Edmonton Journal

OPP drop probe into RCMP data

Mounties’ destructio­n of long gun records protected by new law

- Bruce Cheadle

The Ontario Provincial Police have dropped an investigat­ion into the RCMP’s destructio­n of gun registry data, saying the alleged offences no longer exist under a back-dated, retroactiv­e Conservati­ve law passed last spring.

Documents filed in court by the federal informatio­n commission­er’s office include a letter from the OPP that lays out four potential offences by the RCMP when the national police force destroyed long gun registry records in 2012.

The OPP letter, dated Sept. 22, details at length how Conservati­ve changes buried in a highly controvers­ial omnibus budget bill last spring close off every avenue for investigat­ion of the alleged RCMP offences.

“After giving the provisions described above detailed considerat­ion, I am of the view that the retrospect­ive aspect of the Bill C-59 amendments completely remove any criminal liability in relation to deletion of long-gun registry data by the RCMP,” writes OPP Det. Supt. Dave Truax.

The bill was passed just prior to the House of Commons rising for the summer.

Informatio­n commission­er Suzanne Legault has launched a constituti­onal challenge of the government’s retroactiv­e changes to the legislatio­n, called the Ending the Long-gun Registry Act, or ELRA.

Legault issued a special report to Parliament last spring laying out how the RCMP knowingly destroyed registry files, even though it knew those records were part of an active investigat­ion under the Access to Informatio­n Act, and even though the federal public safety minister had assured Legault’s office that the Mounties would abide by the access law and preserve the data.

Legault recommende­d charges be laid and Justice Minister Peter MacKay referred the matter to the public prosecutor­s’ office on May 6, but the following day the government tabled an omnibus bill that retroactiv­ely wiped the offences from the legal code.

The government also back-dated the changes to when the original bill to kill the gun registry was tabled in Parliament, months before it actually passed into law, wiping out “any request, complaint, investigat­ion, applicatio­n, judicial review appeal or other proceeding” related to the final six months of the registry’s legal existence.

The OPP letter states that it was looking into three possible offences under the Access to Informatio­n Act and one criminal offence, mischief to computer data.

Word of the dropped police investigat­ion came Tuesday as a large group of Canadian academics published an open letter to Prime Minister Stephen Harper saying the retroactiv­e legal change “will be judged in the court of public opinion: citizens will be justifiabl­y alarmed that their government has taken actions that have profound, negative implicatio­ns for the practice of Canadian democracy.”

The letter, signed by some 80 academics, states that “a government should not decriminal­ize its own actions if they were illegal at the time they were committed. This requiremen­t precludes laws that are retroactiv­e as they would re-write history.”

Legault has said the back-dated legal changes — coming in the face of an active investigat­ion and a finding of wrongdoing by her office — set a “perilous precedent” that could allow future government­s to retroactiv­ely rewrite laws on everything from spending scandals to electoral fraud.

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair at the time called the changes “banana-republic behaviour” but parliament­ary procedure experts said the retroactiv­e law, while unorthodox, could not be stopped, and it received royal assent on June 23.

Expert affidavits filed in Ontario Superior Court by Legault’s office question Parliament’s power to enact laws that retrospect­ively infringe on Canadians’ quasi-constituti­onal right to government informatio­n.

“Virtually all formulatio­ns of the rule of law principle — in Canada and elsewhere in peer common law jurisdicti­ons — include the idea that laws should be prospectiv­e rather than retrospect­ive or retroactiv­e,” says the 87-page affidavit by law professor Lorne Sossin of York University’s Osgoode Hall.

“The reasons for this are obvious. Imagine a government that acted corruptly could simply have legislatio­n passed retrospect­ively altering the consequenc­es of rules by which it operated so as to make illegitima­te actions legitimate.”

THE ONLY PARTY TALKING ABOUT

THE FULL SPECTRUM OF HOUSING NEEDS

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LIBERAL MP

ADAM VAUGHAN,

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