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A-529-82
Federal Republic of Germany (Applicant)
v.
Helmut Rauca (Respondent)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Urie JJ. and Cowan
D.J. Toronto, July 30; Ottawa, August 9, 1982.
Judicial review — Applications to review — Extradition — Application to review and set aside bail order of Ontario High Court Justice pending extradition hearing for alleged war crimes — Decision reviewable by Federal Court of Appeal since High Court Justice acting under Extradition Act is acting as federal board, commission or tribunal within s. 28 of Federal Court Act — Usual tests for bail applicable to all Canadians charged with an offence apply notwithstanding enormity of alleged crimes — Trial Judge found that respond ent likely to appear for extradition hearing and that there was no evidence respondent poses threat to public — Application dismissed — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28 — Extradition Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-21, ss. 9, 10, 13.
This is a section 28 application to review and set aside a bail order of a High Court of Ontario Justice pursuant to the Extradition Act. The respondent was accused of war crimes in the Federal Republic of Germany and was arrested in Canada under the Extradition Act. He was released on conditions including a recognizance of $150,000. The applicant applied for review on the grounds that the tests to be applied for the granting of bail in extradition cases were more stringent than in ordinary bail hearings. The enormity of the crimes with which the respondent was charged and the strength of the evidence against him gave him sufficient motive to flee the jurisdiction so that there is a real risk that he will not appear for the extradition hearing.
Held, the application is dismissed. The respondent is a Canadian citizen, had no criminal record in Canada, has roots in Canada and is 73 years of age. A Canadian citizen who is charged with an offence in a foreign country for which he may be extradited ought not to have his right to bail abrogated if he satisfies the usual tests applicable in the exercise of judicial discretion to grant bail. The Extradition Judge did not err when he found that the evidence, though significant, would not constitute a strong case until it could be assessed at the extradition hearing. The Extradition Judge found that the respondent was likely to appear, and that lie posed no menace to the public, thereby satisfying the proper tests for granting bail.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico v. Hernandez, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 228.
DISTINGUISHED:
Re Barnes and State of Tennessee (1972), 34 C.C.C. (2d) 122 (Ont. H.C.).
CONSIDERED:
Herman, et al. v. Deputy Attorney General of Canada, [1979] I S.C.R. 729; Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495.
REFERRED TO:
Re State of Arizona and Thompson and Schliwa (1976), 30 C.C.C. (2d) 148 (Ont. Cty. Ct.); Re Armstrong and State of Wisconsin (1977), 37 C.C.C. (2d) 397 (Ont. Cty. Ct.); Re State of Ohio and Schneider (1977), 34 C.C.C. (2d) 130 (Ont. Cty. Ct.); Re Piperno and The Queen (1981), 65 C.C.C. (2d) 178 (Que. S.C.); Com monwealth of Virginia v. Cohen, [1973] F.C. 622 (T.D.); Re Gaynor and Green (No. 5) (1905), 9 C.C.C. 255 (Que. K.B.); Re Low (1932), 41 O.W.N. 468 (Ont. C.A.).
COUNSEL:
W. 1. C. Binnie, Q.C. for applicant.
W. J. Parker and W. B. Horkins for respondent.
Bert Raphael, Q.C., David Matas and Irwin Cotter for Canadian Jewish Congress.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for applicant.
William J. Parker, Toronto, for respondent. Raphael, Wheatley & MacPherson, Toronto, for Canadian Jewish Congress.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
URIE J.: This application made pursuant to section 28 of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, is to review and set aside the order made by the Honourable Mr. Justice Grif- fiths, a Judge of the High Court of Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario, pursuant to the Extra dition Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-21, ("the Act") ordering the respondent to be released on bail upon the terms and conditions which I will hereinafter refer to.
