Ontario Superior
Court of Justice Divisional Court
(O'Leary,
Coo and Ferrier JJ.)
IN THE MATTER OF a decision
of the Information and Privacy Commissioner made under the Municipal
Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.
M.56
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BETWEEN: JOHN
DUNCANSON and JIM RANKIN
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applicants |
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Paul B. Schabas
and Judy Chan for the Applicants |
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and - ANITA
FINEBERG, Inquiry Officer, METROPOLITAN TORONTO POLICE SERVICES BOARD and
METROPOLITAN TORONTO POLICE ASSOCIATION |
) ) ) ) ) )
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Joanne
Mulcahy for the Affected Persons
Robin MacKay for Toronto Police
Services Board |
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Repondents |
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BETWEEN: JOHN DUNCANSON and JIM RANKIN |
) ) ) |
Leslie McIntosh for the
Attorney General for Ontario |
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Applicants |
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and - DONALD
HALE, Inquiry Officer, and METROPOLITAN TORONTO POLICE SERVICES BOARD |
) ) ) ) ) |
William S. Challis
and Margaret Drent for Information and Privacy Commissioner |
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Respondents |
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Heard: April 13 and
14, 1999. |
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BETWEEN: JOHN DUNCANSON and JIM RANKIN |
) ) ) |
Judgment: July 5, 1999.
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Applicants |
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and - TOM
MITCHINSON, Assistant Commissioner, MARIANNE MILLER, Inquiry
Officer,and METROPOLITAN TORONTO POLICE SERVICES BOARD |
) ) ) ) ) ) |
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Repondents |
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BETWEEN: JOHN DUNCANSON and JIM RANKIN |
) ) ) |
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Applicants |
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and - ANITA
FINEBERG, Inquiry Officer, METROPOLITAN TORONTO POLICE SERVICES BOARD |
) ) ) ) ) |
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Respondents |
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BETWEEN: JOHN DUNCANSON and JIM RANKIN |
) ) ) |
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Applicants |
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and - DONALD
HALE, Inquiry Officer, MINISTRY OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL and METROPOLITAN
TORONTO POLICE ASSOCIATION |
) ) ) ) ) ) )
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Respondents |
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The judgment of the Court was delivered by
[1] O'LEARY J.: The issue on this application for
judicial review is whether the court should order:
| (a) |
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the disclosure of records kept by
the Metropolitan Toronto Police Services Board (the "Police") containing |
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| (i) |
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the names of all police officers
employed by the police; |
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| (ii) |
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public complaints made against police officers
including the names and ranks of the officers, and the allegations made and the
outcome or disposition of the complaints, being information collected in the
Public Complaint Bureau's Public Complaint System data base since 1990; |
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| (iii) |
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the docket sheets posted outside the court
rooms for trials of all officers charged since 1986 under the Police Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c. 8 which docket sheets contain the officers' names, rank, badge
numbers and the charges laid; |
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| (b) |
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the disclosure of records kept by
the Ministry of Attorney General (the "Ministry") of all Criminal Code
indictments and informations laid against all police officers employed by the
Police who have been charged and prosecuted, as far back as the records have
been kept, including the names of the officers, their ranks, the charges, the
allegations and the disposition of the cases. |
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[2] The disclosure of the above records was requested by John
Duncanson and Jim Rankin, reporters for the Toronto Star by letters dated
November 29, 1996, December 13, 1996 and January 16, 1997.The Police and the
Ministry refused the requests.Duncanson and Rankin appealed the refusals to the
Information and Privacy Commissioner.The Commissioner upheld the refusals to
disclose the records.Duncanson and Rankin ask on this application that the
Commissioner's decisions be quashed and that the Court direct that the records
be disclosed to Duncanson and Rankin.
[3] For the reasons which follow the Court should not disturb any
of the Commissioner's decisions and so the application for judicial review
fails.I deal separately with each request for disclosure.
| 1. |
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Request for disclosure of records
containing the names of all police officers. |
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[4] The decision of the Commissioner being Order M-913 was
delivered by Anita Fineberg, Inquiry Officer, on March 20, 1997.That decision
reads in part:
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It is the position of the Police
supported by [the Metropolitan Toronto Police Association] (the MTPA), that
disclosure of the names of the officers are exempt under section 13 of the
[Municipal Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act)]
which states: |
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A head may refuse to disclose a
record whose disclosure could reasonably be expected to seriously threaten the
safety or health of an individual. |
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... |
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The Police and the MTPA identify police
officers, their families and third parties including friends and neighbours as
the individuals whose safety or health could reasonably be expected to be
seriously threatened as a result of the disclosure.As far as the manner in
which such harm may occur, the Police state as follows: |
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A certain number of police officers
are assigned at any time to `old clothes' [drug squad, intelligence, morality
officers, etc.] or `plain clothes' duties, typified by the detectives in field
units and specialized squads [homicide, fraud, hold-up, etc.]. These officers
go about their tasks in non-uniform dress precisely because they can operate
most efficiently and efficaciously in public where they are not readily
identified as police officers.
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Should such individuals be easily identifiable
as police officers at certain stages of their investigative work, their tasks
would be made more difficulty, unwieldy, or sometimes impossible. Interviewing
potential witnesses in certain situations could endanger either interviewer or
interviewee, for example. |
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The Police go on to state that
these submissions are not limited to intelligence undercover officers only but
also to any officers who do not wear uniforms in the performance of their
regular duties.
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The MTPA submits: |
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Undercover officers must and do
seriously guard their identities.Uniform officers must do the same for
themselves and their families.Their identification could facilitate unwanted,
even dangerous, interventions in their lives, facilitate identification of
homes where guns may be stored and otherwise endanger them. |
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... |
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The position of the appellant is that the names
of the police officers are publicly available in that, as a rule the Police
make no secret of officers' names.The appellant points to the issuance of press
releases which contain the names and badge numbers of the officers who have
signed off.The appellant notes that the Police regularly provide the media with
the names of officers involved in incidents or investigations.He states that
this information is not limited to the media and the public may contact the
Police switchboard to confirm whether an individual is still a member of the
police force and to which division he or she is attached.
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Finally, the appellant has provided me with a
copy of a page from the Police's Web site which shows the names, positions,
telephone and badge numbers of the members of the Sexual Assault squad of the
Police.
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Based on the public availability of the
information described above, the appellant questions how disclosure of only the
names of the officers could result in the harms outlined in section
13.
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...
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... the Police take the position that there are
circumstances, as described in their submissions cited previously, where
disclosure of the names of officers could reasonably be expected to seriously
threaten the safety or health of an officer or his or her family. Conversely,
there are situations where such harms do not exist or where the Police have
identified in their discretion that there are overriding reasons for the
provision of names of officers to the public - for example, in the context of a
specific investigation or the publication of the names of the officers of the
Sexual Assault Squad.However, when considering the list of all the officers of
the force as a whole, which is the subject of this request, they have exercised
their discretion in favour of non-disclosure.
