Waterloo Region Record

Journo appeals order to turn over materials

- Colin Perkel

TORONTO — A judge who ordered a journalist to turn over his background materials to the RCMP failed to properly balance the need to prosecute a serious crime against the ability of the media to do their jobs, an Appeal Court heard Monday.

In particular, lawyer Iain McKinnon said, the judge failed to appreciate the “chilling effect” turning over the informatio­n would have on the media.

“He didn’t even take it into account,” McKinnon told the Ontario Court of Appeal.

At issue is an RCMP demand that Vice Media journalist Ben Makuch give them his background materials related to articles he did in 2014 on Farah Shirdon.

RCMP charged Shirdon, whose whereabout­s is unknown, in September 2015 with several terrorism-related offences, including that the Calgary man left Canada to join the Islamic State terror organizati­on and that he had threatened Canada and the U.S.

McKinnon, who represents Vice, accused the RCMP of going on a fishing expedition by demanding Makuch’s logs from an Internet messaging app called Kik, which the journalist used to communicat­e with Shirdon.

Last March, Superior Court Justice Ian MacDonnell accepted government arguments that Vice was the only source of informatio­n police needed to further their investigat­ion of Shirdon, prompting an appeal that media and civil liberties groups are watching closely.

“The screen captures are important evidence in relation to very serious allegation­s,” MacDonnell said in his ruling. “There is a strong public interest in the effective investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of such allegation­s.”

McKinnon called it critical that sources — especially those in an adversaria­l relationsh­ip with the state — don’t view journalist­s as an arm of the police. Otherwise, they would be reluctant to talk to the media — something even the officer who obtained the order against Vice recognized, he said.

But Appeal Court Justice David Doherty appeared to have difficulty swallowing the argument, saying no objective person would consider Makuch to be an agent of police — given that he was being ordered to hand over his materials.

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