The facts, briefly stated, are these: On June 17, 1982, pursuant to an information and complaint issued in accordance with section 10 of the Act, Associate Chief Justice Parker of the High Court of Justice of the Supreme Court of Ontario issued
a warrant for the apprehension of the respondent. The information and complaint alleged that the respondent "... is currently accused of an extradi tion crime or crimes to wit: aiding and abetting the murder of 10,500 persons on or about the 28th day of October 1941 in Kaunas, Lithuania ..." and that a warrant for his arrest had been issued in the Federal Republic of Germany on September 21, 1961. On June 21, 1982, in accordance with a warrant of remand issued by Associate Chief Jus tice Parker on the same day as the warrant of apprehension, the respondent was brought before Griffiths J. At that time a notice of motion was returned with three affidavits in support, to admit the respondent to bail. He, and three other wit nesses, gave evidence on his behalf and one witness was heard on behalf of the applicant. At the conclusion of the hearing Griffiths J. issued the order here sought to be set aside, the relevant terms and conditions of which read as follows:
AND WHEREAS the said HELMUT RAUCA was brought before me today, the 21st day of June, 1982 and I ordered that he be released on bail on the following terms and conditions:
1) a recognizance in the amount of One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($150,000.00) without deposit, against ade quate security or otherwise and with three sureties acceptable to the Crown, and
2) that his passport remain in the custody of the R.C.M.P. and that he not make application for another passport while this order is in force, and
3) that he remain in the City of Metropolitan Toronto, and
4) that he report daily to the R.C.M.P. Headquarters, 225 Jarvis Street, Toronto between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., and
5) that he at all times communicate his current address to the said R.C.M.P., and
6) that he attend court on September 20, 1982 and thereafter as required.
At the opening of the argument on the applica tion three counsel appeared on behalf of the Canadian Jewish Congress seeking leave to partici pate in the argument on the application. Leave to do so was granted and all counsel were heard in support of the application.
The Court then, ex proprio motu, raised the question of the jurisdiction of this Court to review the order in issue herein. It was pointed out that while the Supreme Court of Canada in Common-
wealth of Puerto Rico v. Hernandez', by a majori ty, had held that an extradition commissioner or judge sitting under the Extradition Act acts per sona designata and his decision is subject to review by this Court pursuant to section 28 of the Court's constituent Act, two later decisions of the Court in Herman, et al. v. Deputy Attorney General of Canada 2 and the Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand' appear to have drastically curtailed the application of the notion of judges sitting persona designata and some of the lan guage used in the reasons of several of the judges is such that it is difficult to see how a judge sitting under the Extradition Act could be doing so per sona designata while judges sitting pursuant to other federal statutes are not. After hearing all counsel on the subject, judgment was reserved on the question of jurisdiction and the hearing pro ceeded on the merits.
After reflection and a careful reading and re-reading of the three judgments, I have conclud ed that this Court is bound by the Hernandez decision despite the difficulty in rationalizing it with the Herman and Coopers and Lybrand judg ments. This application then, which is to review and set aside the bail order made by Griffiths J. in his capacity as a judge sitting persona designata under the Extradition Act, and not as a judge of the Supreme Court of Ontario, is within the juris diction of this Court in that Griffiths J., so acting, is a federal board, commission or tribunal within the meaning of section 28 of the Federal Court Act.
While a number of arguments on the merits were advanced by counsel for the applicant as well as for the Canadian Jewish Congress, only one, in my view, had merit. Therefore, because of the obvious desirability of disposing of this application with all possible dispatch and in the interests of brevity, I will deal only with that argument. To appreciate the submission it would be useful to set out the relevant portions of Mr. Justice Griffiths' reasons, delivered orally at the conclusion of the hearing, in full.
This is an application to grant bail to Helmut Rauca, a Canadian citizen, who had been arrested pursuant to an Order
' [1975] 1 S.C.R. 228.
2 [1979] 1 S.C.R. 729.
3 [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495.
of Arrest issued by Associate Chief Justice Parker, under the provisions of the Extradition Act.
