Legal information for activists
Introduction
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Definitions
Acquittal | Decision of a court declaring a person is not guilty - CAIJ Quebec and Canadian Law Dictionary |
Civil disobedience |
“May include any action taken in contravention of a legal norm in order to expose its illegitimacy.” In other words, the refusal to comply with certain laws or to pay taxes and fines, as a peaceful form of political protest. - Ligue des droits et libertés |
Civil suit | A breach of private law that contains the fundamental rules relating to persons, the family, property and obligations. It is the common law applicable to relationships between individuals. - CAIJ Quebec and Canadian Law Dictionary |
Class Action | “Allows you to file a civil suit on behalf of all those who have experienced a similar situation.” - Ligue des droits et libertés |
Constitutional Rights | The rights protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Some of these rights are protected under certain conditions. - Canadian Legal Information Institute |
Criminal law | Law governed by the Criminal Code (all types of offences): can lead to the creation of a criminal record. - CAIJ Quebec and Canadian Law Dictionary |
Criminal offence | No statute of limitations, harsher penalties than 'summary offences' -CAIJ Quebec and Canadian Law Dictionary |
Crown Prosecutor (or Deputy Attorney General) | A lawyer in the service of the government who is responsible for representing the State before the courts in criminal or penal matters. - CAIJ Quebec and Canadian Law Dictionary |
Direct Action | "Denounces and aims to stop a situation, decision, policy or project by means of action that proves to be illegal." - Ligue des droits et libertés |
Discharge | When a person is convicted, a sentence that does not result in a criminal record.
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Injunction | An order of the Superior Court enjoining a person or, in the case of a legal person, partnership or association or other grouping without legal personality, its officers or representatives, not to do or to cease to do a certain thing or to perform a certain act. - CAIJ Quebec and Canadian Law Dictionary |
Person without status | Person who has been refused asylum, person who did not leave when his visa expired, etc. - Ligue des droits et libertés |
Political profiling | "Any action taken by a person or persons in a position of authority with respect to a person or group, for reasons of public safety, security or protection, that is based on factors such as political opinion, political belief, allegiance to a political group or political activity, without probable cause or reasonable suspicion, and that has the effect of subjecting the person to differential scrutiny or treatment. Political profiling also includes any action by persons in authority who apply a measure disproportionately to segments of the population because of, among other things, their real or presumed political opinions or beliefs.” - Ligue des droits et libertés |
Racial profiling | "Any action taken by a person or persons in authority with respect to an individual or group of individuals, for reasons of safety, security or public protection, that is based on factors such as race, color, ethnic or national origin, or religion, without actual purpose or reasonable suspicion, and that has the effect of subjecting the individual to differential scrutiny. More and more complaints of this type are being made to the Human Rights Commission. Racial profiling is, on balance, the result of intolerance, misunderstandings, lack of cross-cultural communication and preconceived notions by police officers." - Collectif opposé à la brutalité policière (COBP; Collective against police brutality) |
Regulatory offence | “Regulatory offences are the least serious, such as disturbing the peace (section 175), participating in an unlawful assembly (section 66(1)) or being naked in a public place (section 174). A person convicted of such an offence is liable to a fine of not more than five thousand dollars and imprisonment for not more than two years less a day (section 787 (1))." They do not result in a criminal record. After 12 months, it is no longer possible to prosecute; if you do not receive the information that you are under arrest before this term, the process stops. - Ligue des droits et libertés |
Social profiling | "With the goal of "cleaning up" the public space, social profiling is a form of discrimination that consists of police officers and other law enforcement officials imposing fines on people who do not "seem to conform to society" through the strict application of municipal regulations for minor infractions. Marginals, itinerants, punks, homosexuals, prostitutes, immigrants, the poor, etc. are all targets in order to "protect and serve us". This type of profiling is only meant to give the impression of a "beautiful image of the city" in front of tourists." - Collectif opposé à la brutalité policière |
Risk Assessment [2]
Assess your risk and capacity for participating in actions that risk arrest. Risk: can be defined by legal, social, physical or financial consequences. There are individual factors which may place some people at higher risk of harassment, violence, arrest and more when taking higher-risk actions. Furthermore, certain circumstances can keep people from doing as much as they wish they could safely. Factors/circumstances that may increase your risk or decrease your capacity when participating in actions include:
This is not an exhaustive list. Please take your own personal factors into account when assessing your level of risk. |
What are your rights?
Public vs private property [3] [4]
Public sidewalks, in public parks, or on other property publicly owned by a government (not private businesses or individuals) is accessible to the public for protests.
- Research the owner of the place on which you plan to protest. Protests can take place on private property with the permission of the owner.
- It is legal to picket in front of a business by slowing down access to the business to present your position if people are able to enter and exit the business.
- On private property, the police can...
