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Bill C-3

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    (a) if an extrajudicial sanction is used to deal with the young person, the period ending two years after the young person consents to be subject to the sanction in accordance with paragraph 10(2)(c);

    (b) if the young person is acquitted of the offence otherwise than by reason of a verdict of not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder, the period ending two months after the expiry of the time allowed for the taking of an appeal or, if an appeal is taken, the period ending three months after all proceedings in respect of the appeal have been completed;

    (c) if the charge against the young person is dismissed for any reason other than acquittal, the charge is withdrawn, or the young person is found guilty of the offence and a reprimand is given, the period ending two months after the dismissal, withdrawal, or finding of guilt;

    (d) if the charge against the young person is stayed, with no proceedings being taken against the young person for a period of one year, at the end of that period;

    (e) if the young person is found guilty of the offence and the youth sentence is an absolute discharge, the period ending one year after the young person is found guilty;

    (f) if the young person is found guilty of the offence and the youth sentence is a conditional discharge, the period ending three years after the young person is found guilty;

    (g) subject to paragraphs (i) and (j) and subsection (9), if the young person is found guilty of the offence and it is a summary conviction offence, the period ending three years after the youth sentence imposed in respect of the offence has been completed;

    (h) subject to paragraphs (i) and (j) and subsection (9), if the young person is found guilty of the offence and it is an indictable offence, the period ending five years after the youth sentence imposed in respect of the offence has been completed;

    (i) subject to subsection (9), if, during the period calculated in accordance with paragraph (g) or (h), the young person is found guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction committed when he or she was a young person, the latest of

      (i) the period calculated in accordance with paragraph (g) or (h), as the case may be, and

      (ii) the period ending three years after the youth sentence imposed for that offence has been completed; and

    (j) subject to subsection (9), if, during the period calculated in accordance with paragraph (g) or (h), the young person is found guilty of an indictable offence committed when he or she was a young person, the period ending five years after the sentence imposed for that indictable offence has been completed.

Prohibition orders not included

(3) Prohibition orders made under an Act of Parliament or the legislature of a province, including any order made under section 50, shall not be taken into account in determining any period referred to in subsection (2).

Extrajudicial measures

(4) Access to a record kept under section 114 or 115 in respect of extrajudicial measures, other than extrajudicial sanctions, used in respect of a young person shall be given only to the following persons for the following purposes:

    (a) a peace officer or the Attorney General, in order to make a decision whether to again use extrajudicial measures in respect of the young person;

    (b) a person participating in a conference, in order to decide on the appropriate extrajudicial measure; and

    (c) a peace officer, the Attorney General or a person participating in a conference, if access is required for the administration of the case to which the record relates.

Exception

(5) When a youth justice court has withheld all or part of a report from any person under subsection 34(9) or (10) or 39(7), that person shall not be given access under subsection (1) to that report or part.

Records of assessments or forensic DNA analysis

(6) Access to a report made under section 34 or a record of the results of forensic DNA analysis of a bodily substance taken from a young person in execution of a warrant issued under section 487.05 of the Criminal Code may be given only under paragraphs (1)(a) to (c), (e) to (h) and (q) and subparagraph (1)(s)(ii).

Introduction into evidence

(7) Nothing in paragraph (1)(h) or (q) authorizes the introduction into evidence of any part of a record that would not otherwise be admissible in evidence.

Disclosures for research or statistical purposes

(8) When access to a record is given to a person under paragraph (1)(p) or subparagraph (1)(s)(i), the person may subsequently disclose information contained in the record, but shall not disclose the information in any form that would reasonably be expected to identify the young person to whom it relates.

Application of usual rules

(9) If, during the period of access to a record under any of paragraphs (2)(g) to (j), the young person is convicted of an offence committed when he or she is an adult,

    (a) section 81 does not apply to the young person in respect of the offence for which the record is kept under sections 113 to 115;

    (b) this Part no longer applies to the record and the record shall be dealt with as a record of an adult; and

    (c) for the purposes of the Criminal Records Act, the finding of guilt in respect of the offence for which the record is kept is deemed to be a conviction.

Records of offences that result in a prohibition order

(10) Despite anything in this Act, when a young person is found guilty of an offence that results in a prohibition order being made, and the order is still in force at the end of the applicable period for which access to a record kept in respect of the order may be given under subsection (2), the youth justice court may disclose the record only to establish the existence of the order in any offence involving a breach of the order.

