The Telegram (St. John's)

Bill C-75 proposal should be welcomed

A good first step towards diverse, impartial Canadian juries

- BY KENT ROACH, PROFESSOR AND PRICHARD WILSON CHAIR IN LAW AND PUBLIC POLICY UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO SPECIAL TO THE CANADIAN PRESS

The proposal to abolish what are known as “peremptory challenges” in Bill C-75, the Canadian government’s new criminal justice bill, should be welcomed.

Peremptory challenges allow both the accused and the prosecutor to challenge and dismiss a potential juror basically because they do not like how that juror looks. They’re an invitation to discrimina­tion.

Neverthele­ss, some defence lawyers have argued that abolition will make juries less diverse.

The challenge for cause process is transparen­t and open. It should have been used in the Stanley/ Boushie case to ensure that no juror, Indigenous or non-indigenous, had already made up his or her mind and was unprepared to fairly decide the case on the evidence.

This ignores the inconvenie­nt fact that the defence team’s use of peremptory challenges produced an all-white jury in the Gerald Stanley-colten Boushie case.

Some argue that abolition is a knee-jerk and quick-fix response to Stanley’s acquittal, and even an attempt to stack the jury.

This ignores that England, the birthplace of peremptory challenges, abolished them in 1988. After much research and deliberati­on, the Manitoba Aboriginal Justice Inquiry also recommende­d in 1991 that they be abolished.

Finally, arguments against doing away with peremptory challenges also ignore that retired Supreme Court Justice Frank Iacobucci concluded in a well-researched 2013 report that no attempt to address the dramatic under-representa­tion of Indigenous people on juries will work as long as both prosecutor­s and defence lawyers can use peremptory challenges in a discrimina­tory manner.

Despite the fact that equality rights under Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms have been in force since 1985, defence lawyers and prosecutor­s have failed to challenge the discrimina­tory use of peremptory challenges.

The U.S. has developed such jurisprude­nce, but it slows down trials, the opposite of what Bill C-75 was aiming to do in its response to the Supreme Court of Canada’s speedy trial ruling.

Bogus reasons to exclude jurors

What’s more, it doesn’t work to address concerns about discrimina­tion.

In the U.S., the prosecutor and the defence are allowed to invent seemingly neutral reasons for keeping minorities off the jury. For example, saying: “I am excluding this potential juror because she works for a tribal council” could be just another way of saying: “I am excluding her because she is Indigenous.”

Employing the American approach in Canada would therefore only result in complex and ineffectiv­e litigation.

Those claiming that the abolition of peremptory challenges could lead to biased jurors ignore what’s known as the “challenge for cause” process in Canada’s Criminal Code that allows both sides to question jurors about whether they would be impartial.

Bill C-75, in fact, improves “challenges for cause” by mandating that judges, rather than the last two jurors selected for a trial, decide whether a prospectiv­e juror is impartial.

The use of two jurors to decide whether other jurors are partial has caused delays and problems in jury selection in the past, and resulted in Criminal Code amendments in both 2008 and 2011.

Transparen­t and open

The challenge for cause process is transparen­t and open. It should have been used in the Stanley/boushie case to ensure that no juror, Indigenous or non-indigenous, had already made up his or her mind and was unprepared to fairly decide the case on the evidence.

The challenge for cause process could be improved even further _beyond provisions in Bill C-75 _without going to the extreme of the American process that allows prospectiv­e jurors to be asked questions that violate their privacy, including how they vote.

The fact that challenge for cause was not used, and that the defence employed peremptory challenges to remove five visibly Indigenous potential jurors, has rightly undermined public confidence in Stanley’s acquittal.

Bill C-75 would also allow judges to set aside some prospectiv­e jurors, not only on a hardship basis, but to maintain public confidence in the administra­tion of justice. This is in response to findings that Indigenous people are underrepre­sented on juries and the concerns that many Canadians had about the fairness of the jury selection process in the Stanley/boushie case.

This expansion of judges’ power could result in more diverse and representa­tive juries, depending on how they exercise that discretion.

But more work is needed to ensure that juries represent the diversity of our communitie­s. Bill C-75 retains the citizenshi­p requiremen­t for jurors even though many permanent residents, often from racialized groups, might otherwise be competent and impartial jurors.

Bill C-75 does not follow up Justice Iacobucci’s recommenda­tion about allowing, in cases where it’s appropriat­e, people who speak Indigenous languages to serve on juries with translatio­n assistance.

The government should also revisit a 2015 Supreme Court of Canada decision that accepts dramatic under-representa­tion of Indigenous people on panels of prospectiv­e jurors.

Two judges dissented in this case, stressing the importance of justice being seen to be done.

We also need a more modern standard based on equality that ensures a fair and random sample of the community.

Such a change would push provinces to develop better ways to ensure more representa­tive jury panels, including outreach and support of Indigenous and other groups such as Africancan­adians who are under-represente­d both on jury panels and actual juries.

Jury trials, especially in the North, held in smaller communitie­s and not simply the largest city in the region could also ease the barriers and hardships that some Indigenous people face when they serve on juries.

Better pay for jurors would also respond to the under-representa­tion of Indigenous and other racialized and disadvanta­ged groups on jurors.

Saskatchew­an has experiment­ed with deliberate­ly diverse coroner’s juries.

In Ontario, there is interest in volunteer jurors from Indigenous communitie­s. With co-operation from the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, more than 500 members of First Nations volunteere­d to serve on the coroner’s juries that deliberate­d about and made important recommenda­tions about preventing the death of Indigenous youth in Thunder Bay.

Iacobucci’s 2013 report supported the use of volunteers to increase Indigenous representa­tion on juries.

Some may fear that volunteer jurors or jurors appointed from the group affected by the case, or jurors from a small community where a crime is alleged to have taken place, may be biased and have no place in criminal trials. But such arguments forget about the critical “challenge for cause” process for ensuring that all jurors are impartial. Nobody wants biased jurors who have already made up their minds. We should all want diverse juries who reflect the relevant life experience in the case.

More could and should be done, but Bill C-75 is a necessary first step that will correctly remove peremptory challenges that allow prosecutor­s and defence lawyers to keep people off juries whose looks they do not like.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Disclosure informatio­n is available on the original site. Read the original article: https://theconvers­ation.com/a-good-first-step-towards-diverseimp­artcom/a-good-first-step-towards-diverseimp­arthttps://theconvers­ation.c

 ?? 123RF STOCK PHOTO ?? Despite the fact that equality rights under Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms have been in force since 1985, defence lawyers and prosecutor­s have failed to challenge the discrimina­tory use of peremptory challenges.
123RF STOCK PHOTO Despite the fact that equality rights under Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms have been in force since 1985, defence lawyers and prosecutor­s have failed to challenge the discrimina­tory use of peremptory challenges.
 ?? CP FILE ?? Gerald Stanley enters the Court of Queen’s Bench for the fifth day of his trial in Battleford, Sask., on Feb. 5.
CP FILE Gerald Stanley enters the Court of Queen’s Bench for the fifth day of his trial in Battleford, Sask., on Feb. 5.

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