The Supreme Court of Canada released its decision of R v Hart in July of 2014. The decision provided a two-prong framework for assessing the admissibility of confessions obtained through the undercover police tactic known as “Mr. Big”. The goal of the framework was to address reliability concerns, to protect suspects from state abuse, and to reduce the risk of wrongful convictions. The first prong of the test created a new common law evidentiary rule, under which Mr. Big obtained confessions are now presumptively inadmissible. The second prong revamped the existing abuse of process doctrine. In this article, the authors review the last five years of judicial application of the new Hart framework. In total, all 61 cases that applied Hart wer...
Purpose – A recent Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) ruling resulted in stricter rules being placed on h...
Canadian courts have become far more willing in recent years to rely on the common law as a source o...
At common law, the privilege against self-incrimination protects the accused solely against compelle...
The Supreme Court of Canada released its decision of R v Hart in July of 2014. The decision provided...
In Queen v Hart, the Supreme Court of Canada recognised what was described as a ‘new rule of evidenc...
Taken together, the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent judgments in R. v. Hart and R. v. Mack represen...
In a 2014 decision, R v Hart, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) held that confessions obtained from ...
In Queen v Hart, the Supreme Court of Canada recognised what was described as a 'new rule of evidenc...
In 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada in R v Hart reviewed the application and evidentiary consequenc...
Canada’s legal system recognizes that police interrogation procedures may contrib-ute to false confe...
In an era of Charter protections, the common law rule excluding involuntary confessions remains a su...
This article argues that the objections to the Mr. Big investigation technique have been apparent si...
At common law, the privilege against self-incrimination protects the accused solely against compelle...
This thesis examines a controversial, yet increasingly common, undercover operational method known a...
This thesis is a discussion about the inadequacy of the Canadian confessions rule in light of what m...
Purpose – A recent Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) ruling resulted in stricter rules being placed on h...
Canadian courts have become far more willing in recent years to rely on the common law as a source o...
At common law, the privilege against self-incrimination protects the accused solely against compelle...
The Supreme Court of Canada released its decision of R v Hart in July of 2014. The decision provided...
In Queen v Hart, the Supreme Court of Canada recognised what was described as a ‘new rule of evidenc...
Taken together, the Supreme Court of Canada’s recent judgments in R. v. Hart and R. v. Mack represen...
In a 2014 decision, R v Hart, the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) held that confessions obtained from ...
In Queen v Hart, the Supreme Court of Canada recognised what was described as a 'new rule of evidenc...
In 2014, the Supreme Court of Canada in R v Hart reviewed the application and evidentiary consequenc...
Canada’s legal system recognizes that police interrogation procedures may contrib-ute to false confe...
In an era of Charter protections, the common law rule excluding involuntary confessions remains a su...
This article argues that the objections to the Mr. Big investigation technique have been apparent si...
At common law, the privilege against self-incrimination protects the accused solely against compelle...
This thesis examines a controversial, yet increasingly common, undercover operational method known a...
This thesis is a discussion about the inadequacy of the Canadian confessions rule in light of what m...
Purpose – A recent Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) ruling resulted in stricter rules being placed on h...
Canadian courts have become far more willing in recent years to rely on the common law as a source o...
At common law, the privilege against self-incrimination protects the accused solely against compelle...