- Evict you if requested by the owner
- Declare the gathering unlawful and order the dispersal of the crowd under section 63 of the Criminal Code
- Apply an injunction
- Arrest you if you refuse to leave the premises (for contempt of court under s. 605(2) of the Criminal Code in case of an injunction or for trespassing at night under s. 177 of the Criminal Code)
- Moving into a public space next to a property is sufficient, as long as you do not completely block access to the property.
- See this example case from Quebec City
- Evict you if requested by the owner
Filming and identifying police [5] [6]
- If you are in a private space where the public generally has access – like a shopping mall or hospital– there might be rules about what you can or cannot record that might impact your ability to record a police officer. If you start filming in a private space and the person in charge of that space doesn’t want you to continue, you might be asked to leave.
- You are allowed to film police. "Several court and disciplinary decisions have affirmed that police officers do not have the power to simply order a person to stop filming them, with one ruling affirming that police interference with an individual who is filming and/or photographing police is a 'significant abuse of authority.'" [7]
What if the police ask for, or try to take, your phone?
- If the police ask you to hand over your phone, clearly tell them that you do not consent to them taking or searching your phone. If they insist, you can ask what legal grounds they have for seizing your phone.
- Police may seize your phone without a warrant if it contains 'evidence of a crime being committed.' They cannot search it without a warrant, but make sure your phone is locked so that content is not readily available. If they say they have a warrant, ask to see it.
- If a police officer asks for your phone because they think it has evidence of a crime, offer to provide your contact information, and state you will not delete the video so they can access it once they have a warrant. Remember that filming an arrest can be considered evidence. See; Police Ethics Commissioner v. Ledoux, 2016 QCCDP 31
- If the police continue to insist that they can seize your phone, you may consider offering to send the video to the police so that you can keep your phone. Upload photos/videos to the cloud or send them to a friend through an encrypted messaging service. If you know that the video/photo is saved elsewhere, then it could end your interaction with the police if you show them that you have deleted the copy on your phone.
- If an officer asks you to move for safety reasons, you can continue to film but you should move, which also goes for if an arrest is taking place to avoid being described as having interfered with an arrest.
- Images taken during a protest can be used against the people protesting. Putting an icon (emojji) on the faces before publishing the photos taken is the best option when there is no way to get consent from the people photographed. Avoid Facebook or Instagram Live.
- If someone you know is being arrested, take the names of those who recorded it and other witnesses
Revealing Identities [8]
Section 5 of the Police Code of Ethics requires police officers to wear identification and to identify themselves when requested to do so by a person, regardless of the type of interaction.
You must identify yourself with your name, date of birth and address to police if:
Again, police officers are obligated to identify themselves if you ask.
NOT protected rights
- Blocking passersby, roads, or access to building entrances is an act of civil disobedience, and therefore these do not fall under protected constitutional rights.
- If the area is subject to an injunction that limits protest activity, protesters may be arrested if they choose to violate the terms of the injunction.
- "Injunctions are increasingly being used by private companies (such as land developers and resource extraction companies) to try to ‘evict’ protesters engaged in lengthy blockades or occupations." - Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA)
"A protest that endangers others, damages property or significantly restricts essential services and processes within society is unlikely to receive constitutional protection." - (CCLA)
- If your protest is going to be large and disruptive, there are additional steps you may want to consider based on local/municipal noise and traffic laws. I.e. The hours of legal demonstration outside or in front of a residence as well as the number of people in it are often restricted.
Yellow ribbons are often used to prevent demonstrators from proceeding to certain locations. Breaking these ribbons gives police a reason to arrest people for rioting under s. 64 of the Criminal Code or for obstructing police work under s. 129(a) of the Criminal Code. Police officers may also use their bodies to do so.
- If your protest is going to be large and disruptive, there are additional steps you may want to consider based on local/municipal noise and traffic laws. I.e. The hours of legal demonstration outside or in front of a residence as well as the number of people in it are often restricted.
See: Doern v. Police Complaint Commissioner, 2001 BCCA 446; ;Buckley c. R., 2016 QCCS 4432;Richardson v. Vancouver (City), 2006 BCCA 36
- The Canadian Charter protects the fundamental freedoms of all persons in Canada, regardless of their immigration status. Anyone can protest regardless of their immigration status. However...
- Being convicted of a criminal offence, depending on migration status, the offence charged or the sentence imposed, may lead to deportation, with or without an opportunity to appeal the removal order.
- For those who are neither citizens nor permanent residents, the rules are the most severe (temporary residents or international students, for example). If the sentence is discharge D, there is no risk of deportation.
- For those without status, people may fear deportation if police officers identify, detain them and transfer a person to the Canada Border Services Agency. This practice occurs even though it is not part of the roles imposed on police in the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act.
- The Canadian Charter protects the fundamental freedoms of all persons in Canada, regardless of their immigration status. Anyone can protest regardless of their immigration status. However...
