Pending & Prominent: Reviewing Crown discretion
I wrote about the case of R v Gill, 2011 ONSC 1145 in Mack's Criminal Law Bulletin and have blogged about it on two occasions: Exercising, or is it excising, Crown discretion; Protecting the Quasi-Judicial Function of the Crown. That case was argued before the Ontario Court of Appeal on Thursday. We will see if they agree with my conclusion:
The decision by the Crown to file notice is one that goes to the nature and extent of the prosecution; such discretion, therefore, should only be reviewable in accordance with the principles in R v Power, [1994] 1 SCR 601.
DG Mack
Current & Curious: How many ways can you say "forthwith"?
News: MCL Blog New Home
Welcome to the new home for Mack's Criminal Law Blog (MCLB). MCLB will continue as it has in the past providing up-to-date and insightful commentary on recent criminal law cases of interest to criminal law practitioners and judges. On this new site - Mack's Criminal Law - readers will have access to companion sites including a law enfrocement blog and forensic science page.
I hope you enjoy and come back often!
News: High profile trials and social media
New & Notable: Identification case
Yes. Um, when I was at the…the last time I was in court we had, um…–you were asking questions similar to what we are now. Um, but at that time I was asked, “Can you identify him”, and I was the distance away I am now, from behind you. And at that point I was unable to see the features that I had recognized at the robbery. But on going out of that courtroom, I was as close to him as the jurors are to each other, as I walked past him, and then I recognized him [para 7].
That’s not identification beyond a reasonable doubt for sure, but is that, when taken with all of the evidence, sufficient for you to come to a conclusion as to whether the accused was or was not the perpetrator? [para 18].
[Y]ou heard her explanation about why she didn't identify him during the preliminary inquiry but did later. How reliable is that identification? Even if she's telling the truth, is it reliable? How much does that tip the scales either way in your deliberating as to whether identity has been proven beyond a reasonable doubt? [para 19].
In my view, it would have been preferable had the trial judge given a stronger warning about the nature and weakness of the in-dock identification evidence...However, I am not able to say that, in the circumstances of this case and reading the charge as a whole, the manner in which the trial judge instructed the jury on this issue amounted to an error of law.
Here, the in-dock identifications – if indeed they amounted to in-dock identifications – were qualified...
The trial judge did warn the jury in general terms about the dangers of eyewitness and in-dock identification evidence, and I am not persuaded that the shortcoming in his instruction that I have identified amounted to a reversible error of law in the circumstances of this case.
I am satisfied that the jury would have appreciated from the manner in which the case was presented by the Crown and from what they were told by the trial judge that, standing on its own, the identification evidence was weak, and that it had to be assessed on the basis that it amounted to no more than one small piece of a much larger puzzle [paras 21 and 23-25].
News: Latest issue of MCLB, preliminary hearings
DG Mack
News: Child exploitation Legislation comes into force
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"report tips they receive regarding Web sites where child pornography may be publicly available to the Canadian Centre for Child Protection; and
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notify police and safeguard evidence if they believe that a child pornography offence has been committed using an Internet service that they provide.
News: Two years less a day for Luangpakham
News: MCLB Issues 12 and 13 now online!