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PUBLICATION BANS AND OTHER ORDERS LIMITING ACCESS TO COURTS Webinar for Canadian Newspaper Association October 16, 2007 Presenters Tony S.K. Wong, PartnerRobert.

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Presentation on theme: "PUBLICATION BANS AND OTHER ORDERS LIMITING ACCESS TO COURTS Webinar for Canadian Newspaper Association October 16, 2007 Presenters Tony S.K. Wong, PartnerRobert."— Presentation transcript:

1 PUBLICATION BANS AND OTHER ORDERS LIMITING ACCESS TO COURTS Webinar for Canadian Newspaper Association October 16, 2007 Presenters Tony S.K. Wong, PartnerRobert Koopmans, reporter Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLPr_koopmans@shaw.ca Commerce Court West, 199 Bay StreetKamloops Daily News Toronto, Ontario M5L 1A9250-372-2331 Tel: 416.863.2180 Fax: 416.863.2653 Email: tony.wong@blakes.com

2 THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS There is a common law and constitutional presumption of openness with respect to court proceedings. The presumption of openness includes the right to: –Attend at court proceedings; –Report fairly and accurately on court proceedings; and –To access exhibits filed in court proceedings. The presumption of openness prevails unless specifically limited by court order or by statute. Tony S.K. Wong Page 2

3 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS How the Presumption of Openness Can Be Limited –A publication ban – limits what a journalist can report about a court proceeding or exhibits filed. –A sealing order – limits what documents or exhibits in a court file can be accessed by a journalist or a member of the public. –An in-camera order/order to exclude the public – limits who can be present in the courtroom during all of or certain portions of a court proceeding. Tony S.K. Wong Page 3

4 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Examples A number of statutory limits on the presumption of openness exist. In most cases, these statutory limits apply automatically or are automatically available at the request of a particular party to the court proceedings. Tony S.K. Wong Page 4

5 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Type of Court Hearing Subject to Publication Ban and What the Publication Ban Covers (cont’d) Preliminary Hearings, s. 539 and 542 of Criminal Code Evidence taken at the preliminary hearing shall not be published. NOTE: There is a publication ban on any admission or confession made at preliminary and on the fact that an admission or confession was made at the preliminary hearing. Tony S.K. Wong Page 5

6 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Types of Court Hearings Subject to Publication Ban and What the Publication Ban Covers Bail Hearings, s. 517 of Criminal Code The evidence taken, the information given or the representations made. If there is a publication ban, you can report on the ultimate order at the bail hearing, i.e. accused released subject to these conditions.... However, you cannot report on the justice or judge’s reasons for the order. Tony S.K. Wong Page 6

7 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Type of Court Hearing Subject to Publication Ban and What the Publication Ban Covers (cont’d) Jury Trials, s. 648 of Criminal Code Any part of the jury trial that takes place in the absence of the jury is subject to a complete publication ban. This includes pre-trial motions heard by the trial judge before a jury is selected. NOTE: In a jury trial, whenever the court is conducting a voir dire or determining the admissibility of evidence, the s.648 ban applies Tony S.K. Wong Page 7

8 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Sex Based Charges The identity of the complainant or witness or an any information that could identify the complainant or witness. The ban can be violated even if you do not specifically name the complainant or witness. So, if you say the complainant is the daughter of Mary Jones or lives at 123 Oak Street, this will likely breach the ban. Tony S.K. Wong Page 8

9 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Trials The ban applies to evidence or submissions that allegedly prejudice fair trial interests, ongoing police investigations, the interests of “innocent persons” or the “proper administration of justice” There is no standard ban. You must review the order made by the trial judge in order to determine what is banned. Tony S.K. Wong Page 9

10 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS Wiretap Applications There is a publication ban on the contents of a communication, or the gist of the communication, that has been intercepted through wiretap. There is a publication ban on the fact that a person has been subject to a wiretap. Tony S.K. Wong Page 10

11 STATUTORY LIMITS ON THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS “Young persons” There is a publication ban on the identity of young persons “dealt with”, ie. charged under the Youth Criminal Justice Act, or any information that could identify him or her. Tony S.K. Wong Page 11

12 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Test for Limiting the Presumption of Openness Absent statutory prohibition, the presumption of openness can only be limited by court order. A court order limiting openness must be justified by the party seeking the order, i.e. Crown or accused. Tony S.K. Wong Page 12

13 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The test that must be satisfied by the party seeking to limit openness is referred to as the Dagenais/Mentuck test – based on the two Supreme Court of Canada decisions by the same name. This test applies to all limits on openness, be they publication bans, sealing order or in-camera orders. Tony S.K. Wong Page 13

