Admission de preuves par écoute électronique
Ang |
Cette page a été mise à jour ou révisée de manière substantielle pour la dernière fois January 2016. (Rev. # 2968) |
n.b.: Cette page est expérimentale. Si vous repérez une grammaire ou un texte anglais clairement incorrect, veuillez m'en informer à [email protected] et je le corrigerai dès que possible. |
- < Fouilles, perquisitions et saisies
- < Mandats de perquisition
- < Écoutes téléphoniques
Principes généraux
Section 189(5) establishes the statutory rules and preconditions for the admissibility of wiretap evidence. [1]
- Place
When dealing with land-line phones, the "place" refers to the two ends of the conversation.[2] For cell phones, the place would describe the location of the cell towers.[3]
- Breach of Privacy
The Charter does not apply to recordings of conversations between to private citizens unless one of them is acting as an agent of the state. The only remedy for aggrieved parties is a civil one.[4] The exceptions are where the person recording the communication is an "agent of the state" or a "part of government."[5]
- Non-Official Languages
A transcript of the wiretap that has been translated into an official language should be sufficient to satsify s. 189 requirements.[6]
- History
Under the previous legislation, s. 189(1) required automatic exclusion of any wiretap evidence unless "the interception was lawfully made."
- ↑ R c Tam, 2000 CanLII 5699 (ON CA), [2000] OJ No 2185 (CA), par Goudge JA, au para 16 ("This section is not a penal provision of the Criminal Code. Rather, it establishes a statutory rule of evidence that defines a pre‑condition for admissibility. Thus, it must receive an interpretation which best assures the attainment of its objectives.")
- ↑
R c Nguyen, 2001 ABPC 52 (CanLII), 294 AR 201, par Stevenson ACJ, au para 29
- ↑
, ibid., au para 29
- ↑
R c Iyer, 2015 ABQB 577 (CanLII), par Moen J, au para 74
- ↑
R c Dell, 2005 ABCA 246 (CanLII), 199 CCC (3d) 110, par Fruman JA, aux paras 7 and 8
Iyer, supra, aux paras 72 to 80
- ↑
Tam, supra
R c Rowbotham, 1988 CanLII 147 (ON CA), 63 CR (3d) 113, par curiam
Notice
The purpose of s. 189(5)(a) is to provide the defense "with timely disclosure of the evidence that may be tendered against him to enable him to prepare his defence."[1]
What amounts to a "reasonable notice" will depend on the circumstances of the case in light of the purpose of the provision.[2]
Reasonable notice can include notes occurring during pretrial motions "several months" before the empaneling of a jury.[3]
189
(1) to (4) [Repealed, 1993, c. 40, s. 10]
- Notice of intention to produce evidence
(5) The contents of a private communication that is obtained from an interception of the private communication pursuant to any provision of, or pursuant to an authorization given under, this Part [Pt. VI – Atteintes à la vie privée (art. 183 à 196.1)] shall not be received in evidence unless the party intending to adduce it has given to the accused reasonable notice of the intention together with
- (a) a transcript of the private communication, where it will be adduced in the form of a recording, or a statement setting out full particulars of the private communication, where evidence of the private communication will be given viva voce; and
- (b) a statement respecting the time, place and date of the private communication and the parties thereto, if known.
[omis (6)]
R.S., 1985, c. C-46, s. 189; 1993, c. 40, s. 10.
[annotation(s) ajoutée(s)]
The notice requirements under s. 189(5) are mandatory. A failure to comply with the conditions prevents a judge from receiving it as evidence.[4]
What constitutes "reasonable notice" is "fact-driven" and depends on the circumstances.[5]
- No Notice for Preliminary Inquiry
Notice is not required for admitting wiretap evidence at a preliminary inquiry.[6]
- No Notice re Content
There is no obligation to provide notice of what exactly was intercepted.[7]
- Particulars
The notice provided under s. 189(5) be adequate, the defence of remedy under section 190 to see particulars. [8]
- Further particulars
190 Where an accused has been given notice pursuant to subsection 189(5) [avis d'intention de produire des preuves d'écoute électronique], any judge of the court in which the trial of the accused is being or is to be held may at any time order that further particulars be given of the private communication that is intended to be adduced in evidence.
1973-74, c. 50, s. 2.