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I accept the submissions of the Police that
identification of police officers could reasonably be expected to make their
work more dangerous in many situations.I also accept that there are instances
in which such identification could place family members and others at
risk.
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As Inquiry Officer Higgins noted in Order
M-465, in order to find that the section 13 exemption applies, it is not
necessary to demonstrate that actual injuries would occur as a result of
disclosure.The Police must establish that a serious threat to health or safety
could reasonably be expected.Based on the submissions of the Police and the
MTPA, I am satisfied that this requirement has been met in the circumstances of
this case. Accordingly, I find that section 13 of the Act applies to exempt the
information at issue in this appeal from disclosure.
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...
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The appellant argues that there exists a public
interest in the disclosure of the information at issue under section 16 of the
Act, which states: |
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An exemption from disclosure of a
record under sections 7, 9, 10, 11, 13 and 14 does not apply where a compelling
public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs the purpose
of the exemption [emphasis added] |
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The appellant submits that there is
a compelling public interest in the dissemination of information about the
Police in the form of investigative journalism which clearly outweighs the
purpose of the denial of access to individuals' personal information.He
indicates that the nature of the requesters is a significant consideration in
this case as his clients have a duty to fully inform the public about the
activities of public institutions, such as the Police, and the public has a
right to be so informed.He states: |
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It is our position that this right
and corresponding duty create a compelling public interest in the disclosure of
information about the activities of one of the most inaccessible public
institutions, the Police.
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... Full and frank disclosure will submit the
Police to necessary public scrutiny; increase public confidence in the Police
and foster open discussion about its activities, its mandate and its internal
procedures.Anything less than full and frank disclosure will engender a lack of
confidence and mistrust in the institution, a far greater harm than any that
might occur as a result of disclosure of the Nominal Roll. |
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In Order P-1121, Inquiry Officer
Holly Big Canoe made the following observations about the application of the
"public interest override' contained in section 23 of the provincial Freedom of
Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the equivalent of section 16 of the
Act.In that case, records had been exempted under section 21 of the provincial
legislation.However, in my view, the reasoning is equally applicable to any
exemption under the Act.She stated: |
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There are two requirements
contained in section 23 which must be satisfied in order to invoke the
application of the so-called "public interest override":there must be a
compelling public interest in disclosure; and this compelling public interest
must clearly outweigh the purpose of the exemption. |
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"Compelling" is defined in the Oxford
dictionary as "rousing strong interest or attention".In order to find that
there is a compelling public interest in disclosure, the information at issue
must serve the purpose of informing the citizenry about the activities of their
government, adding in some way to the information the public has available to
effectively express opinion or to make political choices. |
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If a compelling public interest is established,
it must then be balanced against the purpose of the exemption which has been
found to apply.In my view, the balancing involves weighing the relationship of
the information against the Act's central purposes of shedding light on the
operations of government and protecting the privacy of personal information
held by government.Section 23 recognizes that each of the exemptions listed in
the section, while serving to protect valid interests, must yield on occasion
to the public interest in access to information held by government.An important
consideration in this balance is the extent to which denying access to the
information is consistent with the purpose of the exemption. |
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I adopt the approach expressed in
Order P-1121 for the purposes of this appeal. |
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As noted above, the appellant's submissions on
the application of section 16 relate to the public interest in disclosure of
the record outweighing the purpose of the personal privacy exemption in section
14 of the Act. I have found that the names of the officers are exempt pursuant
to section 13 of the Act.The appellant has not indicated how the public
interest in disclosure outweighs the purpose of this exemption. |
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Furthermore, the appellant has failed to
explain how the disclosure of all of the names of the officers employed by the
Police would result in the public being fully informed about the activities of
the Police, its mandate and internal procedures. |
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In the circumstances of this appeal, therefore,
I am not persuaded that there exists a compelling public interest in the
disclosure of the information at issue that clearly outweighs the purpose of
the exemption in section 13.Accordingly, I find that section 16 of the Act does
not apply in the circumstances of this appeal.The result is that the names of
the officers are exempt from disclosure. |
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[5] It is apparent that Inquiry Officer Fineberg accepted the
submissions of the Police and the MTPA that there are circumstances, where
disclosure of the names of officers could reasonably be expected to seriously
threaten the safety or health of an officer or his or her family or others such
as potential witnesses.While there are occasions when such disclosure would not
entail such danger or where the Police have decided there is overriding reason
for the provision of the names of officers to the public, as has been done with
the officers of the Sexual Assault Squad, when considering the list of all the
officers of the force, which is the subject of the request for disclosure, the
Police are entitled, Fineberg concluded, to make no disclosure.
[6] Inquiry Officer Fineberg also held that the applicants had
not indicated how the public interest in disclosure outweighs the need to
protect police officers and others from the serious threat to their health and
safety that the disclosure would entail.
[7] In my view Inquiry Officer Fineberg's decision is not only
reasonable, it is correct.
[8] After order M-913 was released, counsel for Duncanson and
Rankin wrote to Inquiry Officer Fineberg on March 26, 1997 in part as follows:
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... we ask that you reconsider your
position in light of new evidence that has recently become available. |
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We submit that the new evidence demonstrates
that the Metropolitan Toronto Police Force (the "Police") are acting in an
arbitrary and capricious manner by denying the Appellants access to the names
of officers on the Nominal Roll, and that no deference should be shown to the
Police discretion in refusing release of the information. |
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... the Police freely make public officers
names, ranks and even badge numbers, when it suits them to do so.The
Metropolitan Police Service recently published its 1996 Annual Report.This
report lists the names, ranks and badge numbers of about 1,000 officers, which
represent about one quarter of the entire force.A copy of this report is
attached as exhibit "A" to this letter. |
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The information released in the Annual report
poses more of a potential risk to the health and safety of police officers than
would release of the information sought to our clients. |
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[9] Inquiry Officer Fineberg asked for more information and
submissions.The Police informed her in part as follows:
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... Historically, the names of
officers entitled to long service awards, for example, were not published in
any standardized report available to the public. |
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This decision to incorporate Awards into the
newly formatted annual report was made unbeknownst to not only `the Board', but
also without consultation with any other institutional units which could have
prevented this error involving the rights of approximately 1,000 employees.
