Docket:
T-937-13
Citation: 2014 FC 260
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, March 17, 2014
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Gleason
BETWEEN: |
FRANÇOIS MÉNARD |
Applicant |
and |
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA |
Respondent |
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1] This is an application for judicial review of a decision at the third level of the grievance procedure established under section 74 of the Corrections and Conditional Release Regulations, SOR/92-620 [the Regulations] and section 90 of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act, SC 1992, c 20 [the Act]. The decision in this case was issued on March 18, 2013, by the Senior Deputy Commissioner of the Correctional Service of Canada [the CSC]. In her decision, the Senior Deputy Commissioner denied the applicant’s grievance and refused to remove a note from his file indicating that he had been associated with the Hell’s Angels and was known as their [translation] “special” doctor.
[2] For the reasons set out below, this application for judicial review will be dismissed.
Factual background
[3] The applicant was sentenced to life imprisonment with no possibility of parole for 12 years for second degree murder and received a second sentence of 17 years’ imprisonment to be served concurrently with a possibility of parole half-way through his sentence for manslaughter.
[4] In May 2005, after the applicant’s first conviction, the CSC performed the necessary assessments to determine his applicable security classification, which was necessary in order to transfer him to an appropriate penitentiary. To do so, the CSC gathered information from various sources including the Sûreté du Québec [the SQ]. On May 25, 2005, the CSC informed the applicant in writing that he had been identified as [translation] ”an associate of the Quebec Hell’s Angels, known as the Hell’s Angels’ ‘special’ doctor” in a document entitled “Referral Sheet—Identification of Membership or Association with a Criminal Organization”. According to that sheet, the SQ was the source of this information. Specifically, the information obtained from the SQ indicated that a reliable source had identified the applicant as the Hell’s Angels’ special doctor, that the SQ had observed the applicant spending time with one or more known members or associates of the Hell’s Angels on a regular basis, that there was tangible written, electronic and photographic evidence showing or suggesting that the applicant was a member or associate of the Hell’s Angels and that he himself had admitted being a member or associate of the Hell’s Angels.
[5] After receiving this document, the applicant denied in writing any association with the Hell’s Angels except for the fact that he had treated some members of the group as a doctor, just as he had also treated other members of society like lawyers and members of the Knights of Columbus.
[6] On May20, 2008, the CSC decided that the applicant would no longer be considered as affiliated with the Hell’s Angels. This decision was provided to the applicant in a document entitled “Referral Sheet—Termination of Membership or Association with a Criminal Organization”. In that sheet, the CSC gave the following reasons to support the applicant’s “disaffiliation” with respect to the Hell’s Angels:
[translation]
For almost three years, Ménard has been in a restricted contact area; he no longer lives in the area where most of the gang’s sympathizers are located. No telephone contact or email between the parties. Checks with the SQ and the SPVM were done, and there is no information confirming ties between Ménard and the Hell’s Angels.
[7] Although it no longer considered him affiliated with the Hell’s Angels, the CSC nonetheless continued to refer to the applicant’s past affiliation with the group in other documents in his prison record. That is why the applicant is still concerned about the issues identified in this application, even though he is no longer considered to be affiliated with the criminal organization.
[8] On May 23, 2012, the applicant filed a complaint with his parole officer asking that his prison record be corrected and that the reference to his association with the Hell’s Angels be removed in the places where it appeared in his record. He also sought disclosure of the information the CSC had obtained from the SQ that led the CSC to conclude, in 2005, that the applicant was affiliated with the Hell’s Angels.
[9] On June 7, 2012, the applicant received a response to his complaint stating that the CSC could not go back in time and change documents that were prepared based on the information available at the time. In addition, in its response the CSC invited the applicant to also communicate directly with the SQ to obtain the information and clarifications sought because the CSC, which has [translation] “no authority over them”, was unable to do it.
[10] Subsequently, the applicant filed a grievance at the first level of the grievance procedure established under section 74 of the Regulations. On August 2, 2012, his grievance was denied, stating that the information concerning his affiliation with the Hell’s Angels in 2005 was not erroneous and would not be deleted. In addition, the response indicated that the CSC could not give the applicant a statement from a reliable source in order to protect the source. As for the report received from the SQ, the CSC stated that it did not have the report at the institution. With respect to his admission, the CSC confirmed that it did not have any documents in that regard.
[11] The applicant brought his grievance to the second level, reiterating his position. On September 13, 2012, his grievance was again denied, stating again that the applicant should apply to the SQ to obtain the information about him, that this information was considered between May 25, 2005, and May 20, 2008, and that if he believed the information was erroneous he should submit a request for correction to his parole officer.
