Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Charter Challenge Against Practice That Saw Cops Posing As Reporters Dismissed

The Canadian Press, 11 Aug, 2015 10:48 AM
    TORONTO — An Ontario superior court judge has dismissed a charter challenge filed against a practice that saw a handful of provincial police officers pose as journalists.
     
    Three major media organizations went to court last May to argue that the practice violated the constitution by having a chilling effect on freedom of the press.
     
    But in a decision released last month, Justice Benjamin Glustein said that no such practice truly existed.
     
    The cases at the heart of the charter challenge centred on police efforts to gather information during high-profile protests by aboriginal groups.
     
    Philip Tunley, the lawyer representing the media group, says Glustein's ruling was disappointing and did not address the main questions around freedom of expression.
     
    He says the CBC, Canadian Journalists for Free Expression and the Radio-Television News Directors Association of Canada are considering whether or not to appeal the ruling.
     
    The media organizations argued that the practice of impersonating reporters could place genuine journalists at risk by raising suspicions about who they are, as well as limiting the ability to develop trusting relationships with key sources.
     
    Tunley said Glustein's argument was particularly technical and focused on each individual point raised during the hearing rather than addressing the overarching questions they raised.
     
    The application was centred around specific cases in which police officers impersonated reporters, and Glustein's ruling focuses on why each individual instance doesn't represent a widespread practice.
     
    "What he never does is to sort of sit back and ask the question that we said was important, which was ... are sources likely to believe that there is a practice from all of the reported incidents," Tunley said in a telephone interview.
     
    The application filed by the media organizations cited the cases as proof provincial police pose as members of the media to gather information as part of a criminal investigation.
     
    In one notorious case, two officers filmed protesters at Ipperwash provincial park in 1995 and, when asked who they worked for, named the fictitious United Press Associates. Police confirmed the deception years later at a public inquiry into the fatal police shooting of an aboriginal protester.
     
    In another case, an officer keeping an eye on protesters during an aboriginal Day of Action on Tyendinaga Mohawk territory in 2007 admitted he had pretended to be part of the media, court heard.
     
    Glustein's decision, however, dismissed the argument.
     
    "There is no practice of plainclothes OPP officers engaged in media-presence surveillance to identify themselves as journalists if questioned as to their identity," the decision reads. "Consequently, it cannot be considered a 'real' practice and, as such, I do not address the theoretical constitutional validity of the issue."
     
    The lawyer representing the three respondents in the case — the Attorney General of Ontario, the Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services and the Commissioner of the Ontario Provincial Police — could not be reached for comment.
     
    Attorney General spokesman Brendan Crawley issued a statement saying that "the Ontario Provincial Police used investigative techniques that were in accordance with the law and do not infringe freedom of expression under the Charter." He declined to offer further comment on the ruling since a decision to appeal is still pending.
     
    Tunley said that decision will be made before the end of the month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    1977 Stanley Cup, 1993 World Series Rings Stolen From Toronto Home

    1977 Stanley Cup, 1993 World Series Rings Stolen From Toronto Home
    Toronto police are looking for a thief who made off with a pair of valuable sports championship rings in a residential break-in.

    1977 Stanley Cup, 1993 World Series Rings Stolen From Toronto Home

    B.C. Adds Iconic Hawaii Mars Flying Tanker To Wildfire-Fighting Arsenal

    B.C. Adds Iconic Hawaii Mars Flying Tanker To Wildfire-Fighting Arsenal
    PORT ALBERNI, B.C. — The owner of the iconic, red-and-white Martin Mars water bomber says the British Columbia government has agreed to add the flying tanker to its wildfire-fighting arsenal.

    B.C. Adds Iconic Hawaii Mars Flying Tanker To Wildfire-Fighting Arsenal

    B.C. Panel Orders $42 Million In Penalties For Securities-related Infractions

    B.C. Panel Orders $42 Million In Penalties For Securities-related Infractions
    In its decision announced Monday, the British Columbia Securities Commission also fined and permanently cease-traded Bossteam E-Commerce, the company co-founded by Yan Zhu, also known as Rachel Zhu, and Guan Qiang Zhang

    B.C. Panel Orders $42 Million In Penalties For Securities-related Infractions

    B.C. To Legislate $36-Billion Agreement With Pacific Northwest LNG

    B.C. To Legislate $36-Billion Agreement With Pacific Northwest LNG
    VICTORIA — Finance Minister Mike de Jong says the potential economic returns from British Columbia's first liquefied-natural-gas deal will outweigh any targeted-tax tradeoffs included in a 25-year deal he expects to table in the legislature next week.  

    B.C. To Legislate $36-Billion Agreement With Pacific Northwest LNG

    Pan Am Games Officials Warn Of Traffic Issues, Implore Residents To Take Transit

    Pan Am Games Officials Warn Of Traffic Issues, Implore Residents To Take Transit
    TORONTO — Pan Am Games officials are stressing the importance of using anything but a car to get around the Toronto region as the multi-sport event gets underway.

    Pan Am Games Officials Warn Of Traffic Issues, Implore Residents To Take Transit

    National Chief Bellegarde Calls On Canada To Make Reconciliation Real

    National Chief Bellegarde Calls On Canada To Make Reconciliation Real
    MONTREAL — National Chief Perry Bellegarde wants First Nations and other Canadians alike to get involved in the federal election campaign and push for reconciliation.

    National Chief Bellegarde Calls On Canada To Make Reconciliation Real