Monday, June 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

Too Late To Fix Problem Forms For 2016 Jury Eligibility, Ontario Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Oct, 2015 01:38 PM
  • Too Late To Fix Problem Forms For 2016 Jury Eligibility, Ontario Says
TORONTO — It's too late to fix government forms that could lead to ineligible people finding their way onto a jury next year, according to Ontario's Ministry of the Attorney General.
 
However, the ministry also said it would be taking unspecified steps to try to head off that possibility after The Canadian Press pointed out errors in the information sent to prospective jurors.
 
"Each year, jury questionnaires are sent out starting in September as the first step in compiling the next year's jury roll," Heather Visser, a spokeswoman for the ministry, said in an email.
 
"Because the Juries Act requires the questionnaires to be mailed out each year by Oct. 31, the questionnaires for the 2016 jury roll have already been sent out."
 
The questionnaire and instruction sheet that determine initial jury eligibility, Visser also said, can only be changed by a formal regulation amendment.
 
Instructions accompanying the eligibility questionnaire — 560,924 forms were mailed out over the past month — list more than two dozen criminal convictions that do not lead to automatic exclusion from juries. The problem, however, is that three of the listed crimes do in fact by law automatically disqualify someone from being a juror.
 
The upshot is that someone convicted of those offences — impersonating a peace officer, committing an indecent act, or making indecent or repeated telephone calls — could inadvertently find their way onto a panel in violation of the rules.
 
Visser did say the risk that a person found guilty of one of the ineligible offences could end up sitting on a jury is "minimal" given the low number of convictions related to the offences and other steps in place to establish jury rolls.
 
Either way, she said, both the Criminal Code and Juries Act anticipate this type of circumstance.
 
"An oversight on eligibility or qualifications of jurors is not a ground for overturning a verdict," Visser said.
 
Several legal experts, however, said the problem taints the process and could damage perceptions about the administration of justice.
 
"(The ministry) seems to be treating this somewhat cavalierly," said veteran defence lawyer Tony Bryant.
 
"What if the defence was denied a challenge for cause based on bias? What if the defence applied for information about all this and was denied? What if one of the charges was somehow related to what the juror had been convicted of?"
 
Visser said the government would take steps to amend the questionnaire, in use for years, to remove the faulty information — the problem forms remain available online from the ministry — although it was too late to do so now. For the time being, she said, the ministry would be taking steps to alert all prospective jurors to the problem.
 
She refused to say what those steps might be. 
 
"We are currently reviewing options to identify the best method," Visser said. "It is premature to comment further."

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Seeks Transportation Agency Clout In Railway Battle With Canadian Pacific

Vancouver Seeks Transportation Agency Clout In Railway Battle With Canadian Pacific
The City of Vancouver is fighting back as it battles plans by Canadian Pacific Railway (TSX:CP) to resurrect train traffic on a rail spur cutting through some of the city's priciest neighbourhoods.

Vancouver Seeks Transportation Agency Clout In Railway Battle With Canadian Pacific

Washington Wildfires Force Air Quality Advisory For Eastern Fraser Valley

Washington Wildfires Force Air Quality Advisory For Eastern Fraser Valley
VANCOUVER — Smoke from wildfires in Washington state has forced Metro Vancouver officials to issue an air quality advisory.

Washington Wildfires Force Air Quality Advisory For Eastern Fraser Valley

Ashcroft, B.C., Resident Testifies He Watched Shovel Attack On Neighbour

Ashcroft, B.C., Resident Testifies He Watched Shovel Attack On Neighbour
Gil Anderson testified in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday about what he saw and heard on June 2, 2014, the day a man is accused of fatally attacking his uncle.

Ashcroft, B.C., Resident Testifies He Watched Shovel Attack On Neighbour

New Program Injects 14 New Physicians Into Rural B.C. Communities

New Program Injects 14 New Physicians Into Rural B.C. Communities
VICTORIA — Fourteen internationally-trained doctors are fanning out across British Columbia as part of a program to provide better primary health care in rural areas.

New Program Injects 14 New Physicians Into Rural B.C. Communities

RCMP Deals With China, United Nations As Fentanyl Deaths Surge In Canada

 The RCMP is working with the United Nations and China to dampen the influx of the dangerous opioid fentanyl onto Canada's streets, but one high-level investigator expects the overdose problem to increase.

RCMP Deals With China, United Nations As Fentanyl Deaths Surge In Canada

Suspected Auto Thief Reaches New Heights In Attempt To Evade Alberta RCMP

Suspected Auto Thief Reaches New Heights In Attempt To Evade Alberta RCMP
A man accused of ramming a police cruiser during a 100-kilometre chase appears to have marked a first for a central Alberta RCMP detachment by hiding in a tree to elude capture.

Suspected Auto Thief Reaches New Heights In Attempt To Evade Alberta RCMP