Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Hidden in plain sight, right at the beginning of the code, is one of our laws most laughable
presumptions: Ignorance of the law by a person who commits an offence is not an excuse for
committing that offence.
In other words, we assume that every person in Canada knows not just the letter of the law but also
the centuries worth of judicial interpretation that informs our criminal justice system.
I will let you in on a secret: Even the best criminal lawyer has no idea about half of the flotsam and
jetsam that litter the big book.
Some examples of the antiquated sections of the code are, at least on first blush, quite funny.
It is illegal to steal cattle or oysters from an oyster bed because one section covering all theft is not
quite enough. It is an offence to leave an ice hole open and water ski at night common scourges on
our otherwise idyllic communities. It is illegal to fraudulently practice witchcraft or sorcery a
historic and highly contentious concession made to the powerful legitimate dark arts lobbying
groups.
Yes, all funny. Just silly, old laws; no harm.
But it is also an offence to sell, distribute, or produce any comic book or work of art that depicts real
or fictitious violence an odious limit on free speech that has no place in modern society.
Even worse, the code contains sections that are actually not the law at all.
According to the letter of the code, it is still an offence to advertise, offer, or procure an abortion.
Discrimination is still alive and well in the criminalization of anal sex. And each and every one of
Stephen Harpers tough-on-crime, minimum-sentence laws is still written in permanent ink.
Except the Supreme Court has struck down many of the Conservative minimum sentences, abortion
laws were ruled unconstitutional decades ago, and we are long past the age where the state was
permitted into the bedrooms of the nation.
The fact that Parliament is loath to legislate away vestigial sections of the code is only half the
problem. The creeping breadth of our criminal law is made worse every year through minor
tinkering, poorly written private members bills, massive omnibus legislation, and opportunistic
political reaction to sensational and high-profile tragedies.
Superficial criminal justice legislation is often the low-hanging fruit used to score political points and
spread the veneer of political responsiveness.
More than mere tinkering is required to fix our criminal laws. After all, as the Jian Ghomeshi trial
demonstrated there is an appetite to re-think, re-evaluate, and modernize our rules of evidence and
procedure.
If only there was some sort of commission that could be tasked with a systemic and non-partisan reevaluation of criminal law.