Unfortunately, the Acting Coordinator of the Freedom of Information and
Protection of Privacy Unit did not become aware of the situation until April 1,
1997, too late to apprise the individuals involved with this project of the FOI
concerns and repercussions. |
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... |
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Numerous concerns have been raised regarding
the publication of the personal information contained in the Awards section of
the Professional Standards 1996 Annual Report, and an internal privacy
investigation has been initiated concerning the matter.The institution
acknowledges that an inadvertent, yet horrendous error has been made, however,
such error does not waive the institution's responsibility to protect the
rights to privacy of the approximately 4,000 other police officers employed by
this Service.The institution's position concerning the application of section
13 remains unchanged from that expressed in our representations dated March 6,
1997. |
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The MTPA informed Ms. Fineberg in part as follows:
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... The Association was not aware
of the existence of the "Final Report" at the time of the submissions and would
not have consented to the release of the information therein.Similar
information was not, to our knowledge, provided in earlier reports. |
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... |
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... The fact that the Institution released the
names of some officers can be reasonably expected to seriously threaten the
safety or health of individual police officers.Our understanding is that this
information was released without the knowledge and consent of the Freedom of
information Department at the Metropolitan Toronto Police Service.It was
certainly released without the knowledge and consent of the individual officers
and the MTPA. |
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... we submit that one of the major concerns of
the Police Association is that there is no control over the use which will be
made of the list of names, should it be released. |
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[10] On May 16, 1997 Inquiry Officer Fineberg issued Order
M-938.The decision reads in part:
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I find that upon issuing Order
M-913, I became functus officio.Based on the foregoing discussion, none of the
exceptions to this principle are present in this case. Accordingly, I am
without jurisdiction to reopen Order M-913, solely for the purpose of
considering the new evidence presented by the appellant.Thus, I deny the
appellant's request for reconsideration of Order M-913 and confirm my decision
in that order. |
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I should add that, if I am wrong in my finding
that I am functus, the new evidence provided by the appellant would not have
persuaded me to alter my decision in any event. The facts and circumstances
surrounding the creation and distribution of the Report, as well as the
information contained in this document, would not have caused me to conclude
that the Police improperly applied the exemption in section 13 of the Act to
deny access to the names of all the officers in its employ. |
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[11] This decision also is in my view not just reasonable but
correct.I will now deal with some but not all of the specific attacks made by
Duncanson and Rankin on orders M-913 and M-938.
(a) Breach of Natural Justice - The Failure to Give Reasons.
[12] On December 31, 1996 by letter to Duncanson and Rankin the
Police denied access to the listing of all police officers.The letter reads in
part:
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Access is denied to a current
listing of all police officers employed by Metropolitan Toronto Police Service
pursuant to sub-sections 13, 14(1)(f) and 14(3)(d) of the Municipal Freedom of
Information and Protection of Privacy Act. |
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[13] The letter then sets out in full the words of the section
and subsections just identified.No other reasons were given for the refusal of
access.Section 22(1)(b) of the Act reads in part:
| 22.(1) |
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Notice of refusal to give access to
a record or part under section 19 shall set out, |
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... |
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| (b) |
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where there is such a record, |
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| (i) |
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the specific provision of this Act
under which access is refused, |
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| (ii) |
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the reason the provision applies to the record
... |
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[14] Counsel for Duncanson and Rankin submits that because the
Police failed to give reasons for refusing to disclose the requested
information, the applicants were prejudiced by being required to make
submissions to the Inquiry Officer without knowing how according to the Police
the provisions of the Act quoted applied to the records.This situation it is
said was highly prejudicial and amounted to a denial of natural justice before
the Commission and should lead the court to set aside Orders M-913 and M-938.
[15] Inquiry Officer Fineberg dealt with this issue as follows:
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The decision letter issued by the
Police stated that access was being denied to the listing of police officers
pursuant to sections 13, 14(1)(f) and 14(3)(d) of the Act.The letter went on to
note that "... These sections apply because ..." followed by a paragraph
setting out the language of these sections. |
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In my view, the purpose of the inclusion of the
above information in a notice of refusal is to put the requester in a position
to make a reasonably informed decision on whether to seek a review of the
head's decision (Orders 158, P-235 and P-324).In this case, I agree with the
appellant that the decision letter of the Police should have provided him with
reasons for the denial of access.A restatement of the language of the
legislation is not sufficient to satisfy the requirement in section
29(1)(b)(ii) of the Act.It does not provide an explanation of why the
exemptions claimed by the Police apply to the record.Section 29(1)(b)(i)
already requires that the notice contain the provision of the Act under which
access is refused. |
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Notwithstanding the inadequacy of the decision
letter, the appellant has exercised his right of appeal and provided extensive
representations which I have referred to in my disposition of all the issues
relating to the information in this order.In these circumstances, there would
be no useful purpose served in requiring the Police to provide a new decision
letter to the appellant. |
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[16] Duncanson and Rankin did not in their notice of appeal sent
to the Information and Privacy Commissioner complain about lack of reasons.That
would have been the time to enlist the aid of the Commissioner to get
reasons.Rather they went ahead with the appeal and raised the lack of reasons
only in submissions made on the appeal.That submission, a ten-page letter by
their counsel, addresses the claim by the Police that they are entitled to rely
on sections 13, 14(1)(f) and 14(3d)(d) of the Act and refuse disclosure.
[17] In that submission letter counsel stated as follows in
regard to lack of reasons:
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... The reason provided to the
requester should be sufficient to allow the requester to make an informed
decision as to whether to seek review of the head's decision. |
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The notice of refusal provided by the Police in
this case provides no reasons at all.It merely refers to or restates the
sections of the Act.It is insufficient to allow our client to make informed
decisions and meaningful representations in his appeal.The failure of the
Police to comply with this important requirement should weigh heavily against
it. |
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[18] Counsel appears to have conceded to the Inquiry Officer that
the purpose of reasons is to allow the requester to make an informed decision
whether to appeal.Having appealed and made submissions, it is a little late to
complain.Indeed, counsel did not ask for better reasons even when complaining
about lack of reasons.
[19] The attack on order M-913, based on lack of reasons by the
Police is without merit.
| (b) |
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Section 4(2) Duty of Severance |
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Section 4(2) of the Act reads: |
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| 4.(2) |
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If an institution receives a
request for access to a record that contains information that falls within one
of the exemptions under sections 6 to 15 and the head of the institution is not
of the opinion that the request is frivolous or vexatious, the head shall
disclose as much of the record as can reasonably be severed without disclosing
the information that falls under one of the exemptions. |
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[20] In his submissions to the Inquiry Officer on March 5, 1997
counsel for the applicants submitted that the Police have "failed to apply the
statutory requirement for severance of the Nominal Roll".But at that time his
position was that "there is no indication that the Police have made an attempt
to reasonably sever personal information from the Nominal Roll in an effort to
disclose information responsive to the current request".Counsel was directing
his argument to the removal of such particulars as rank and address from the
list.He was not suggesting that the Police consider removing some names from
the list.