Access to R.C.M.P. records

119. (1) The following persons may, during the period set out in subsection (3), be given access to a record kept under subsection 114(3) in respect of an offence set out in the schedule:

    (a) the young person to whom the record relates;

    (b) the young person's counsel, or any representative of that counsel;

    (c) an employee or agent of the Government of Canada, for statistical purposes under the Statistics Act;

    (d) any person or member of a class of persons that a youth justice court judge considers has a valid interest in the record, to the extent directed by the judge, if the judge is satisfied that access is desirable in the public interest for research or statistical purposes;

    (e) the Attorney General or a peace officer, when the young person is or has been charged with another offence set out in the schedule or the same offence more than once, for the purpose of investigating any offence that the young person is suspected of having committed, or in respect of which the young person has been arrested or charged, whether as a young person or as an adult;

    (f) the Attorney General or a peace officer to establish the existence of an order in any offence involving a breach of the order; and

    (g) any person for the purposes of the Firearms Act.

Access for identification purposes

(2) During the period set out in subsection (3), access to the portion of a record kept under subsection 114(3) that contains the name, date of birth and last known address of the young person to whom the fingerprints belong, may be given to a person for identification purposes if a fingerprint identified as that of the young person is found during the investigation of an offence or during an attempt to identify a deceased person or a person suffering from amnesia.

Period of access

(3) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the period of access to a record kept under subsection 114(3) in respect of an offence is the following:

    (a) if the offence is an indictable offence, other than a presumptive offence, the period starting at the end of the applicable period set out in paragraphs 118(2)(h) to (j) and ending five years later; and

    (b) if the offence is an offence set out in paragraph (a) of the definition ``presumptive offence'' in subsection 2(1) or an offence set out in paragraph (b) of that definition for which the Attorney General has given notice under subsection 63(2), the period starting at the end of the applicable period set out in paragraphs 118(2)(h) to (j) and continuing indefinitely.

Subsequent offences as young person

(4) If a young person who has been found guilty of an offence set out in the schedule is, during the period of access to a record under subsection (3), found guilty of an additional offence set out in the schedule, committed when he or she was a young person, access to the record may be given to the following additional persons:

    (a) a parent of the young person or any adult assisting the young person under subsection 25(7);

    (b) a judge, court or review board, for a purpose relating to proceedings against the young person under this Act or any other Act of Parliament in respect of offences committed or alleged to have been committed by the young person, whether as a young person or as an adult; or

    (c) a member of a department or agency of a government in Canada, or an agent of the department or agency, that is

      (i) preparing a report in respect of the young person under this Act or for the purpose of assisting a court in sentencing the young person after the young person becomes an adult,

      (ii) engaged in the supervision or care of the young person, whether as a young person or as an adult, or in the administration of a sentence in respect of the young person, whether as a young person or as an adult, or

      (iii) considering an application for conditional release or pardon made by the young person after the young person becomes an adult.

Disclosure for research or statistical purposes

(5) A person who is given access to a record under paragraph (1)(c) or (d) may subsequently disclose information contained in the record, but shall not disclose the information in any form that would reasonably be expected to identify the young person to whom it relates.

Subsequent offences as adult

(6) If, during the period of access to a record under subsection (3), the young person is convicted of an additional offence set out in the schedule, committed when he or she was an adult,

    (a) this Part no longer applies to the record and the record shall be dealt with as a record of an adult and may be included on the automated criminal conviction records retrieval system maintained by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police; and

    (b) for the purposes of the Criminal Records Act, the finding of guilt in respect of the offence for which the record is kept is deemed to be a conviction.

Deemed election

120. For the purposes of sections 118 and 119, if no election is made in respect of an offence that may be prosecuted by indictment or proceeded with by way of summary conviction, the Attorney General is deemed to have elected to proceed with the offence as an offence punishable on summary conviction.

Disclosure of information and copies of record

121. A person who is required or authorized to be given access to a record under section 118, 119, 122 or 123 may be given any information contained in the record and may be given a copy of any part of the record.

Where records may be made available

122. (1) A youth justice court judge may, on application by a person after the end of the applicable period set out in subsection 118(2), order that the person be given access to all or part of a record kept under sections 113 to 115 or that a copy of the record or part be given to that person,

    (a) if the youth justice court judge is satisfied that

      (i) the person has a valid and substantial interest in the record or part,

      (ii) it is necessary for access to be given to the record or part in the interest of the proper administration of justice, and

      (iii) disclosure of the record or part or the information in it is not prohibited under any other Act of Parliament or the legislature of a province; or

    (b) if the youth court judge is satisfied that access to the record or part is desirable in the public interest for research or statistical purposes.

