VIDEOCONFERENCING SYSTEM A NEW TOOL FOR THE ITINERANT COURT SERVICING NORTHERN & REMOTE COMMUNITIES

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VIDEOCONFERENCING SYSTEM A NEW TOOL FOR THE ITINERANT COURT SERVICING NORTHERN & REMOTE COMMUNITIES 2

ITINERANT COURT A division of the «Cour du Québec». Created under the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement. Servicing 23 northern communities, more specifically 14 Inuit communities located in the territory known as Nunavik and 9 Cree communities located in the territory known as Eeyou-Istchee. Total population approaches 30,000 persons. All Inuit communities are accessible by plane and as for the Cree communities, accessibility is by plane and by road. The frequency of court sessions in the communities is directly linked to the volume going from 2-3 times/years to 1 session/month, for an overall total of 75 to 85 weeks/years. The judge presiding the court sessions has jurisdiction in the Criminal and Penal chamber, Youth chamber and Civil chamber. 3

Defence lawyers come from Abitibi, Montreal, Quebec, mainly. Head office of the Itinerant court is located in Abitibi (Amos.) Crown prosecutors, except for one residing in Kuujjuaq, reside in Amos. Legal aid services are, except for one residing in Kuujjuaq, located in Abitibi. The main detention facility is in Amos. Departure for Northern communities takes place at the Val-d Or airport. A court session in a community can be for a day up to a week. 4

IDENTIFICATION OF THE ISSUES AFFECTING EFFICIENCY OF THE COURT MAIN ISSUES Increase of the volume. Increase of judicial interim release hearings. Increase of alleged breach of a conditional sentence. Complexity and length of trials including Charter applications and Gladue reports. Urgent and provisional measures in Youth Protection. More contested cases. Departure and landing problems because of weather conditions, including mechanical problems. Impossibility to lodge all the detainees at the police station. CONSEQUENCES Nearly all the time of the court is or was dedicated to emergencies. No time to do trials, preliminary inquiries, complex settlements and often not even enough time to complete : Youth protection urgent and provisional measures; Judicial interim release hearings or alleged breaches of conditional sentence. Rescheduling of the files of detainees that had been transported in the community. Obligation the transport and lodge parents, children, social workers and interpreter for a hearing down south. 5

OVER THE YEARS Immense backlog in many communities. Frustration, tension, anxiety for each person involved with the court at whatever level from the court clerk to the victim. The court criticized and not viewed as an institution capable of restoring or maintaining peace, order or harmony. Unacceptable delays, high costs with no positive outcome. 6

SOLUTION By the end of 2012, seeing that the situation was still deteriorating, Chief Justice Corte decided, after consultation with all parties, namely the Bar, Legal Aid Services, Association of Defence Lawyers, Directors of Youth Protection and local authorities of the Ministry of Justice, to implement videoconferencing for the following urgent matters : Judicial interim release hearings; Hearing for alleged breach of a condition of conditional sentence; Urgent and provisional measure hearing; Settlements of criminal files when no detention is sought or when the detention length would be longer, if the hearing took place in the community at the next court session; Disposition of Youth Protection file, when a agreement has been signed by the Director of Youth Protection and the parents; Demands for psychiatric evaluation and for confinement in an establishment. 7

OBJECTIVES FIRST LEVEL Respond to constitutional delays; Respect formal delays specified in the Criminal Code in the Youth Protection Law and Civil Code; Increase accessibility to the lawyer for the person detained; Hold hearings on sentence, for the person detained, when there is a common suggestion and the necessity to proceed in the community is note at stake. SECOND LEVEL Recuperate all the time saved to preside trials, preliminary inquiries, settlements or disposition; Proceed to the hearing in Youth Protection matters; Allow more weeks for court sessions in communities with a high volume, until the situation stabilizes. 8

HOW IT WORKS A judge is assigned to videoconferencing from Monday 9:00 to Friday 5:00. The judge can be in any of the 3 courthouses in Abitibi, either in a courtroom or in a room equipped with the system in a restricted area near is office. The defence lawyer can be in his office if equipped, or in a designated room in the nearest courthouse. The court clerk can be in any of the 3 courthouses of the district but usually he is at the head office in Amos where the Detention Center is beside the court building. The crown prosecutor is also, most of the time, in Amos for cases originating from the Cree or Inuit communities. In Youth Protection cases, the parents, the children and the social worker are in their community, in a building equipped with videoconferencing. The interpreter/translator can be in any Court building in province. 9

SUMMARY OF PROCEDURE All time slots are for a duration of 45 minutes unless a party advises the court clerk that more than one time slot is necessary. The crown prosecutor must send by email all his documentary evidence the day before the hearing with a copy to the defence lawyer. The same applies for the defence lawyer. In Youth Protection files, documents are sent to the judge at least 3 hours before the hearing. Reservations are done trough the court clerk and the administrative assistant of the judge fill in the court docket in a shared file accessible to the court clerk. When a party reserves a time slot, she must advise the court clerk if an interpreter/translator is necessary and if witnesses are going to be examined. Every participant is provided with a conference call number. 10

EXAMPLE Judicial interim release In his office In a courtroom MONTREAL JUDGE DEFENCE LAWYER In a room in the nearest courthouse (usually Montreal, Quebec, Abitibi) GATINEAU VAL-D OR INTERPRETER/TRANSLATOR In a courthouse nearest to his residence In a courtroom In his office In another office fully equipped In another courthouse CROWN AMOS COURT CLERK In the same courtroom as the court clerk is responsible of the file AMOS DETAINEE Usually in the courthouse nearest to the Detention Centre (Amos) PARENTS, CHILDREN AND SOCIAL WORKER In their community in a room fully equipped 11

RESULTS Since the beginning of the videoconferencing system, court sessions are totally dedicated to trials, preliminary inquiries, hearings on sentence and Youth Protections cases on the security issue and measures applicable. The delays have been reduced and the volume of cases can be managed. Already, after 2 years, it is now possible to allocate more time for court sessions in some communities and reduce them in other communities where the volume has significantly decreased. Lawyers have more time to meet their clients and prepare their cases. Efficiency has increased, transportation and lodging costs have been dramatically reduced for the directors of Youth Protection and to some extent for Correctional Services. Less tension and frustration and less pressure. 12

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SOMMAIRE DES DOSSIER INUITS ET CREES 16