[21] On this application for judicial review it is submitted that
"the Police were required to consider whether some of the names could be
released even if others were exempt".It is said that the Inquiry Officer
recognized that some of the names on the list were not exempt from disclosure.
It is my view that the Inquiry Officer made no such finding.
[22] The Police in its submissions to the Inquiry Officer made it
quite clear it was not arguing that when approached by someone and questioned
an officer on duty should not be required to divulge his name, badge, number,
position and duties.The Police draw a distinction between a police officer's
name on an official document or his identity when on duty and the
identification of the same person as an officer when not on duty.The Police
said:
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Had the requester asked for the
names of specific individuals who had been involved in specific actions or
recorded certain things on behalf of the Service, obviously our response would
have been different and we would probably not have objected to the provision of
this information. |
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[23] The Police recognized there are times when it is essential
that the names of officers be released to certain individuals or indeed the
public.If someone has a legitimate reason for wanting the name of a particular
officer or officers he should have it.
[24] Neither the Police nor Inquiry Officer Fineberg said that
when someone asks for the names of all police officers, the Police can go
through the list and find certain officers the release of whose names would not
pose a risk of danger to them, their families or those including potential
witnesses with whom they may later have to deal.Indeed a uniformed officer
today, may be a detective or undercover officer tomorrow.The danger the Police
and the MTPA envision through the release of names applies to the names of all
officers.
[25] In my view the distinction drawn by the Police between
occasions when it is perhaps safe and certainly necessary, safe or not, to
release the names of officers, and a request for the names of all officers is
what the Inquiry Officer was talking about when she used the following words:
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... Conversely, there are
situations where such harms do not exist or where the Police have identified in
their discretion that there are overriding reasons for the provision of names
of officers to the public - for example, in the context of a specific
investigation or the publication of the names of the officers of the Sexual
Assault Squad.However, when considering the list of all the officers of the
force as a whole, which is the subject of this request, they have exercised
their discretion in favour of non-disclosure. |
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[26] I do not accept that it was open to the Inquiry Officer to
find or that she in fact found the Police could have identified some officers
on the list whose names could be released without endangering safety.
(c)The Inquiry Officer should have reconsidered Order M-913
[27] It is submitted on behalf of the applicants that the Inquiry
Officer erred in deciding that the principle of functus officio applied to her
decision in Order M-913 and that she had no further jurisdiction to consider
the fact that names of 1,000 officers had been released in the 1996 Annual
Report.
[28] I am inclined to the view that the Inquiry Officer became
functus officio upon issuing Order M-913, for the very reasons give by her.But
it is unnecessary to pursue that point, for she said in her reasons:
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I should add that, if I am wrong in
my finding that I am functus, the new evidence provided by the appellant would
not have persuaded me to alter my decision in any event. The facts and
circumstances surrounding the creation and distribution of the Report, as well
as the information contained in this document, would not have caused me to
conclude that the Police improperly applied the exemption in section 13 of the
Act to deny access to the names of all the officers in its employ. |
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[29] So she did consider the new evidence, but that did not
changer her mind.Once again, in my view she is not only reasonable but correct
in so deciding.
| 2. |
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Request for release of records
collected in the Public Complaint Bureau's Public Complaint System data base
since 1990 relating to the complaints made by members of the public against
police officers, the names and ranks of the officers, the allegations made and
the outcome or disposition of the complaints. |
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[30] In denying the request, the Police stated:
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Upon careful consideration it has
been determined that the portion of your request concerning "floppy disk copies
of the PCS database" meets the definition of subsections 52(3)(1) and 52(3)(3)
of the `Act' and therefore the `Act' does not apply.Access is denied to the
requested information.These subsections apply because: |
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| 52(3) |
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This Act does not apply to records
collected, prepared, maintained or used by or on behalf of an institution in
relation to any of the following: |
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| (1) |
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Proceedings or anticipated
proceedings before a court, tribunal or other entity relating to labour
relations or to the employment of a person by the institution. |
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| (3) |
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Meetings, consultations, discussions or
communications, about labour relations or employment-related matters in which
the institution has an interest |
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The Coordinator is responsible for these decisions.
[31] The police gave no other reason for refusing disclosure.
[32] Duncanson and Rankin appealed the refusal to disclose the
records to the Information and Privacy Commissioner but did not at that time
complain about lack of reasons by the Police for the refusal.
[33] Two months later as part of his nine-page letter of
submissions to the Commissioner, counsel for Duncanson and Rankin complained
that the Police had failed to provide reasons for its refusal of access to
information contained in the Public Complaints System database.Once again
counsel conceded that "the reason provided to the requester should be
sufficient to allow the requester to make an informed decision as to whether to
seek review of the head's decision".Counsel further stated "the appellants do
not consent to any delay in this appeal to permit reasons to be given by the
Police". Rather it was counsel's position the failure to give reasons should
cause the Commissioner to treat with scepticism any reasons the "Police may now
present".
[34] On April 24, 1997 Inquiry Officer Donald Hale issued Order
M-931 upholding the decision of the Police not to disclose the records.