14 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test Pursuant to the Dagenais/Mentuck test, the party seeking a court order to limit the presumption of openness must provide evidence and make submissions to satisfy the following test: –such an order is necessary in order to prevent a serious risk to the proper administration of justice because reasonably alternative measures will not prevent the risk; and Tony S.K. Wong Page 14

15 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test (cont’d) −the salutary effects of the publication ban outweigh the deleterious effects on the rights and interests of the parties and the public, including the effects on the right to free expression, the right of the accused to a fair and public trial, and the efficacy to the administration of justice. Tony S.K. Wong Page 15

16 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test (cont’d) The Nature of the Risk Required to Justify a Limit on Openness The risk to the proper administration of justice must be “serious” or “real and substantial”. The risk to the administration of justice must be well- grounded in the evidence. Tony S.K. Wong Page 16

17 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test (cont’d) There must be no reasonable alternative to limiting openness Even if public access creates a “serious risk” or a real and substantial risk to the “proper administration of justice” an order limiting openness should only be issued if the court is satisfied that there are no reasonable alternatives to a limit on openness to prevent the risk. Tony S.K. Wong Page 17

18 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test (cont’d) Alternatives to a limit on openness include a strong instruction by the trial judge, expanded challenge for cause, a change of venue, an adjournment etc. Tony S.K. Wong Page 18

19 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test (cont’d) Any Limit on the Presumption of Openness must be Narrowly Tailored Even if a limit on openness is justified, the limit must still be narrowly tailored to impair the right of the public to know no more than is necessary to prevent the serious risk to the proper administration of justice. Tony S.K. Wong Page 19

20 LIMITING PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The Elements of the Dagenais/Mentuck Test (cont’d) The party seeking the limit bears the burden of proving that the proposed limit is as limited (in scope, time, content, etc.) as possible. Further, if a publication ban is sufficient to prevent the “serious risk” to the proper administration of justice, then there should not be a sealing order or an order excluding the public from the courtroom. Tony S.K. Wong Page 20

21 LIMITING THE PRESUMPTION OF OPENNESS The benefit from the limit on openness must outweigh the harms resulting from such a limit There must be a proportionality between the salutary and deleterious effects of a limit on openness. Tony S.K. Wong Page 21

22 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS Subject to orders to the contrary or specific statutory prohibition, you have the right to be in the courtroom and to see exhibits filed in court proceedings. Tony S.K. Wong Page 22

23 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS How to effectively object to discretionary orders limiting the presumption of openness : Voice an objection to the limit on the presumption of openness. Inquire as to whether Notice has been given to the media. Tony S.K. Wong Page 23

24 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS How to effectively object to discretionary orders limiting the presumption of openness: If no notice has been given, seeking adjournment (if practical) to allow notice to be given and to allow media to determine whether it wishes to intervene and oppose granting of order limiting openness Prepare “script” opposing limit on openness and have it ready if necessary Tony S.K. Wong Page 24

25 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS How to effectively object to discretionary orders limiting the presumption of openness: If you are required to make submissions, ensure that the Court is aware of the Supreme Court of Canada’s decisions in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835 and R. v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442 and the test for limiting openness set out in those cases (see earlier). Tony S.K. Wong Page 25

26 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS Accessing Exhibits Best chance to look at exhibit is likely during break in trial or hearing. Ask the registrar. If the trial or hearing is at an end: Go to the court office holding records and request access. If access is denied, ask the basis for the denial. Register objection. Tony S.K. Wong Page 26

27 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS Accessing Exhibits Consider bringing application for access to exhibits. Ask the Crown or Defence counsel for copies of exhibits Tony S.K. Wong Page 27

28 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS Finding out if there is a limit: Determine if there are any limits on the presumption of openness before preparing report on court proceedings or court documents. Ask judge, crown, defence, court reporter or court staff for clarification if unsure if a limit has been imposed. Online sources of information available in certain provinces, i.e. in Nova Scotia, see www.courts.ns.ca Tony S.K. Wong Page 28

29 PRACTICAL POINTS FOR JOURNALISTS COVERING COURTS Finding out if there is a limit: Breach of a publication ban is an offence under Criminal Code and may expose reporter and paper to contempt proceedings. Tony S.K. Wong Page 29

30 FINAL THOUGHTS … You have the right to be in the courtroom. Don’t let anyone deprive you of that right – at least without a fight. Tony S.K. Wong Page 30


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