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Bill C-104

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SUMMARY

This enactment amends the Criminal Code and the Young Offenders Act to allow a judge to issue a warrant authorizing a peace officer, or another person acting under the direction of a peace officer, to obtain samples of bodily substances by means of special investigative procedures for forensic DNA analysis from a person who is reasonably believed to have been a party to certain designated Criminal Code offences.

The offences defined as designated offences for the purposes of this enactment include sexual offences and crimes of violence.

The enactment authorizes three investigative procedures for the collection of bodily substances, namely,

    (a) the plucking of individual hairs from the person;

    (b) the taking of a buccal swab; and

    (c) the taking of blood by pricking the skin surface with a sterile lancet.

The enactment contains provisions requiring the peace officer executing the warrant to ensure that the privacy of the person is respected, in a manner that is reasonable in the circumstances and permits the judge to include terms and conditions in the warrant that the judge considers advisable to ensure that the seizure of the bodily substances is carried out in a reasonable fashion.

The enactment also contains provisions regulating the use that can be made of the bodily substances and the results of the DNA analysis. Where, after forensic DNA analysis, the involvement of the suspect in the commission of the offence has been disproved, any bodily substances seized under the authority of a warrant that remain and the results of the analysis shall be destroyed unless a judge orders otherwise. Similarly, if the information is withdrawn, or the prosecution is stayed and not recommenced, or the accused is finally acquitted, any bodily substances seized under the authority of a warrant that remain and any associated information resulting from the analysis shall be destroyed.

Young persons are to be treated for the most part as adults. The police would have access to warrants with respect to the same types of offences and all persons to be subject to such procedures would benefit from procedural safeguards at the time the warrant would be executed. There would, nevertheless, be some special protection afforded young persons such as the right to have the samples taken in the presence of counsel or other appropriate adult and the existing rules in the Young Offenders Act with regard to prohibitions on publication and access to records would be extended.