[35] Section 52(3) of the Municipal Freedom of Information and
Protection of Privacy Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. M.56 reads in part:
| 52.(3) |
|
Subject to subsection (4), this act
does not apply to records collected, prepared, maintained or used by or on
behalf of an institution in relation to any of the following: |
|
| 1. |
|
Proceedings or anticipated proceedings before a
court, tribunal or other entity relating to labour relations or to the
employment of a person by the institution |
|
| 3. |
|
Meetings, consultations,
discussions or communications about labour relations or employment-related
matters in which the institution has an interest. |
|
The reasons for the decision of Inquiry Officer Hale read in
part:
|
Section 52(3)(3) |
|
|
In order to fall within the scope of paragraph
3 of section 52(3), the Police must establish that: |
|
| 1. |
|
the record was collected, prepared,
maintained or used by the Police on their behalf; and |
|
| 2. |
|
this collection, preparation, maintenance or
usage was in relation to meetings, consultations, discussions or
communications; and |
|
| 3. |
|
these meetings, consultations, discussions or
communications are about labour relations or employment-related matters in
which the Police have an interest. |
|
|
Requirements 1 and 2 |
|
|
The Police state that under section 76(1) of
Part VI of the Police Services Act (the PSA), the Chief of Police is obliged to
establish and maintain a Public Complaints Investigation Bureau within the
police service to investigate public complaints against police officers. During
the course of these investigations, information is gathered concerning a
particular complaint and recorded and stored in various formats, including the
PCS database. |
|
|
The Police submit that the information
contained in the PCS database is collected, prepared, maintained and used by
the Police in relation to the preparation of a report for the Chief of Police
who will then make a decision as to the disposition of the complaint under
section 90(3) of the PSA.In this way, the Police submit that the investigating
officers communicate the results of their investigation into a public complaint
to the Chief of Police by way of a final report. |
|
|
... |
|
|
In my view, the information contained in the
PCS database was collected, prepared, maintained and/or used by the
investigating police officer in relation to the preparation of a final report
on the results of their investigation, which they then communicated to the
Chief of Police.Therefore, I find that the first and second requirements of
section 52(3)3 have been established. |
|
|
Requirement 3 |
|
|
... |
|
|
Investigations under Part VI of the PSA are
conducted by the Public Complaints Investigation Bureau within a police
service.Such investigations are begun following the receipt of a complaint from
a member of the public against a police officer.A number of consequences may
flow from an adverse finding against an officer by the Chief of Police under
section 90(3) of the PSA.For example, a Board of Inquiry may be convened
pursuant to section 60 of the PSA, which may impose sanctions, including
discipline, dismissal, suspension, forfeiture of pay or time against the
officer under investigation. |
|
|
... |
|
|
... I have no difficulty in finding that
records which were prepared, maintained, collected or used in relation to
communications about an investigation under Part VI of the PSA, including
information used by investigating officers ... are about employment-related
matters ... |
|
|
I must now determine if these investigations
are employment-related matters "in which the Police have an interest". |
|
|
... |
|
|
The appellants argue that while the matters
dealt with in investigations conducted under Part VI of the PSA may affect the
legal rights of the officers charged, the investigations, and any subsequent
proceedings do not impact on the legal rights of the Police in any way.For this
reason, the appellants submit that the police do not "have an interest" in the
matters which are addressed through the Part VI proceedings. |
|
|
... |
|
|
Sections 76(1) and (2) of the PSA requires that
every Chief of Police establish and maintain a public complaints investigation
bureau and that it be adequately staffed to perform its duties
effectively.Sections 78 and 79 of the PSA oblige the Police to provide certain
notices to the complainant and the officer who is the subject of the complaint
at the commencement of an investigation.Similar reporting is required by
section 86(2) on a monthly basis as an investigation is under way. |
|
|
In my view, Part VI of the PSA requires that a
number of other statutory obligations be met by a police service, generally
through its Chief of Police.I find, therefore, that Part VI investigations are
matters in which the Police have certain legal obligations and that they have,
accordingly, an interest in them within the meaning of section 52(3)3. |
|
|
Therefore, the third requirement of section
52(3)3 has also been established. |
|
|
By way of summary, I find that the information
contained in the Public Complaints System was collected, prepared, maintained
and/or used by the Police in relation to communications about
employment-related matters in which the Police have an interest.All of the
requirements of section 52(3)3 of the Act have thereby been established by the
Police.None of the exceptions contained in section 52(4) are present in the
circumstances of this appeal, and I find that the information falls within the
parameters of this section, and is therefore, excluded from the scope of the
Act. |
|
|
... |
|
|
ORDER: |
|
|
I uphold the decision of the Police. |
|
[36] In my view Inquiry Officer Hale was eminently reasonable in
both his reasons and his decision and there is no reason to elaborate.Further I
agree with his disposition of the complaint that the Police did not give
reasons why the records fell within s. 52.He stated:
|
... the appellants did not appear
to have suffered any prejudice in their ability to evaluate whether to appeal
the decision to deny access or to make adequate representations.As such, I also
find that no useful purpose would be served by ordering the Police to provide
the appellants with another decision letter in this appeal. |
|
| 3. |
|
Request for the release of docket
sheets that had been posted outside the court room for trials of all officers
charged since 1986 under the Police Act, which docket sheets contained the
names of the officers charged, their ranks, badge numbers and the charged
laid. |
|
[37] In his decision of December 22, 1997 being Order M-1053
Assistant Commissioner Tom Mitchinson stated in part as follows:
|
The Metropolitan Toronto Police
Services Board (the Police) received a request under the Municipal Freedom of
Information and Protection of Privacy Act (the Act) for access to dockets
listing police officers charged under the Police Services Act (the PSA) from
1986 to 1996. These dockets, posted daily outside the Trials Office in Police
Headquarters, contain the name, rank, badge number and alleged offences of
officers scheduled to appear that day before the Police Discipline Tribunal.The
request was made by two journalists. |
|
|
The Police denied access to the responsive
records, claiming that they fell under section 52(3), and were therefore
excluded from the jurisdiction of the Act. This decision was appealed and
disposed of in Order M-936, where former Inquiry Officer Anita Fineberg found
that section 52(3) did not apply and ordered the Police to issue an access
decision to the appellants. |
|
|
Before issuing a decision, the Police notified
53 police officers (the affected persons) whose interests might be affected by
disclosure of the records, pursuant to section 21 of the Act.One affected
person consented to disclosure of information relating to him, and 52 objected
to disclosure.After considering all submissions received from the affected
persons, the Police granted access to the information relating to the
consenting affected person, and denied access to the remaining responsive
records, claiming the following exemption: |
|
| * |
|
invasion of privacy - section
14(1) |
|
|
The Police also advised the
appellants that dockets have only been prepared since late 1993 or early 1994,
therefore no responsive records exist from 1986 to that point; and that any
responsive records prior to January 1, 1997 have been destroyed.The Police
agreed to extend the time period covered by the request to the date of their
decision, and identified 42 Police Discipline Tribunal dockets covering the
period January 8, 1997 to May 2, 1997.The affected persons notified by the
Police are those officers listed on these 1997 records. |
|
|
The appellants appealed the decision to deny
access, and claimed that there was an overriding public interest in the
disclosure of the records.The appellants later objected to the Police
destroying responsive records, and claimed that more responsive records should
exist.I have added these issues to the scope of this inquiry. |
|
|
... |
|
|
... section [14(1)(f)] reads as follows: |
|
|
A head shall refuse to disclose
personal information to any person other than the individual to whom the
information relates except, |