[annotation(s) ajoutée(s)]
- Failure to Notify
Where there has been no proper notice pursuant to s. 196, the intercept does not become unlawful.[9]
- ↑
R c Youkhana, 2006 SKQB 351 (CanLII), 284 Sask R 5, par Laing J, au para 17
R c Pleich, 1980 CanLII 2852 (ON CA), 55 CCC (2d) 13, par Morden JA at p 21 (CCC)
- ↑ , ibid.
- ↑ R c Proudfoot, 1995 ABCA 409 (CanLII), 102 CCC (3d) 260, par curiam
- ↑
R c Paquet, 1999 CanLII 2259 (NB CA), 140 CCC (3d) 283, par curiam, au para 24
R c Welsh, 2007 CanLII 23170 (ON SC), par O’Connor J, au para 34
- ↑
R c Shalala, 2000 CanLII 20260 (NB CA), 45 WCB (2d) 203, par curiam, au para 123
- ↑ LeBlanc and Steeves v R, 2009 NBCA 84 (CanLII), 250 CCC (3d) 29, par Richard JA
- ↑ R c Zaduk, 1979 CanLII 1960 (ON CA), (1979) 46 CCC 327, par Arnup JA
- ↑ R c Tam, 2000 CanLII 5699 (ON CA), par Goudge JA, au para 21
- ↑ R c Welsh (No 6), 1977 CanLII 1215 (ON CA), 1977 32 CCC (2d) 363, par Zuber JA
Hearsay
Wiretaps, even though the contain hearsay, are frequently admitted into evidence.[1] Typically, they are accepted under the "admissions against interest" exception.[2]
They also will satisfy the principled approach requirements of necessity and reliability as wiretaps contain spontaneous declarations that are contemporaneously recorded are likely the best evidence available for the facts they establish. They provide "cogent and reliable" evidence of the parties to the conversation and their activities.[3] The evidence is high quality since the parties are unaware that they are being listened to.[4] They will have "enormous weight."[5]
- ↑
R c Eiswerth, 1998 CanLII 13844 (SK QB), [1998] S.J. No 798 (Sask. Q.B.), par Hrabinsky J, aux paras 12 to 15
R c Violette, 2008 BCSC 422 (CanLII), [2008] BCJ No 2781 (S.C.), par Romilly J, au para 10
R c Wu, 2010 ABCA 337 (CanLII), [2010] AJ No 1327 (CA), par curiam
R c Shea, 2011 NSCA 107 (CanLII), [2011] NSJ No 653 (CA), par Farrar JA, aux paras 54 to 67, 74, 80 to 83
R c Shields, 2014 NSPC 21 (CanLII), par Derrick J, au para 98
- ↑
see Traditional Exceptions to Hearsay
- ↑
R c Lepage and Oliynyk, 2008 BCCA 132 (CanLII), [2008] BCJ No 524, par Hall JA, au para 37
- ↑
Shields, supra, au para 101
- ↑
R c Niemi, 2008 CanLII 82240 (ON SC), [2008] OJ No 4619 (SCJ), par Eberhard J, au para 29
see also Violette, supra, au para 101
Privileged Evidence
189
[omis "(1) to (4)" and (5)]
- Privileged evidence
(6) Any information obtained by an interception that, but for the interception, would have been privileged remains privileged and inadmissible as evidence without the consent of the person enjoying the privilege.
R.S., 1985, c. C-46, s. 189; 1993, c. 40, s. 10.
A wife who previously consented to a wiretap of conversations between her and her husband but then refuses to testify at trial may rely on spousal privilege s. 4(3) of the Evidence Act.[1]
- ↑ See Spousal Privilege
Procedure
Wiretap Transcripts
Transcripts of wiretaps may be put to the jury. The transcript however are only to be sued as aids and not evidence themselves.[1] The court should be satisfied that the transcripts are "substantially accurate" before allowing them to be put to the jury.[2]
- Labels on Transcripts
It may be acceptable to put a wiretap transcript to a jury along with labels identifying the alleged identity of the speaker in the wiretap, even where identity is in dispute, as long as the jury is provided with limiting instructions that indicate the labels are not evidence and the jury must decide for themselves.[3]
- ↑
R c Aldaba, 2014 ABQB 228 (CanLII), par Burrows J, au para 2
R c Iyer, 2015 ABQB 577 (CanLII), par Moen J, au para 82
- ↑
, ibid., aux paras 97 to 99
- ↑
Aldaba, supra, au para 9