Wednesday, December 8, 2010

“Caught in the Act” Ombudsman Report Investigation into The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services’ conduct in relation to Ontario Regulation 233/10 under the Public Works Protection Act.

“Caught in the Act”
André Marin
Ombudsman of Ontario
December 2010Table of Contents
Executive Summary...........................................................................................................................5
Securing the Summit.....................................................................................................................14
G20 Land ............................................................................................................................................16
Over the Summit and Beyond................................................................................................28
Complaints..............................................................................................................................................32
Investigative Process.....................................................................................................................39
Strategic Use of Social Media.............................................................................................39
Extraordinary Times Call for Extraordinary Measures ........................................42
The War Ends, but Martial Law Lingers .....................................................................44
Preparing to Scale the Summit.........................................................................................45
Good Fences Make Good Neighbours ..........................................................................48
Securing the Perimeter ................................................................................................................52
A Public Work By Any Other Name is Still a Public Work............................59
The Sound of Silence................................................................................................................61
Keeping Things Under Wraps.............................................................................................63
Going South at the Summit.................................................................................................67
Tell Me No Secrets, I’ll Tell You No Lies ....................................................................73
Questionable Power ........................................................................................................................81
Don’t Fence Me In .......................................................................................................................82
Putting Square Fence Posts in Round Holes ..........................................................87
Setting Reasonable Boundaries........................................................................................89
Best Kept Secret...........................................................................................................................95
I Fought the Law and the Law Won...................................................................................98
Conclusion ........................................................................................................................................... 100
Recommendations......................................................................................................................... 102
Response .............................................................................................................................................. 102
Appendix A: YouTube Videos ............................................................................................... 105
Appendix B: Public Works Protection Act ................................................................... 111
Appendix C: Regulation 233/10......................................................................................... 117
Appendix D: Map of Public Works in G20 Security Zone............................... 121
Appendix E: Response from Ministry of Community Safety and 
Correctional Services.................................................................................................................. 1255
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Executive Summary
1 Regulation 233/10, passed to enhance security during the G20 summit, should 
never have been enacted.  It was likely unconstitutional.  The effect of Regulation 
233/10, now expired, was to infringe on freedom of expression in ways that do not 
seem justifiable in a free and democratic society.  Specifically, the passage of the 
regulation triggered the extravagant police authority found in the Public Works 
Protection Act, including the power to arbitrarily arrest and detain people and to 
engage in unreasonable searches and seizures. Even apart from the Charter of 
Rights and Freedoms, the legality of Regulation 233/10 is doubtful.  The Public 
Works Protection Act under which it was proclaimed authorizes regulations to be 
created to protect infrastructure, not to provide security to people during events.  
Regulation 233/10 was therefore probably invalid for having exceeded the 
authority of the enactment under which it was passed.  These problems should have 
been apparent, and given the tremendous power Regulation 233/10 conferred on 
the police, sober and considered reflection should have been given to whether it 
was appropriate to arm officers with such authority.  This was not done.  The 
decision of the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services to sponsor 
the regulation was unreasonable.
2 Even had Regulation 233/10 been valid, the government should have handled its 
passage better.  Regulation 233/10 changed the rules of the game.  It gave police 
powers that are unfamiliar in a free and democratic society.  Steps should have 
been taken to ensure that the Toronto Police Service understood what they were 
getting.  More importantly, the passage of the regulation should have been 
aggressively publicized, not disclosed only through obscure official information 
channels.  Perversely, by changing the rules of the game without real notice,
Regulation 233/10 acted as a trap for the responsible – those who took the time to 
educate themselves about police powers before setting out to express legitimate 
political dissent.
3 All of this makes for a sorry legacy.  The value in hosting international summits is 
that it permits the host nation to primp and pose before the eyes of the world.  
Ordinarily Ontario and Canada could proudly showcase the majesty of a free and 
democratic society.  The legacy of the passage and administration of Regulation 
233/10 is that we failed to do that well.
***6
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4 Dave Vasey, a York University master’s student, had never heard of the Public 
Works Protection Act before 4 p.m. on Thursday, June 24, 2010.  In fact, it may 
have been the best-kept secret in Ontario’s legislative history, although it wasn’t a 
secret at all.  The Public Works Protection Act had sat largely dormant on Ontario’s 
statute books for more than 70 years, a hoary relic of World War II and veritable 
civil rights land mine waiting to be tripped.  And Mr. Vasey certainly didn’t know 
about Regulation 233/10 passed under that Act, to provide additional legal support 
for the security perimeter constructed for the G20 summit.  Like the Public Works 
Protection Act, Regulation 233/10 was hidden in plain sight.  It was announced not 
in newspapers, public service messages, or on ministry or police websites, but in 
the government’s seldom-read and little-known electronic legislative database and 
then in the Ontario Gazette, a publication of interest only to civil servants, pundits 
and the occasional lawyer.  Soon, however, Mr. Vasey would gain up close and 
personal knowledge of the Public Works Protection Act and Regulation 233/10.
5 Mr. Vasey and a friend, like many Torontonians, were simply curious about the 
massive steel grey security fence that wound its way through downtown streets.  