|
|
If the disclosure does not
constitute an unjustified invasion of personal privacy. |
|
|
Sections 14(2) and (3) of the Act
provide guidance in determining whether disclosure would result in an
unjustified invasion of personal privacy.Section 14(2) provides some criteria
for the head to consider in making this determination. |
|
|
... |
|
|
The Police rely on sections 14(2)(e), (f) and
(i) as factors favouring non-disclosure. |
|
|
The appellants raise section 14(2)(a) in
support of their position that the records should be released.They also point
out that the records were posted publicly and relate to information about
hearings that are open to the public.This is not a factor which appears in
section 14(2), but may be a relevant consideration favouring disclosure. |
|
|
These sections read as follows: |
|
|
A head, in determining whether a
disclosure of personal information constitutes an unjustified invasion of
personal privacy, shall consider all the relevant circumstances, including
whether, |
|
| (a) |
|
the disclosure is desirable for the
purpose of subjecting the activities of the institution to public
scrutiny; |
|
| (e) |
|
the individual to whom the information relates
will be exposed unfairly to pecuniary or other harm; |
|
| (f) |
|
the personal information is highly
sensitive; |
|
| (i) |
|
the disclosure may unfairly damage the
reputation of any person referred to in the records. |
|
|
14(2)(e) |
|
|
The Police and the affected persons submit that
disclosure of the records would perpetuate the publicity of the disciplinary
matters, and that they are entitled to closure.They add that, because the
appellants are journalists, there is no certainty about how or when the
information would be used, and that the ongoing and potentially never-ending
wait would be stressful and unfair.Finally, they argue that disclosure of their
identities would interfere with their ability to transfer to a specialized unit
or undercover work. |
|
|
The appellants argue that there is no evidence
that the police officers identified on the dockets will be exposed to pecuniary
or other harm, let alone unfairly exposed. They point out that any harm which
may result to these officers "would be due to decisions of the Tribunal, and
not by disclosure to a member of the public". |
|
|
... |
|
|
... In my view, once the affected parties have
been through the appropriate proceedings in responding to a complaint under the
PSA, they are entitled to consider the matter as closed.For the same reasons
stated in Order P-1167, I find that section 14(2)(e) is a relevant
consideration in the circumstances of this appeal, and is a factor favouring
privacy protection. |
|
|
14(2)(f) |
|
|
The Police and the affected persons submit that
information relating to allegations of professional misconduct is highly
sensitive.They support this position by pointing to the high stress levels
experienced by many affected persons stemming from past prosecutions.The Police
also refer to previous orders of this office where information relating to
criminal history and allegations of improper professional conduct were found to
be "highly sensitive". |
|
|
... |
|
|
In order to qualify as "highly sensitive", the
Police must establish that release of the information would cause excessive
personal distress to the affected persons (Order P-434).It is clear that the
records contain information relating to allegations of improper professional
conduct against the affected parties.While I accept the appellant's position
that the records were displayed publicly at a specific point in time, this does
not mean that the information contained in the records is not highly
sensitive.I accept that disclosure of allegations of professional misconduct
would cause excessive personal stress to the officers involved, and that this
information is properly characterized as highly sensitive (Orders P-658,
P-1055, P-1117, P-1278 and P-1427). |
|
|
Therefore, I find that section 14(2)(f) is a
relevant consideration in the circumstances of this appeal, and is another
factor favouring privacy protection. |
|
|
14(2)(i) |
|
|
The Police and affected persons submit that
disclosure of the records would impact on the professional and personal
reputations of the affected persons, in particular those who were eventually
found not guilty of misconduct.They further argue that the records do not
contain sufficient details and could be misleading as to the circumstances
surrounding each matter, potentially resulting in unfair damage to the
reputation of the affected persons. |
|
|
... |
|
|
In my view, given the limited information
contained in the records, it is reasonable to expect that the disclosure of
information which identifies these individuals by name may unfairly damage
their reputations, particularly those who were ultimately acquitted.Therefore,
I find that section 14(2)(i) is a relevant consideration in the circumstances
of this appeal. |
|
|
14(2)(a)/previously publicly available |
|
|
The Police submit that section 14(2)(a) is not
relevant. In their view, there is an adequate level of public scrutiny of the
activities of the Police through a number of avenues, including the media's
attendance at Police Discipline Tribunal hearings.The public is aware through
the media that the Police have a disciplinary hearings process and, in the
opinion of the Police, the release of the docket sheets "do[es] not subject the
activities of the institution to scrutiny, but only the activities of the
individual police officers".The Police also point out that there is nothing to
indicate that the public has demanded scrutiny in the form of the docket
sheets, and although the appellants are journalists, it does not automatically
follow that the request is made on behalf of the public.The Police submit that
the fact that the appellants have requested access to the records in bulk is an
indication that there is no public demand for scrutiny of these records, "but
that the public will have access to this information only when the requester
chooses to release it". |
|
|
... |
|
|
In my view, section 14(2))(a) is not a relevant
consideration in the circumstances of this appeal.In Order P-347, I made the
following statements regarding the application of this section, which are
equally applicable in this appeal: |
|
|
In my view, in order for [section
14(2)(a)] to be a relevant consideration, there must be a public demand for
scrutiny of the Government or its agencies, not one person's subjective opinion
that scrutiny is necessary.No such public demand has been established in this
case and, accordingly, I find that [section 14(2)(a)] is not a relevant
consideration in the circumstances of this appeal. |
|
|
In my view, the public hearings
process under the PSA is established for the very purpose of subjecting police
services to public scrutiny.The appellants have provided insufficient evidence
to establish that additional public scrutiny is desirable in the
circumstances.I am also not satisfied that disclosure of this information would
contribute in any meaningful way to the public's understanding of the
activities of government. |
|
|
... |
|
|
Balancing the considerations of the one factor
favouring the disclosure of the records against the three factors favouring the
protection of the privacy of the affected persons, I find the factors weighing
in favour of privacy protection are more compelling.Accordingly, I find that
the disclosure of the records would result in an unjustified invasion of the
personal privacy of the affected persons, and that the records are exempt under
section 14(1) of the Act. |
|
|
COMPELLING PUBLIC INTEREST |
|
|
Section 16 of the Act reads as follows: |
|
|
An exemption from disclosure of a
record under sections 7, 9, 10, 11, 13 and 14 does not apply if a compelling
public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs the purpose
of the exemption.(emphasis added). |
|
|
In order for section 16 to apply,
two requirements must be met.First, there must exist a compelling public
interest in the disclosure of the records.Second, this interest must clearly
outweigh the purpose of the personal information exemption. |
|
|
... |
|
|
... the records were, at the time the charges
were heard, made available to the public, through the posting of the dockets
outside the hearing room.In addition, the Police and the appellants both point
out that the media is able to attend these hearings and does so quite
frequently.Therefore, having considered the representations of the appellants,
including statements submitted by both appellants and materials referred to me
by the appellants from previous appeals, I find that they have not established
that the additional disclosure of the records is necessary in order to address
public interest concerns.In my view, the public interest in disclosure of these
records is adequately and properly served by the practice of posting the docket
sheets outside the hearing room on the date of the hearings and the ability of
the media to attend and report on these hearings. |
|
|
... |
|
|
ORDER: |
|
|
I uphold the decision of the Police to deny
access to the records. |
|
[38] The applicants submit that Assistant Commissioner
Mitchinson's interpretation and application of the privacy interests in s.
