Bill C-270
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2nd Session, 36th Parliament, 48 Elizabeth II, 1999
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The House of Commons of Canada
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BILL C-270 |
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An Act to protect persons accused of a crime
from undue public speculation and
suspicion before guilt has been
established
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Preamble
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Whereas it is a fundamental principle of
justice that an accused person is presumed
innocent until found to be guilty by a proper
judicial process;
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Whereas publication of the fact that a
person has been charged with committing a
crime inevitably causes public speculation
that may amount to an unjustified
presumption of guilt;
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Whereas the law already provides
protection from undue publicity for certain
witnesses, complainants and young offenders
in order to protect their interests and that there
should also be protection for those who are
accused but not convicted of an offence;
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Whereas Parliament considers that a
restriction on the right to publish details of a
criminal charge or trial in such a way as to
identify an accused before the matter has been
determined is a reasonable limit on the
freedom of expression guaranteed by the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
that is demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society as necessary to maintain
the principle of presumption of innocence;
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Now, Therefore, Her Majesty, by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate and House of
Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:
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1. The Criminal Code is amended by
adding the following after section 533:
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PART XVII.1 PUBLICATION PRIOR TO CONVICTION |
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Publication
delay
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534.1 (1) Subject to this section, no person
shall publish by any means any report
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in which the name of the person or any
information serving to identify the person is
disclosed, until the person has been found
guilty of the offence or has been acquitted of
the offence by a court of competent
jurisdiction.
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Exception
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(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a judge,
on application orders that such information
may be published, having being satisfied that
it is in the public interest to do so because
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Adminis- tration of justice
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(3) For greater certainty, subsection (1)
does not apply in respect of the disclosure of
information in the course of the
administration of justice, including the
disclosure of information for the purposes of
the investigation of an offence or the purposes
of Part III of this Act, or the Firearms Act
where it is not the purpose of the disclosure to
make the information known in the
community.
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Appeals
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(4) For greater certainty, subsection (1)
does not apply to an appeal of a conviction or
acquittal.
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