When they wandered near the fence to take a look that day, after taking part in a 
peaceful march, they were stopped by police and questioned.  Standing on what he 
understood to be his rights, Mr. Vasey declined to provide identification.  Soon 
after, he found himself under arrest by authority of the Public Works Protection 
Act.  At least one other person was detained and charged under the Act in 
connection with G20 summit security, and numerous others were questioned and 
searched using the sweeping powers conferred by the Act, and activated by 
Regulation 233/10. 7
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Figure 1: June 26, 2010 - Police officers behind the fence near Bay and Front streets, Toronto. 
(Photo by George Tulcsik) Note: All photos in this report were taken in 2010 in Toronto.
6 While many of those stopped and questioned by police under the Public Works 
Protection Act in the week leading up to and during the G20 summit were involved 
in demonstrations, many others were simply Torontonians going about the 
activities of their daily lives.  Rob Kittredge practiced law just outside the secure 
perimeter zone.  When he went to take photographs of the zone one evening before 
the summit meeting, police searched him, examined his photographs, and purported 
to “ban” him under the Act.  Nancy Ryan
1
 was on her way home from grocery 
shopping, outside of the security fence, when police approached her and required 
that she submit her bags to a search. 
7 It wasn’t that the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services didn’t 
mean well in promoting the use of the Act through Regulation 233/10 to assist 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
1
 While some individuals provided consent for our Office to use their names in this report, many wished to 
remain anonymous.  This person’s name has been changed for reasons of confidentiality. 8
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Toronto police in maintaining security during the summit.  Typically, international 
summits attract protests, and protests can turn violent and even deadly.  The 
world’s leaders have also been subject to terrorist threats.  But the security needs 
associated with protecting foreign dignitaries and the public from harm must be 
weighed against constitutionally entrenched rights.  Protest is a democratic right.  
Ontario’s citizens were entitled to the freedom to express themselves as well as 
from unreasonable search and arbitrary arrest during the G20 summit. 
Unfortunately, when it came to Regulation 233/10, the Ministry got the balance 
wrong.  
8 Regulation 233/10’s enactment triggered the Public Works Protection Act, a statute 
containing unusual, even extravagant police powers that could be – and in fact were 
– used to intimidate and arrest people who had done no harm.  By designating gaps 
in the security perimeter as “public works” and reconfirming the authority to use 
the full powers of the Act within the exterior security zone, remarkable legal 
obligations were imposed on citizens seeking entry.  A new landscape was created 
in which people were compelled to identify themselves and explain why they 
wanted to enter, sometimes even in writing, and they were required to submit to 
warrantless searches.  And even if they were refused entry, changed their mind and 
wished to walk away, they were still required to identify themselves, answer 
questions and submit to a search.  Those who declined could be arrested.  Those 
who declined could even be prosecuted and jailed. 
Figure 2: June 27 – Police search man near University Ave. and College St. 
(Photo by David King)9
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9 The only way to understand why the Legislature of Ontario would create a statute 
conferring police powers of this kind is to hearken to history.  The Public Works 
Protection Act is a war measure.  It was enacted in 1939 during an emergency 
session of the Legislature in the days following the declaration of war against 
Germany to deal with the threat posed by saboteurs against Ontario’s infrastructure.  
Guards and peace officers were given the kind of authority one might expect in a 
time of war or emergency circumstance – the kind of authority that stretches, if not 
transgresses, constitutional rights.  Yet here, in 2010, was the province of Ontario 
conferring wartime powers on police officers in peacetime.  That is a decision that 
should not have been taken lightly, particularly not in the era of the Canadian 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
10 In fact, Regulation 233/10 was of doubtful constitutional validity.  By creating 
security zones to bar entry and by authorizing arrest, it imposed definite limits on 
freedom of expression.  It was therefore in prima facie violation of the Charter as a 
matter of law, likely in ways that are not constitutionally justifiable. Regulation 
233/10 worked to trip the powers of the Public Works Protection Act, thereby 
enabling the arrest and muting of protesters and others who had done nothing 
wrong.  The impact of Regulation 233/10 on freedom of expression was therefore 
almost certainly disproportionate.  The government should have been wary of 
relying on a statute of doubtful constitutional validity in preference to dealing 
openly with the matter in the Legislature.
11 Even leaving the Charter aside, there is every reason to believe that the regulation 
was illegal.  It was also almost certainly beyond the authority of the government to 
enact.  The Public Works Protection Act, by its name and by its terms, was enacted 
to protect public property.  Nowhere does the Public Works Protection Act
authorize the government to enact a regulation to protect people rather than places.  
Nowhere does it grant authority to the government to confer additional police 
powers in order to protect internationally protected persons.  There may be room 
for a law that does so, and this Act may have been used with the best of intentions, 
but it was used instrumentally and unnecessarily.  The security perimeter it 
provided for would have been legal without it, and the existing common law and 
statutory authority of peace officers would have been ample to screen and prevent 
entry to those who might pose a threat to G20 participants.  Simply put, Regulation 
233/10 was of dubious legality and of no utility.  It was unreasonable for the 
Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services to have promoted its 
passage. 10
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December 2010
12 The problems with the Ministry’s handling of Regulation 233/10 are not confined 
to its passage.  Both the follow-up to and the publication of the regulation were 
inadequate.