14(2) of the Act and of the public interest considerations in s. 16 of the Act
is patently unreasonable. In my view they are reasonable and so cannot be
interfered with on this application for judicial review.
[39] Since the Assistant Commissioner has ruled that the
requested docket sheets need not be produced, there is no point in pursuing the
argument of the applicants that the Police did not make a reasonable search for
the records and that the Police should have been ordered to reconstruct the
docket sheets destroyed after the request for disclosure was received.
[40] I agree with the Assistant Commissioner that the applicants
were provided with sufficient information as to why the Police refused
disclosure to enable them to address the issues on the appeal.There was then no
denial of natural justice.
[41] The applicants raise two further arguments:
| (a) |
|
In Order M-936, Inquiry Officer
Fineberg erred by failing to order the Police to release the responsive
records, after finding that the Police had failed to meet the test and onus set
out in ss. 52(3) and (4) of the Act, the sole ground upon which the Police
relied for refusing the request. |
|
| (b) |
|
Inquiry Officer Miller lost jurisdiction when
she fettered her discretion and granted the police an additional period of time
to raise exemptions. |
|
[42] In dealing with argument (b) Inquiry Officer Miller said in
her letter to counsel for the applicants on August 28, 1997:
|
In accordance with administrative
law principles, and similar to other tribunals, the IPC has instituted
procedures to control its processes.The IPC has adopted a policy which allows
an institution 35 days from the date an appeal is confirmed to raise any new
discretionary exemptions the institution did not claim in its original decision
letter.The objective of this policy is to maintain the integrity of the appeals
process by ensuring identification of discretionary exemptions early in the
process.That policy is reflected in the Confirmation of Appeal notice sent to
the institution and the appellant by the IPC when an appeal from the
institution's decision has been received. That notice specifies a date by which
any new discretionary exemptions must be claimed. |
|
|
The IPC's adoption and application of its "35
day" policy was upheld by the Ontario Court (General Division) Divisional Court
in Ontario (Ministry of Consumer and Commercial Relations) v. Fineberg (21
December 1995), Toronto Doc. 110/95, leave to appeal refused [1996] O.J. No.
1838 (C.A.). |
|
|
Notwithstanding this policy, the IPC will
consider the circumstances of each case and may exercise its discretion to
depart from the policy in appropriate cases. |
|
|
... |
|
|
Your reason for making this request appears to
be based on the fact that your request was made to the Police some months ago.I
have reviewed your letters, the file in this matter, as well as the
circumstances surrounding the issuance of Order M-936.I find nothing in my
review of the history of this matter that would lead me to conclude that this
is an appropriate case to deviate from the IPC's 35 day policy. |
|
[43] In my view those words are a complete answer to not only
argument (b), but argument (a) as well.Both arguments are an attack on the
procedural processes of the Commission.Those procedures did not prevent the
applicants from pursuing by appeal to the Commission their request for
disclosure, nor from making full argument on the appeal. There was nothing so
urgent about the request for information that required the ordinary procedures
and time limits to be altered.The process followed by the Commissioner was not
unfair to the applicants.
| (4) |
|
The request for disclosure of
records kept by the Ministry of the Attorney General (the Ministry) of all
Criminal Code indictments and informations laid against all police officers
employed by the Police, as far back as the records have been kept, including
the names of the officers, their ranks, the allegations and the disposition of
the cases. |
|
[44] Order P-1415 issued by Inquiry Officer Donald Hale June 25,
1997 reads in part:
|
The Ministry of the Attorney
General (the Ministry) received a request under the Freedom of Information and
Protection of Privacy Act (the Act).The requesters, reporters for a Toronto
newspaper, sought access to information held by the Ministry's Special
Investigations Branch, Crown Law Office - Criminal Division with respect to
criminal charges laid against police officers employed by the Metropolitan
Toronto Police Services Board (the Police).The Ministry located 64 documents,
known as "Informations" or "Indictments", in its Crown Law Office - Criminal
Division which relate to criminal proceedings taken against Metropolitan
Toronto police officers between 1990 and the date of the request.It also
created a 38-page summary of the details, including the name of the offender
and victim, the charges, the circumstances surrounding the offence and the
disposition of the charges, all of which was contained in the documents. |
|
|
Access to some of the information in each of
these documents was granted to the requesters.However, access to the name of
the police officer charged, the name of the victim, as well as any information
which may identify either individual was withheld.The Ministry claimed the
application of section 21(1) of the Act (invasion of privacy) to exempt this
information from disclosure.The requesters, now the appellants, appealed the
Ministry's decision, arguing that there exists a public interest in the
disclosure of information relating to police wrong-doing. |
|
|
During the mediation of the appeal, the
appellants indicated that they no longer seek access to the 38-page summary
prepared by the Ministry, but continue to seek access to the undisclosed
portions of the documents. |
|
|
... |
|
|
... The decision letter provided by the
Ministry does not explicitly state the reasons why access to the information
was denied.It does, however, make reference to the sections of the Act which
address the types of information that are considered to be "personal
information" for the purposes of the Act.I also note that the appellants do not
appear to have suffered any prejudice in their ability to evaluate whether to
appeal the decision to deny access or to make adequate representations.As such,
I find once again that no useful purpose would be served by ordering the
Ministry to provide the appellants with another decision letter in this
appeal.I urge the Ministry to more carefully comply with its obligations to
requesters under section 29(1)(b) in the future. |
|
|
... |
|
|
The provisions of section 21(2) which are
referred to above state: |
|
|
A head, in determining whether a
disclosure of personal information constitutes an unjustified invasion of
personal privacy, shall consider all the relevant circumstances including
whether, |
|
| (a) |
|
the disclosure is desirable for the
purpose of subjecting the activities of the Government of Ontario and its
agencies to public scrutiny; |
|
| (f) |
|
the personal information is highly
sensitive; |
|
| (i) |
|
the disclosure may unfairly damage the
reputation of any person referred to in the record. |
|
|
I have reviewed the submissions
received from the parties and the records at issue in this appeal and have come
to the following conclusions: |
|
| 1. |
|
The consideration in section
21(2)(a) is not applicable in the circumstances of this appeal.In my view, the
disclosure of the information which remains at issue would not further the
purpose of subjecting the activities of the Ministry or of its agencies to
public scrutiny.The portions of the records which have already been disclosed
demonstrate the extent of the Ministry's efforts to protect the public from
criminal conduct by police officers.In my view, the disclosure of the personal
information of those police officers and victims is not desirable for the
purpose of subjecting the activities of the Ministry to public scrutiny as
contemplated by this section. |
|
| 2. |
|
For similar reasons, I find that it cannot be
said that the disclosure of the remaining information contained in the records
could be desirable for ensuring public confidence in the integrity of the
Ministry or its agencies.In my view, the disclosure of the remaining portions
of the records containing only the personal information of the police officers
and victims would not serve to ensure public confidence in the Ministry and its
activities and agencies. |
|
| 3. |
|
I find that the information contained in the
records was, at the time the charges were laid, made available to the media,
and thereby the public, through either the Police Public Complaints Bureau or
its Internal Affairs office.In addition, each of the documents sought by the
appellants is also publicly available in a Metropolitan Toronto-area court
facility, though not compiled in the same way as the Police have done.I find
that this is a significant factor weighing in favour of the disclosure of the
requested information. |
|
| 4. |
|
The information withheld from the records is
highly sensitive within the meaning of section 21(2)(f). The records include
information about criminal convictions of some of the individuals named
therein.Previous orders of the Commissioner's office have held that information
relating to an individual's criminal record may properly be described as
"highly sensitive" within the meaning of section 21(2)(f) (Orders M-68 and
M-222). |
|
| 5. |
|
Similarly, many of the records contain
information about police officers who were charged, but ultimately acquitted,
of criminal offences.In my view, it is reasonable to expect that the disclosure
of information which identifies these individuals by name may unfairly damage
their reputations.As such, I find that the consideration listed in section
21(2)(i) applies to the personal information in the records at issue. |
|
| 6. |
|
Balancing the considerations favouring the
disclosure of the withheld information against the factors favouring the
protection of the privacy of the police officers, victims and other
individuals, I find the factors weighing in favour of privacy protection to be
more compelling.Accordingly, I find that the disclosure of the remaining
personal information contained in the records would result in an unjustified
invasion of the personal privacy of the police officers, victims and other
individuals named in them.The information is, therefore, exempt under section
21(1) and should not be disclosed to the appellants. |
|
ORDER:
I uphold the Ministry's decision.