The Bail Reform Act provisions of the Criminal Code relat ing to bail, do not appear to apply to the circumstances of this case. There is however, ample authority for the proposition that a judge of the Supreme Court has jurisdiction to grant bail to a person held in custody pending extradition proceedings, in effect, such an application becomes a habeas corpus application.
Counsel for the Crown has referred me to a decision of Mr. Justice Wright in re Barnes and The State of Tennessee, 1972, 34 C.C.C. (2nd), 122, wherein Mr. Justice Wright held that although a Supreme Court judge has the inherent jurisdiction to grant bail, bail should be granted only in rare circumstances and then when there is no serious risk. In that case however, it is clear from the facts that Barnes, the fugitive in question, was in Canada illegally at the time and was not a Canadian citizen, there was some real doubt as to whether he would appear on the extradition hearing, if released.
As counsel for the applicant has pointed out, The Canadian Bill of Rights recognize [sic] specifically the right to reasonable bail and the right, normally prevailing in Canada, and provides that no one charged with a criminal offence should be deprived of the right to bail or interim release, without just cause. In my view, a Canadian citizen should not have his right to bail abrogated simply because he is facing a charge in a foreign jurisdiction for an offence alleged to have occurred there and for which he faces extradition proceedings.
Regardless of where the onus lies, and I do not have to decide that issue in this case, it seems to me that in a case of this nature the governing principle should be, first, is the accused person likely to appear for his extradition hearing, if released and secondly, if released, does the accused person present any threat to society so that it would be against the public interest to grant his release. I should add that there may be some cases in which the very nature of the crime, where there is a very strong and overwhelming case that that crime has been com mitted, might justify, in the public interest, that the accused be detained.
I have read the material on which Associate Chief Justice Parker issued the Order of Arrest in this case and I have heard the evidence presented today and one cannot help but be overwhelmed with revulsion at the nature and the enormity of the crime. It is alleged that Helmut Rauca selected over 10,000 Jewish men and women and children from a ghetto within Lithuania and ordered them to be shot in 1941. However, one's revulsion at the nature of the crime should not blind the court to a fundamental principle that in Canada, a person accused of a crime is presumed to be innocent until properly proven guilty. The evidence here is signifcant [sic] but, I would not be prepared to say that even there is a strong case against the accused, I would prefer, before making such a decision, to have the witnesses present their evidence under oath and face the accused and be subject to cross-examination and the other safeguards of a proper hearing.
In essence what I am saying is, despite the enormity of the crime, I do not believe that in this case that alone should force me to deprive this man, as a Canadian citizen, of his rights under Canadian law. The evidence indicates that this man has firmly established his roots in Canada, he has apparently, at least since 1950, been a good Canadian citizen and a hard working citizen, he has no criminal record and he is 73 years of age. The Crown submits that the real risk here is that he may flee and will not turn up for the extradition hearing. I am not persuaded of that. I am of the view that sufficient safeguards may be built to ensure his attendance. As far as the second ground, that is that he constitutes a menace to the public, there is no evidence to that effect.
I hope my decision will be understood in light of the fact that I am simply applying the fundamental principles of Canada [sic] law and administering justice as I see it. In the circum stances I am prepared to release this man but on fairly strict terms. I would like to hear from the Crown on that.
It was the contention of counsel for the appli cant, supported by counsel for the Canadian Jewish Congress, that the Extradition Judge mis directed himself as to the test to be applied in a bail application in an extradition case and thereby committed a reviewable error within paragraph 28(1)(b) 4 of the Federal Court Act. The learned Judge, it was said, did not appreciate the differ ence between the test to be applied in an ordinary bail hearing and that in extradition matters and thereby erred in law.
A number of cases were referred to by counsel in respect of the power to grant bail in extradition proceedings. From those decisions certain general propositions may be stated:
4 28. (1) Notwithstanding section 18 or the provisions of any other Act, the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction to hear and determine an application to review and set aside a decision or order, other than a decision or order of an administrative nature not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis, made by or in the course of proceedings before a federal board, commission or other tribunal, upon the ground that the board, commission or tribunal
(b) erred in law in making its decision or order, whether or not the error appears on the face of the record; ...