Restriction for par. (1)(a)

(2) Paragraph (1)(a) applies in respect of a record relating to a particular young person or to a record relating to a class of young persons only if the identity of young persons in the class at the time of the making of the application referred to in that paragraph cannot reasonably be ascertained and the disclosure of the record is necessary for the purpose of investigating any offence that a person is suspected on reasonable grounds of having committed against a young person while the young person is, or was, serving a sentence.

Notice

(3) Subject to subsection (4), an application for an order under paragraph (1)(a) in respect of a record shall not be heard unless the person who makes the application has given the young person to whom the record relates and the person or body that has possession of the record at least five days notice in writing of the application, and the young person and the person or body that has possession has had a reasonable opportunity to be heard.

Where notice not required

(4) A youth justice court judge may waive the requirement in subsection (3) to give notice to a young person when the judge is of the opinion that

    (a) to insist on the giving of the notice would frustrate the application; or

    (b) reasonable efforts have not been successful in finding the young person.

Use of record

(5) In any order under subsection (1), the youth justice court judge shall set out the purposes for which the record may be used.

Disclosure for research or statistical purposes

(6) When access to a record is given to any person under paragraph (1)(b), that person may subsequently disclose information contained in the record, but shall not disclose the information in any form that would reasonably be expected to identify the young person to whom it relates.

Access to record by young person

123. A young person to whom a record relates may have access to the record at any time.

Disclosure of Information in a Record

Disclosure by peace officer during investigation

124. (1) A peace officer may disclose to any person any information in a record kept under section 113 or 114 that it is necessary to disclose in the conduct of the investigation of an offence.

Disclosure by Attorney General

(2) The Attorney General may, in the course of a proceeding under this Act or any other Act of Parliament, disclose the following information in a record kept under section 113 or 114:

    (a) to a person who is a co-accused with the young person in respect of the offence for which the record is kept, any information contained in the record; and

    (b) to an accused in a proceeding, if the record is in respect of a witness in the proceeding, information that identifies the witness as a young person who has been dealt with under this Act.

Information that may be disclosed to a foreign state

(3) The Attorney General or a peace officer may disclose to the Minister of Justice of Canada information in a record that is kept under section 113 or 114 to the extent that it is necessary to deal with a request to or by a foreign state under the Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, or for the purposes of any extradition matter under the Extradition Act. The Minister of Justice of Canada may disclose the information to the foreign state in respect of which the request was made, or to which the extradition matter relates, as the case may be.

Disclosure to insurance company

(4) A peace officer may disclose to an insurance company information in a record that is kept under section 113 or 114 for the purpose of investigating a claim arising out of an offence committed or alleged to have been committed by the young person to whom the record relates.

Preparation of reports

(5) The provincial director or a youth worker may disclose information contained in a record if the disclosure is necessary for procuring information that relates to the preparation of a report required by this Act.

Schools and others

(6) The provincial director, a youth worker, a peace officer or any other person engaged in the provision of services to young persons may disclose to any professional or other person engaged in the supervision or care of a young person - including the representative of any school board or school or any other educational or training institution - any information contained in a record kept under sections 113 to 115 if the disclosure is necessary

    (a) to ensure compliance by the young person with an authorization under section 90 or an order of any court concerning bail, probation, the serving of a portion of the sentence in the community under supervision or conditional supervision;

    (b) to ensure the safety of staff, students or other persons; or

    (c) to facilitate the rehabilitation of the young person.

Information to be kept separate

(7) A person to whom information is disclosed under subsection (6) shall

    (a) keep the information separate from any other record of the young person to whom the information relates;

    (b) ensure that no other person has access to the information except if authorized under this Act, or if necessary for the purposes of subsection (6); and

    (c) destroy their copy of the record when the information is no longer required for the purpose for which it was disclosed.

Time limit

(8) No information may be disclosed under this section after the end of the applicable period set out in subsection 118(2).

Records in the custody, etc., of archivists

125. When records originally kept under sections 113 to 115 are under the custody or control of the National Archivist of Canada or the archivist for any province, that person may disclose any information contained in the records to any other person if