C-55 , 40th Parliament, 2nd session Monday, January 26, 2009, to Wednesday, December 30, 2009

An Act to amend the Criminal Code
Short title: Response to the Supreme Court of Canada Decision in R. v. Shoker Act
Bill type
House Government Bill

Summary

Current status
At second reading in the House of Commons
Latest activity
Introduction and first reading on Friday, October 30, 2009 (House of Commons)

Progress

End of stage activity
Introduction and first reading, Friday, October 30, 2009
Chamber sittings
Sitting date Debates (Hansard)
Friday, October 30, 2009
Second reading
No activity
Consideration in committee
Not reached
Report stage
Not reached
Third reading
Not reached

Senate

First reading
Not reached
Second reading
Not reached
Third reading
Not reached

Details

Recorded votes

House of Commons

There are currently no recorded votes for this bill.

Senate

To view the complete list of standing votes that have taken place in the Senate, please refer to the Votes page of the Senate of Canada website.

Speaker's rulings and statements

There are currently no Speaker's rulings and statements.

Major speeches at second reading

There are currently no major speeches for this bill.

About

Legislative summary

The following executive summary is available:

On 30 October 2009, the Minister of Justice introduced Bill C-55, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (Response to the Supreme Court of Canada Decision in R. v. Shoker Act), in the House of Commons and it was given first reading.

In 2006, the Supreme Court of Canada, in the decision R. v. Shoker, decided that such demands for bodily samples were unlawful. As a result, police and probation officers have been unable to obtain blood and other samples under probation orders,

Bill C-52 amends the Criminal Code to re-establish the discretion of a court to impose conditions requiring bodily samples to be provided to police and probation officers on demand or at regular intervals where the court sees fit to prohibit the individual from consuming drugs and alcohol in order to enforce compliance with a prohibition on consuming drugs or alcohol imposed in a probation order, a conditional sentence order or a recognizance under section 810, 810.01, 810.1 or 810.2 of the Criminal Code.

Similar bills

No similar bills were introduced during previous sessions or Parliaments

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