(1) while there appear to be some differences in opinion of judges in various jurisdictions, the current view of most is that there is a power, as a matter of discretion, to admit fugitives to bail in extradition cases;
(2) different principles may apply in bail applications made before committal than those which prevail after apprehension but before the extradition hearing;
(3) it appears that subject to those principles in either case a judge is empowered by section 9 of the Act in his discretion to admit an alleged fugitive to bail;
(4) that the power referred to in (3) is not derived from section 13 of the Act;
(5) the provisions of the Bail Reform Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 2; 1970-71-72, c. 37 do not apply to applications for bail of fugitives subject to extradition proceedings;
(6) the applicable law in respect of admitting a fugitive to bail is that which prevailed prior to the proclamation of the Bail Reform Act in 1972 and the onus thus rests on the fugitive to show why the extradition judge's discretion should be exercised in his favour.
In deriving these principles I have had regard, inter alia, to the following cases to which counsel referred us: Re State of Arizona and Thompson and Schliwa 5 ; Re Armstrong and State of Wisconsin 6 ; Re State of Ohio and Schneider'; Re Piperno and The Queen 8 ; Commonwealth of Vir- ginia v. Cohen 9 ; Re Gaynor and Green (No. 5J 10 ; Re Low"; and Re Barnes and State of Tennessee' 2 .
It is upon the last case that counsel for the applicant and the Canadian Jewish Congress heavily relied as enunciating the proper test for
5 (1976), 30 C.C.C. (2d) 148 (Ont. Cty. Ct.).
6 (1977), 37 C.C.C. (2d) 397 (Ont. Cty. Ct.). (1977), 34 C.C.C. (2d) 130 (Ont. Cty. Ct.).
8 (1981), 65 C.C.C. (2d) 178 (Que. S.C.).
9 [1973] F.C. 622 (T.D.).
10 (1905), 9 C.C.C. 255 (Que. K.B.).
11 (1932), 41 O.W.N. 468 (Ont. C.A.).
12 (1972), 34 C.C.C. (2d) 122 (Ont. H.C.).
granting bail to fugitives in extradition cases. In that case a warrant for committal had been issued by an Extradition Judge after a hearing following which the prisoner had applied to a Judge of the Supreme Court of Ontario, Wright J., for a writ of habeas corpus and to grant bail. The learned Judge reviewed the authorities (including those to which 1 have referred, supra) and at pages 129 and 130 of the report had this to say:
I conclude from these cases and generally, that there is jurisdiction in single Judges of this Court to grant bail to fugitives under the Extradition Act R.S.C. 1970, c. E-21, both before and after committal, that it should be sparingly and cautiously exercised, that great weight should be given to the mutual commitments of Canada and other states in extradition, that these should be respected and assured, and that, in fine, bail should not be granted except in rare circumstances, and then when there is no serious risk, on the evidence, of the prisoner not surrendering for extradition, and the Court pro ceedings in connection with it.
I should add that the provisions and point of view of the Bail Reform Act R.S.C. 1970, c. 2 (2nd Supp.); 1970-71-72 (Can.), c. 37, or Part XIV of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 170 [sic], c. C-34 (as it is variously known), do not apply to applications for bail of fugitives subject to extradition proceedings. They do not apply in their terms. If they did, they would represent a unilateral amendment of Canada's obligations under its extra dition treaties and might, in large measure, defeat the para mount purpose of those treaties. But they do lead to the release, in proper cases, of persons accused of murder under the Crimi nal Code, above, as the applicant has observed.
Finally, although the prisoner has been heard in this case, I hope that no one will consider that applications for bail in like cases will be entertained favourably unless the facts are of a strong and extremely unusual character, nor will hearings be held until the material is properly prepared for the Court's consideration in the light of the authorities.