What if you are arrested or detained? [9] [10]
A: address D: date of birth N: full name
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Contesting a statement of offence [11] [12]
Defending yourself against a criminal chargeRelease and conditions
Taking care of your offence reports
If found guilty
Minors [14]
What if your rights are violated? [15] [16]
Reducing individual and group's risk [17]For individuals attending an action1. Use a passcode, not a fingerprint on your phone 2. If you think your action will risk arrest, write down #'s of family members, lawyer, bring medications and make childcare plans. Wear a bracelet if you have a disability, special needs or speak limited Eng/French. Bring ID as this could prevent you from having to go to the station following an arrest for identification. 3. Bring a pen and paper in case you need to record details of incidents that occur. 4. It might be helpful to bring a change of clothes in a plastic bag (in case cops use chemical agents). Cover as much of your skin as possible and avoid cotton, polar and wool as these absorb chemical agents. Bring tight glasses (ski or swimming) and a full protection mask. 5. Bring water and food! Do NOT keep anything on yourself you wouldn't want police to find (i.e. drugs. address book) 6. Turn off location tracking—you might have to do that in one or two different places in the settings. 7. Wear neutral colours and note that backpacks make profiling easier. Try to hide as many piercings and tattoos as possible. Try not to wear a sweater with a hood, or anything else that can be pulled. 8. Never leave a protest alone. Police will often look to intimidate attendees of a demonstration once it's finished by following them and targeting them with any possible reason to hand out a violation, and thus fill their notebooks with identified activists. (I.e. lack of reflectors on a bike, throwing a cigarette butt on the ground, having made noise etc). Do not leave a protest alone. Groups preparing for civil disobedience actions
Legal information [18] [19]Common reasons for arrest
8.1.1 Declaration of illegality [20]
Municipal lawsWhen faced with a contradiction between rights and municipal by-laws, the amendment of municipal by-laws can be forced through...
Strategies to oppose or challenge municipal bylaws that restrict the right to protest include [21] :
Police powers [26]Cameras and surveillance
Surveillance precautions if this feels relevant to you:
Collecting personal information
Power to handcuff
Searching [28]
See: Cloutier c. Langlois, [1990 1 R.C.S. 158], R. c. Stillman, [1997 1 R.C.S. 607] & R. c. Fearon, 2014 CSC 77
Police weapons [29]Pepper spray
Tear gas
Flash bombs, rubber bullets, stun grenade & tear gas projectiles
Advanced legal questions
Learning from History: Police, demonstrations and politics [30]G20 Protests in Toronto
-Art. 500 and 500.1 of the Highway Safety Code (obstruction of traffic)
-Individual actions for damages (civil suit) -Factors limiting the exercise of freedom of expression -Exclusionary factors related to the realities of individuals -Constraints related to legislative requirements -Arbitrariness (randomness and unpredictability) in police interpretation and application of regulatory requirements
-create clearly visible surveillance teams "at demonstrations to document police brutality, violence and political profiling practices political profiling practices". -educate about the right to protest
Repression, discrimination and the 2012 student strike
Lawyer Testimonials
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- ↑ http://lois-laws.justice.gc.ca/fra/const/page-12.html#h-42
- ↑ www.bankingonabetterfuture.org
- ↑ Par la Protestor Legal Information Clinic
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/category/pendant/vos-droits-et-obligations-lors-de-larrestations-ou-de-la-detention/
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ http://unfuck.cobp.resist.ca/fr/documentation/brochure-guess-what-weve-got-rights
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ http://unfuck.cobp.resist.ca/fr/documentation/brochure-guess-what-weve-got-rights
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/apres/se-defendre-face-a-un-constat-dinfraction-ou-une-accusation-criminelle/
- ↑ unfuck.cobp.resist.ca/fr/documentation/brochure-guess-what-weve-got-rights
- ↑ Anonymous lawyer consultation
- ↑ http://unfuck.cobp.resist.ca/fr/documentation/brochure-guess-what-weve-got-rights
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl-uqam.ca/apres/les-recours-en-cas-dabus-policiers/
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/pendant/de-linterpellation-a-larrestation/
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/pendant/lillegaite-dune-manifestation-et-sa-dispersion/
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/apres/strategies-contre-p-6-a-montreal/
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/avant/obtention-dune-assurance-responsabilite/
- ↑ http://droitdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/avant/interdiction-de-gener-la-circulation/
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ Canadian Civil Liberties Association
- ↑ http://drpotdemanifester-ldl.uqam.ca/pendant/pouvoirs-policiers-de-filmer-ficher-menotter-et-fouiller/
- ↑ Par la Protestor Legal Information Clinic
- ↑ http://unfuck.cobp.resist.ca/fr/documentation/brochure-guess-what-weve-got-rights
- ↑ http://unfuck.cobp.resist.ca/fr/documentation/brochure-guess-what-weve-got-rights
- ↑ http://liguedesdroits.ca/wp-content/fichiers/bilan-version-longue-finale-10-juin-2015.pdf