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Decentralized Democracy

Bill S-206

44th Parl. 1st Sess.
October 18, 2022
  • This bill amends the Criminal Code to allow jurors to disclose information about jury proceedings to health care professionals in certain situations. Currently, jurors are prohibited from disclosing such information. However, this bill creates an exception where jurors can share information with health care professionals for medical or psychiatric treatment or counseling related to their service as a juror. The health care professional must be legally authorized to provide these services in their respective province. This bill received royal assent on October 18, 2022 and will come into force 90 days after that.
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  • Yea (334)
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First Session, Forty-fourth Parliament,

70-71 Elizabeth II – 1 Charles III, 2021-2022

STATUTES OF CANADA 2022

CHAPTER 12
An Act to amend the Criminal Code (disclosure of information by jurors)

ASSENTED TO
October 18, 2022

BILL S-206



SUMMARY

This enactment amends the Criminal Code to provide that the prohibition against the disclosure of information relating to jury proceedings does not apply, in certain circumstances, in respect of disclosure by jurors to health care professionals.

Available on the Senate of Canada website at the following address:
www.sencanada.ca/en


70-71 Elizabeth II – 1 Charles III

CHAPTER 12

An Act to amend the Criminal Code (disclosure of information by jurors)

[Assented to 18th October, 2022]

His Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows:

R.‍‍S.‍‍, c. C-46

Criminal Code

1Section 649 of the Criminal Code is replaced by the following:

Disclosure of jury proceedings

649(1)Every member of a jury, and every person providing technical, personal, interpretative or other support services to a juror with a physical disability, who discloses any information relating to the proceedings of the jury when it was absent from the courtroom that was not subsequently disclosed in open court is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.

Exceptions

(2)Subsection (1) does not apply in respect of the disclosure of information for the purposes of

  • (a)an investigation of an alleged offence under subsection 139(2) in relation to a juror;

  • (b)giving evidence in criminal proceedings in relation to such an offence; or

  • (c)any medical or psychiatric treatment or any therapy or counselling that a person referred to in subsection (1) receives from a health care professional after the completion of the trial in relation to health issues arising out of or related to the person’s service at the trial as a juror or as a person who provided support services to a juror.

Health care professional

(3)For the purpose of paragraph (2)‍(c), the health care professional who provides any medical or psychiatric treatment or any therapy or counselling must be entitled to do so under the laws of a province.

Coming into Force

Ninetieth day after royal assent

2This Act comes into force on the 90th day after the day on which it receives royal assent.

Published under authority of the Senate of Canada