Montreal Gazette

Culture of delay clogging Quebec justice system

Lawyers blame government policies that force defendants to contest charges

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE The Canadian Press

During the summers of MONTREAL 2015 and 2016, McGill University professor Jason Carmichael tried to study what factors influenced sentencing outcomes for people convicted of drunk driving — but he ran into a problem.

The researcher­s he sent to the Montreal courthouse couldn’t track those criminal cases within a reasonable — and cost-efficient — time frame because of consistent delays.

“Every day, one out of five cases scheduled would actually take place, and even that one would get postponed,” Carmichael said in an incredulou­s tone.

“It was one of the most dysfunctio­nal things I have ever heard of in my life.”

Quebec recently announced $175 million over four years in funding for more judges, Crown attorneys and support staff to help alleviate the overburden­ed system.

But for Carmichael and others who spoke to The Canadian Press, money alone is not the answer.

There is a culture of delay, they explain, that runs through all the actors in the system, from beat cops to attorneys to politician­s who create new policies without providing the funding to implement them.

Courts across the country have been overburden­ed for years and the problem intensifie­d after a Supreme Court ruling last July aimed at respecting the fundamenta­l right of an accused to be tried within a reasonable period.

In a 5-4 decision, the court decided provincial court criminal cases cannot exceed 18 months from the moment a suspect is charged until the end of that person’s trial.

At the Superior Court level, the ceiling was set at 30 months.

Only delays initiated by the state count toward the caps, meaning delays sought by defence attorneys aren’t factored in.

Provinces have had to scramble to adhere to the Supreme Court ruling.

In Manitoba, for example, its three chief justices and attorney general recently suggested a pilot project that would eliminate preliminar­y inquiries so cases can move straight to trial.

Crown officials in Quebec note that, since last summer’s ruling, lawyers in 574 cases have requested that charges be stayed against their clients due to unduly lengthy proceeding­s.

Criminal defence lawyer Isabel Schurman said government­s are partly to blame for delays by creating new policies without the necessary funding.

“They want to make a strong statement against domestic violence — they create a zero-tolerance policy,” she said.

For instance, when the Quebec government removed the right to obtain temporary driving licences in the 1990s after drunk driving conviction­s, the number of challenges soared.

A first drunk driving conviction means losing one’s licence for at least one year.

“Before that, people just pleaded guilty and they could get a temporary permit to drive to work so their livelihood wasn’t in jeopardy,” Schurman said.

“But now the consequenc­es of not being able to keep a job are high enough that people contest.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? McGill University professor Jason Carmichael says he couldn’t study the factors that determine how drunk drivers are sentenced because so many cases were constantly delayed in court.
THE CANADIAN PRESS McGill University professor Jason Carmichael says he couldn’t study the factors that determine how drunk drivers are sentenced because so many cases were constantly delayed in court.

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