Counsel focused in particular on the words "bail should not be granted except in rare circum stances, and then when there is no serious risk, on the evidence, of the prisoner not surrendering for extradition, and the Court proceedings in connec tion with it". Counsel said, that in this case because of the enormity of the crimes with which the respondent is charged, and the strength of the evidence against him and the consequent motive for him to flee from this jurisdiction before the extradition hearing, there is a real risk that he will not appear for that hearing. In granting bail,
Griffiths J., it was said, failed to have regard to Wright J.'s admonition and, in light of the facts in this case, he thereby erred in law.
It will first be noted from Mr. Justice Griffiths' reasons for judgment, supra, that not only was he cognizant of the test propounded by Wright J. but distinguished the case on the threefold basis that the fugitive in that case was in Canada illegally, was not a Canadian citizen, and there was real doubt as to whether he would appear on the extra dition hearing if released. In the case at bar, on the other hand, the prisoner is a Canadian citizen (although counsel for the Congress argued that he ought not to be for alleged misrepresentations at the time of his admission to Canada), had no criminal record here, has roots here and is 73 years of age. Moreover, it is clear that the learned Judge accepted the proposition enunciated in other cases, supra, that because a Canadian citizen is charged with an offence in a foreign country for which he may be extradited, he ought not to have his right to bail abrogated if he satisfies the usual tests applicable in the exercise of the judicial discretion to admit an accused to bail or not. It is a proposi tion with which I agree. I can find little in the cases, and nothing in the Act, which supports the purported principle that because Canada has obli gations to a demanding state arising from a treaty between the two countries that the safeguards and remedies otherwise available to citizens of Canada ought not to be available to a fugitive qualifying for bail (see: Re Piperno and The Queen, supra, at page 184). The treaty obligation is a factor to be taken into account but, in my view, it is not necessarily the dominant factor in the decision whether or not to admit a fugitive to bail prior to committal although obviously it may be of great importance if a bail application is made thereafter.
It is common ground, as I understand it, that the governing principles cited by Griffiths J. for admission to bail are those which applied in crimi-
nal matters before the enactment of the Bail Reform Act. The applicant, however, takes the position that superimposed on these principles is the fact, in this case, that the crimes of which the respondent stands accused are of such a revolting nature and of such a magnitude that the principles applicable in ordinary domestic cases, prior to the Bail Reform Act, founded on the presumption of innocence of an accused, must be overruled and bail refused. Griffiths J., who had before him not only the material which led Parker A.C.J. to issue the warrant of apprehension, but also the three affidavits in support of the motion and, as well, had the advantage of hearing the evidence of the respondent and the four other witnesses, and of observing them, found the evidence against the respondent to be "significant" but it would not constitute a strong case against him so far as he, (Griffiths J.), was concerned. The strength of the case could not be assessed until the hearing, with its built-in protections and safeguards, is the essence of what he said. Making such a finding did not, as alleged by counsel, constitute an error in my opinion. It was a conclusion to which he was entitled to come on the evidence and it was rele vant in the determination of whether or not to make the bail order. It cannot, therefore, provide a basis for setting aside the order.
The learned Judge then had to determine wheth er or not the respondent was likely to appear for his extradition hearing. Having assessed the evi dence he concluded that "sufficient safeguards may be built in to ensure his attendance". I find it quite impossible to say that he wrongly exercised his discretion in so concluding being aware, as he was, of the enormity of the crimes with which the respondent is charged.
On the second principle of bail release, I agree with the learned Judge that there is no evidence that the respondent poses a menace to the public.
Since it is clear that a grant of bail is the exercise of a discretion, that discretion ought not to be interfered with by a supervising court unless
it is satisfied that the judge proceeded on a wrong principle or unless there was no evidence upon which he could have reached the conclusions which he did. For the reasons which I have heretofore given, I am not satisfied that either prerequisite appears on the record. Accordingly, I would dis miss the section 28 application.
HEALD J.: I concur. COWAN D.J.: I concur.
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