Waterloo Region Record

Intoxicati­on law ruled unconstitu­tional

Supreme Court says law barring ‘automatism’ defence in criminal cases violates Charter rights

- ERIKA IBRAHIM

Canada’s highest court has ruled that the law barring the use of automatism, or a state of extreme intoxicati­on, as a defence for some crimes is unconstitu­tional and called on Parliament to consider new legislatio­n.

The Supreme Court of Canada ruled on three cases Friday that examined whether people who commit certain violent crimes can use the defence of automatism — a state of extreme intoxicati­on to the point where they lose control of themselves.

Justice Nicholas Kasirer, who wrote the unanimous decision, said the section of the Criminal Code that bars the use of this defence for certain acts is unconstitu­tional.

The use of the Criminal Code section violates the Charter because a person’s decision to become intoxicate­d does not mean they intended to commit a violent offence, said Kasirer.

The section also violates the Charter because an accused could be convicted without the prosecutio­n having to prove the person was willing or meant to commit the act.

The court also said that Parliament may want to enact a new law to hold extremely intoxicate­d people accountabl­e for violent crimes, to protect vulnerable victims, particular­ly women and children.

The federal government enacted the existing law in 1995 amid a backlash over a court ruling that recognized drunkennes­s could be raised as a defence against a sexual assault charge.

Justice Minister David Lametti said in a statement Friday that the government is carefully reviewing the top court’s decision to assess its effect on victims as well as criminal law.

Lametti noted that the decision does not apply to the “vast majority” of cases involving someone who commits a crime while intoxicate­d.

One of the cases considered by the court was that of a Calgary man who consumed alcohol and magic mushrooms and then violently attacked a woman while in a state of extreme intoxicati­on.

The court restored the acquittal of Matthew Brown, who was convicted for breaking into a professor’s house and assaulting her with a broom handle. Kasirer said Brown was not merely drunk or high, but “was in a psychotic state and had no willed control over his actions.”

The court’s other decision dealt with two Ontario cases, for Thomas Chan and David Sullivan.

The men had either killed or injured close relatives. Both were high on drugs — one had eaten magic mushrooms, while the other had tried to kill himself with an overdose of a prescripti­on stopsmokin­g medication.

Applying the decision in Brown’s case, the court acquitted Sullivan because he proved he was intoxicate­d “to the point of automatism,” noting the trial judge found he was acting involuntar­ily.

The top court ordered a new trial for Chan because he was entitled to raise the defence of automatism but no finding of fact had been made in the original trial.

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