profile Oland mistrial.

“I would be surprised if these were the only two cases in Canada.”

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? After recent jury dismissals, questions arise as to how far police, Crown and others may go in gaining informatio­n on potential jurors.
ANDREW VAUGHAN THE CANADIAN PRESS After recent jury dismissals, questions arise as to how far police, Crown and others may go in gaining informatio­n on potential jurors.

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