[12] The applicant then brought his grievance to the third level of the grievance procedure. On March 18, 2013, his grievance was denied in the decision that is the subject of this judicial review. In that decision, the Deputy Commissioner first summarized the applicant’s initial complaint, noting that he claimed to have never had a relationship with the Hell’s Angels and had never been their [translation] “special” doctor. She went on to review the history of the case and summarized the previous decisions made regarding his complaint as well as the decisions from the first and second levels of the grievance procedure. The Deputy Commissioner then referred to paragraph 2 of the Commissioner’s Directive (CD) 568-3 (2008-07-11), Identification and Management of Criminal Organizations, which recognizes that an association with a criminal organization is a significant risk factor and a serious threat to the safe, secure, orderly and efficient management of penal institutions and is thus important information to obtain. The Senior Deputy Commissioner reiterated that the applicant’s file did not raise reasonable grounds to believe that the validity and reliability of the information from the SQ was questionable. Accordingly, she concluded that the applicant’s grievance should be denied. She provided other reasons for denying it, such as the fact that the applicant did not follow the proper procedure for obtaining a correction to his prison record and that his grievance was filed late.
[13] Because a review of the CSC’s various responses did not identify exactly what information was in the records, counsel for the respondent filed an affidavit of a legal assistant that attached as an exhibit a letter from Daniel Mélançon, senior project manager at the CSC for the Quebec region. In his letter, Mr. Mélançon confirmed that the CSC did not currently have any report from the SQ about the applicant’s criminal affiliation. Accordingly, even if such documents existed, they were no longer in the CSC’s possession. It therefore appears that the only documents the CSC currently has regarding the applicant’s past criminal affiliation are limited to the sheets that were already given to the applicant, in which the CSC summarized the information provided by the SQ.
Issues and standard of review
[14] The parties set out two issues in their memoranda and in their counsel’s oral argument:
1. Is the CSC required to provide the applicant with the information from the SQ concerning his association with the Hell’s Angels?
2. Did the CSC’s Deputy Commissioner err by refusing to remove from the applicant’s prison record the reference concerning his affiliation with the Hell’s Angels, which was provided to the applicant in the “Referral Sheet—Identification of Membership or Association with a Criminal Organization” dated May 28, 2005?
[15] Both these issues are reviewable on a reasonableness standard. In this regard, in Tehrankari v The Attorney General of Canada, 2012 FC 332 [Tehrankari], my colleague Justice Mosley concluded at para 22 that “the standard of review for interpretation of the [Act is] correctness, and that the standard would be reasonableness for the application of the law to the facts and for the decision as a whole”. In Scarcella v Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FC 1272 [Scarcella] at paragraph 14, Justice Snider also applied the reasonableness standard to a judicial review concerning the reliability of information the CSC had relied on in identifying an inmate as belonging to or associating with a criminal organization. Similarly, my colleague Justice Gagné in Nagy v Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 137 [Nagy] also applied the reasonableness standard on an application for judicial review questioning the soundness of a decision by the CSC following an offender’s grievance that challenged the assignment of his security classification. In that case, as in this one, the applicant argued that the CSC’s decision was based on erroneous information.
[16] A court called upon to apply the reasonableness standard must show deference and be concerned mostly with the existence of justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision‑making process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law (on this point, see Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paragraph 47; Canada (Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12; and Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61).
Positions of the parties
[17] The applicant argues that the Deputy Commissioner’s decision is unreasonable because the CSC could not have concluded that the applicant was affiliated with the Hell’s Angels if it had not received a report from the SQ in this regard that set out various information that the CSC summarized in certain documents in his prison record including the Referral Sheet—Identification of Membership or Association with a Criminal Organization, which was completed immediately after he was incarcerated. On this point, the applicant relies on sections 23 and 27 of the Act, which require the CSC to obtain reliable information about inmates’ sentence or imprisonment and disclose that information to them.
[18] The relevant provisions of sections 23 and 27 of the Act read as follows:
s
[19] The applicant argues that if the CSC was unable to obtain or keep the SQ’s report on his alleged criminal history, the Court should order it to obtain this relevant information from the SQ under subsection 23(1) of the Act and to disclose it to him under subsections 23(2) or 27(1) and (2) of the Act.
[20] Conversely, if the CSC does not obtain this information, the applicant contends that all references to his alleged affiliation with the Hell’s Angels should be removed from his prison record because there is no factual basis to support them. He adds that the Deputy Commissioner’s refusal to do so is unreasonable.
[21] The applicant relies on the decisions in May v Ferndale Institution, [2005] 3 SCR 809 and Demaria v Regional Classification Board, [1986] FCJ No 493 A-185-86 to justify his right to this information. In those decisions, the CSC was ordered to disclose the information it had consulted in the decision‑making process regarding the security classification of inmates.
[22] For his part, the respondent submits that the application should be dismissed because there is no obligation on the CSC to obtain information to support references in prison records. In this regard, the respondent relies on the Tehrankari decision, above, in which Justice Mosley found that there was no such obligation on the CSC. In addition, the respondent argues that the mere fact that the CSC referral sheets do not contain a detailed report from the SQ does not mean that the findings with respect to the applicant’s past affiliation should be removed from his record. On this point, he relies on Tehrankari and Scarcella, in which it was decided that findings that rely on information obtained from bodies responsible for applying the Act are a sufficient basis for institutional decisions by the CSC.