[45] The applicants attack decision P-1415 on four grounds:
| 1. |
|
The failure of the Ministry to
provide adequate reasons for non-disclosure was a breach of natural justice not
adequately considered by the Inquiry Officer. |
|
[46] The inquiry Officer did recognize that the Ministry had not
provided reasons for refusing disclosure but noting that the appellants do not
appear to have suffered any prejudice in their ability to decide whether to
appeal the decision to deny access or to make adequate representations on the
appeal, concluded that no useful purpose would be served by ordering the
Ministry to provide the appellants with another decision letter.
[47] Indeed in his letter to the Commissioner of May 27, 1997
counsel for Duncanson and Rankin stated:"Our clients ... do not wish to delay
the process further by waiting for proper reasons from the Ministry.To do so
would cause further delay to what should be an expeditious process, and would
reward institutions which flaunt requirements of the Act."
[48] It appears then that the applicants did not suffer a denial
of natural justice or if there was some minor breach of natural justice, they
asked that the appeal go ahead without the reasons.The applicants cannot now
say the Inquiry Officer should have penalized the Ministry and the persons
whose personal information was at stake, by ordering disclosure because reasons
had not been given by the Ministry. If the reasons were important to them the
applicants should have asked that the Inquiry Officer request them.
[49] In my opinion there is no substance in this ground of
complaint.
| 2. |
|
Inquiry Officer Hale's
interpretation and application of the definition of"personal information" in s.
2(1) is patently unreasonable. |
|
[50] Section. 2(1) reads in part:"personal information" means
recorded information about an identifiable individual including ... (b)
information relating to the ... criminal ... history of the individual."
[51] In light of that definition of the meaning of "personal
information" it was reasonable for the Inquiry officer to hold that the
indictments and informations here in question disclose personal information
about the officers or, putting it another way, that releasing the names of the
officers along with the charges, would be releasing personal information.
[52] Indeed counsel for the applicants seems to have conceded as
much in his letter of May 27, 1997 to the Commission when he said:"We agree
that, given the extraordinarily broad definition of "personal information" in
the Act, technically the records requested in the case are personal
information..."This argument is then without substance.
| 3. |
|
Inquiry Officer Hales'
interpretation and application of the privacy interests in s. 21(2) of the Act
is patently unreasonable |
|
[53] Section 21(2) of the Act reads in part:
| 21.(2) |
|
A head, in determining whether a
disclosure of personal information constitutes an unjustified invasion of
personal privacy, shall consider all the relevant circumstances, including
whether, |
|
| (a) |
|
the disclosure is desirable for the purpose of
subjecting the activities of the Government of Ontario and its agencies to
public scrutiny; |
|
...
| (f) |
|
the personal information is highly
sensitive; |
|
| (i) |
|
the disclosure may unfairly damage
the reputation of any person referred to in the record. |
|
[54] In my view it was not unreasonable for the Inquiry Officer
to make any of the following findings:
| (i) |
|
that the names of the police
officers who had been charged would not further the purpose of subjecting the
activities of the Ministry or of its agencies to public scrutiny, within the
meaning of s. 21(2)(a) because the portions of the information which have
already been disclosed demonstrate the extent of the Ministry's efforts to
protect the public from criminal conduct by police officers; |
|
| (ii) |
|
that the names of individuals who
have been charged is highly sensitive within the meaning of s. 21(2) |
|
| (iii) |
|
that since many of the indictments and
informations contain information about officers charged but ultimately
acquitted, and since the Ministry's copy of the indictment and information
usually is not completed at the end of the case and so may not show the
acquittal, disclosure of information which identifies the officers may unfairly
damage their reputations. |
|
| 4. |
|
Inquiry Officer Hale's failure to
consider the compelling public interest in disclosure of the records pursuant
to s. 23 of the Act is potentially unreasonable. |
|
[55] Section 23 of the Act reads:
| 23. |
|
An exemption from disclosure of a
record under sections 13, 15, 17, 18, 20 and 21 does not apply where a
compelling public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs
the purpose of the exemption. |
|
[56] The compelling public interest the applicants say entitles
them to this record, is their intention to use the records to put the Police
under public scrutiny.Because the Inquiry Officer did not refer to s. 23, the
applicants say he did not consider it.
[57] But the inquiry Officer did consider s. 21(2)(a) which
directed him to consider whether "the disclosure is desirable for the purpose
of subjecting ... the government ... and its agencies to public scrutiny".He
concluded the disclosure was not desirable for that purpose.A fortiori the
disclosure does not outweigh an unjustified invasion of personal privacy.The
Inquiry Officer determined the s. 23 issue without referring to it.
[58} For these reasons I would dismiss the application for
judicial review without costs.
O'LEARY J. COO J. - I agree. FERRIER J. - I
agree. |