Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

As hate-crime landscape evolves, a reminder — online behaviour exists in real life

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2024 03:20 PM
  • As hate-crime landscape evolves, a reminder — online behaviour exists in real life

A lawyer with the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association says it's wise to remember that even though charges over offensive social media activity are rare, online posts exist in real life and involve real people.

Aislin Jackson, the association's policy staff counsel, says police are developing the expertise required to identify people posting online, and in rare cases that leads to charges for their actions.

"It's not the wild west online anymore, and conduct that would be criminal anywhere is going to be investigated online as well," Jackson said.

"But it is not an offence to be racially offensive, in the criminal sense. It's conduct that we may want to socially discourage — but when it comes to the power of the state to lock you in a cage, you should be OK with just being racially offensive, as long as it doesn't cross the threshold of advocating genocide or publicly inciting hatred against an identifiable group."

Jackson was commenting after the RCMP last week announced the arrest of a Chilliwack, B.C., woman for what police described as "racially offensive social media content."

The woman has not yet been charged. Police have not named her, or said what charges are being recommended to prosecutors. 

Jackson said it's difficult to speak specifically on the Chilliwack case without knowing more details.

 "In general, we don't want to use the strong, and in many ways blunt, tool of the criminal law to deal with speech that's simply socially problematic," Jackson said.

"There are a whole bunch of things we can do to address people expressing ideas in our communities that are contrary to the values of our communities, and the criminal law is a very extreme one. So if there is not actual harm being done, then generally we wouldn't want to see that done through the criminal law."

Laws prohibit the willful promotion of hatred or public incitement of hatred against a specific group as well as the promotion of genocide.

Jackson said promoting hate involves communicating "statements in any public place that give rise to feelings of hatred and directed against an identifiable group."

Jackson said the bar for hate crime charges is very high and that cases in other provinces have resulted in charges for criminal harassment or uttering threats, rather than hate speech.

"Depending on what the facts are, this may well be a criminal harassment, which can be repeated communications that cause another person to reasonably fear for their safety or the safety of anyone they know," Jackson said.

"That can certainly happen online, just as it can happen by, you know, leaving notes in somebody's mailbox."

Premier David Eby told an unrelated news conference Tuesday that while he didn't know specific details of the Chillwack case, there are guidelines for Crown lawyers deciding whether to approve hate charges.

"We are a government that wants this to be, and continue to be, a province where everyone feels welcome and safe regardless of what their religion is, regardless of where their ancestors came from, regardless of who they are as a person … We want everybody to have that opportunity, and sometimes that means criminal charges against people for promoting hate against groups," he said.

"I fully support that. We've given direction to our Crown counsel to be able to support those charges, consistent with the Criminal Code, where the elements are made out."

The Chilliwack case comes as the legal landscape around hate online is changing in Canada.

Earlier this year the federal government tabled its Online Harms Act which would increase the punishment for hate-related offences and give judges the power to restrict someone's movements if they have evidence they could commit a hate crime.

Legal and privacy experts, as well as civil liberties groups, have raised concerns about its potential to limit free speech.

Jackson said the Chilliwack case will be interesting to follow as more details are made public.

"It's never a bad idea to remember that the internet is real life. The people you're talking to are, for the most part, real people and conduct that you wouldn't participate in, in your real life, is something that you should think carefully about participating in online."

MORE National ARTICLES

Ibrahim Ali trial

Ibrahim Ali trial
An RCMP expert testifying at Ibrahim Ali's murder trial said the first DNA evidence linking the accused to the killing of a 13-year-old girl in Burnaby, B.C., came from a discarded cigarette butt. Christine Crossman says Ali's DNA from the cigarette was then matched to the DNA recovered from the body of the girl who was found dead in Burnaby's Central Park six years ago.

Ibrahim Ali trial

Man walked naked out of shower, found Mountie in his bedroom: lawsuit

Man walked naked out of shower, found Mountie in his bedroom: lawsuit
A British Columbia man who is suing the RCMP claims he walked naked out of his shower to find a female uniformed Mountie standing in his bedroom. Kirk Forbes says the encounter in his Coquitlam home in June 2022 left him "shocked, confused and embarrassed."  

Man walked naked out of shower, found Mountie in his bedroom: lawsuit

Small plane with engine failure makes emergency landing on highway near Salmo, B.C.

Small plane with engine failure makes emergency landing on highway near Salmo, B.C.
Mounties in southeastern British Columbia say the pilot of a small plane used Highway 6 as a runway after experiencing engine trouble.  Police say a member of the public informed them on Tuesday that the plane was parked on the side of the highway, near Salmo.  

Small plane with engine failure makes emergency landing on highway near Salmo, B.C.

Pedestrian dies in Abbotsford crash

Pedestrian dies in Abbotsford crash
Police in Abbotsford say a 35-year-old pedestrian died late last night after being hit by a vehicle. The death came just hours after an unrelated head-on crash involving two vehicles in the southwest corner of Abbotsford, leaving both drivers -- a 49-year-old man and 29-year-old woman -- with potentially life-threatening injuries.

Pedestrian dies in Abbotsford crash

Weeks of worry ease as alerts lift for two B.C. wildfires outside Kamloops, Lillooet

Weeks of worry ease as alerts lift for two B.C. wildfires outside Kamloops, Lillooet
The Thompson-Nicola Regional District has issued the "all clear" to residents affected by the Ross Moore Lake fire which was sparked by lightning nine weeks ago and scorched nearly 114 square kilometres before being held. The B.C. Wildfire Service says an area restriction order covering travel through the fire zone remains in effect until at least Friday.

Weeks of worry ease as alerts lift for two B.C. wildfires outside Kamloops, Lillooet

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show
The documents obtained by the B.C. office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives show a registered professional engineer found numerous problems in 2018 with dikes protecting the community in the province's southern Interior.  Dike maintenance is a municipal responsibility but with provincial oversight.

B.C. aware of dike problems before destructive flooding in 2021, documents show