Analysis
[23] First, with respect to the applicant’s submission that the CSC is required to obtain a report from the SQ concerning his past affiliation with the Hell’s Angels, I share the respondent’s view: as the Tehrankari decision confirmed, such a requirement does not exist. In that case, Mr. Tehrankari’s prison record, maintained by the CSC, contained a summary of 76 incidents of institutional misconduct that he was accused of during his detention at the Ottawa‑Carleton Detention Centre. Mr. Tehrankari argued that the CSC was required to obtain this information from the Ottawa police and the Ottawa‑Carleton Detention Centre so that he could dispute the allegations of misconduct, which he considered erroneous. Justice Mosley came to a different conclusion, stating the following at para 35:
Mr. Tehrankari is correct that s.24(1) of [the Act] does oblige CSC to “take all reasonable steps to ensure that any information about an offender that it uses is as accurate, up to date and complete as possible.” However, that does not mean that CSC must reinvestigate information obtained from reliable sources such as provincial ministries, police forces and the courts. The Offender Complaint and Grievance Procedures Manual indicates that matters under provincial jurisdiction, matters relating to convictions and sentencing by courts, matters relating to the administration of justice including courts and police forces, and matters relating to treatment by non CSC agencies are non-grievable within the institutional grievance process.
[24] Justice Mosley’s conclusion applies in this case. The CSC is not required to obtain information from the SQ to support the references it made in his referral sheets to the information from the SQ dealing with the applicant’s affiliation with the Hell’s Angels. Furthermore, considering that the CSC has already provided the applicant with all the information it has, as Mr. Mélançon’s letter indicates, there is no reason for the Court to order the CSC to provide more.
[25] With respect to his second submission, that the Deputy Commissioner’s refusal to remove the information from his prison record was unreasonable, the applicant did not provide any evidence beyond a systematic denial of his affiliation with the Hell’s Angels. Moreover, he admitted having treated a number of Hell’s Angels’ members over the course of his career as a doctor. Consequently, the Deputy Commissioner’s decision to deny his grievance was not unreasonable because the applicant did not submit any evidence questioning the truth of the information received from the SQ, which was, in fact, confirmed by some of the evidence adduced at his trial and which was summarized in some of the CSC reports that the applicant filed as exhibits to his affidavit. Given the lack of evidence provided by the applicant and his admission that he had been the treating physician of a number of Hell’s Angels’ members, it was not unreasonable to find, as the Deputy Commissioner did, that the reference to the applicant’s prior association with the Hell’s Angels should not be removed from his prison record. In summary, this conclusion falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[26] In this regard, the situation is similar to the Scarcella case where Justice Snider noted the following at paragraph 23:
The problem with Mr. Scarcella’s position is that there is no evidence that any further information was available or that the information considered was somehow erroneous. Mr. Scarcella could have adduced further evidence to show that, while he may have been associated or involved with a criminal organization, that was no longer the case. He did not do so. Given the nature of the information and the fact that nothing new was brought forward by Mr. Scarcella, I am satisfied that the SDC was entitled to rely on information before it as “accurate, up to date and complete”. There was, on these facts, no obligation on the Service to go so far as to ask the police to re-investigate its initial opinions, or to conduct investigations on its own.
[27] Accordingly, this application for judicial review will be dismissed because the CSC is not required to seek additional information or documents from the SQ and the decision that there are no reasonable grounds to believe that the validity and reliability of the information from the SQ was questionable, is reasonable.
[28] However, I note, as counsel for the respondent acknowledged, that it remains open to the applicant to argue, considering the lack of supporting evidence, that no probative value should be assigned to the finding that he was at one time affiliated with the Hell’s Angels if the CSC or any other organization attempts to rely on his prison record to establish that fact. Indeed, a decision on the part of the CSC or other organizations that relies solely on the information in the applicant’s prison record to establish this prior association could well be unreasonable, as my colleague Justice Gagné found in circumstances that were, on balance, similar in the Nagy case.
[29] Exercising the discretion conferred on me, I make no order as to costs because this application seems to be, in part, the result of the CSC’s ambiguous responses at the various levels of the grievance procedure. Indeed, this ambiguity forced counsel for the respondent to seek out and file the letter from Mr. Mélançon to confirm what information from the SQ the CSC actually had in its possession about the applicant’s alleged past affiliation with the Hell’s Angels.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that this application for judicial review of the decision issued on March 18, 2013, by the Senior Deputy Commissioner of the Correctional Service of Canada is dismissed. No costs are awarded.
“Mary J.L. Gleason”
Judge
Certified true translation
Mary Jo Egan, LLB
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET:
T-937-13
STYLE OF CAUSE: |
FRANCOIS MENARD v ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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PLACE OF HEARING:
Montréal, QuEbec
DATE OF HEARING:
FEBRUARY 26, 2014
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT:
GLEASON J.
DATED:
MARCH 17, 2014
APPEARANCES:
Maxime Hébert-Lafontaine
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FOR the applicant
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Nicholas Banks
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Maxime Hébert-Lafontaine Latour Lafontaine Blouin & Associés Montréal, Quebec
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FOR the applicant
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William F. Pentney Deputy Attorney General of Canada Montréal, Quebec
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FOR THE RESPONDENT
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