13 When the regulation was passed, the Ministry of Community Safety and 
Correctional Services had simply intended to restrict the Act’s application to the 
area within the exterior security fence around the restricted zones housing foreign 
dignitaries.  However, once the sleeping giant had been awakened, it could not be 
controlled.  The Ministry was caught short when the Toronto Police Service 
misapprehended the boundaries of the security area designated under Regulation 
233/10, and used the authority of the Public Works Protection Act to arrest people
who were simply in the vicinity of the security fence.  Moreover, throughout the 
weekend of the G20 summit, police exercised their powers under the Act well 
beyond the limits of the security perimeter, even after the misinterpretation on the 
part of the Chief of the Toronto Police Service had been corrected. 
Figure 3: June 27 – Police search man near University Ave. and College St. 
(Photo by David King)
14 To be sure, the government of Ontario is not responsible for misunderstandings on 
the part of police officials.  Yet even the power that was properly conferred by 
Regulation 233/10 was inordinate, and went well beyond the normal understanding 
of Ontario’s citizens as to their obligations when dealing with police.  The 11
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Ministry, who had sponsored the regulation, should have satisfied itself that
Toronto Police Service officers understood it and had been properly trained.  This 
was not done.  The Ministry simply handed over to the Toronto Police Service 
inordinate powers, without any efforts made to ensure those powers would not be 
misunderstood.
15 More importantly, it was grossly unreasonable and unfair for the Ministry of 
Community Safety and Correctional Services to let Regulation 233/10 fly under the 
radar the way it did.  No one knew about the regulation until after the news of Mr. 
Vasey’s arrest under the Act went viral.  Not the public, not the press, not the 
administrators of the very city in which it was to be implemented.  As our 
investigation revealed, quite remarkably, not even the Integrated Security Unit 
Steering Committee lead or key members of the Integrated Security Unit’s G20 
Public Affairs Communications Team knew of the regulation.  While municipal 
authorities in Toronto did a fine job of ensuring that the public was aware of the 
traffic plan for the G20, nowhere was it announced that police officers would have 
extraordinary powers of compulsion and arrest.  Municipal officials didn’t inform 
citizens for the same reason that Mr. Vasey didn’t comply with police requests on 
June 24, 2010: They simply didn’t know about it.  And the Ministry of Community 
Safety and Correctional Services did nothing to ensure that people would be aware 
of these powers so that they could govern themselves accordingly.  Apart from 
insiders in the government of Ontario, only members of the Toronto Police Service 
knew that the rules of the game had changed, and they were the ones holding the 
deck of “go directly to jail” cards.
16 By any measure, a regulation conferring temporary police powers and imposing 
unusual obligations on citizens was unexpected.  What was not unexpected was 
that, in the incendiary protest atmosphere of an international political event, 
individuals would question and even test the limits of police authority.  Prudence 
alone would have required that the regulation be aggressively publicized in order to 
reduce the risk of unnecessary confrontation.  Yet it was not. 12
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December 2010
Figure 4: June 26 - Demonstrators lie in front of police officers at King and Bay streets.
(Photo by Charles Bodi, ridemypony.com)
17 By changing the legal landscape without fanfare in this way, Regulation 233/10 
operated as a trap for those who relied on their ordinary legal rights.  Reasonably, 
protesters were trained by advocacy groups in “know your rights” sessions and 
advised through websites and brochures that they would not have to identify 
themselves or submit to search unless they were otherwise arrested.  In fact, the
inconspicuous Regulation 233/10 made it an offence for protesters to fail to 
identify themselves when approaching the secured area.  Ensuring that protesters 
know their rights and the limit on those rights is something to be encouraged. 
Those who attempted to do so set themselves up.  They and those they counseled 
were caught up in the Act’s all but invisible web. 
18 Given questions about its constitutional validity and legality, Regulation 233/10 
deserved to be tested in the courts – not after it expired and had served its purpose, 
but before it was implemented.  It is an infamous problem in protest situations that 
police tactics that control protesters cannot be challenged until those tactics have 
served their purpose – after it is too late.  In the interests of ensuring a proper 13
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December 2010
balance between civil rights and security, the Ministry of Community Safety and 
Correctional Services should have ensured that anyone intent on challenging 
security plans would have the opportunity to do so.  The Ministry promoted the 
regulation.  It should have stood up and ensured that those affected by it would be 
aware of it.
19 It is therefore my view that the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional 
Services promoted a regulation that was of questionable legality and that conferred 
unnecessary police powers of questionable constitutionality. It was unreasonable to 
have done so. Moreover, the Ministry unreasonably and unjustly failed to ensure 
that the citizens of this province would be aware of the highly exceptional police 
authority that had been conferred.
20 The government has announced that the Public Works Protection Act will be 
reviewed in consultation with stakeholder groups.  This is a step in the right 
direction.  I have recommended that in the context of this review, the Ministry 
should take steps to revise or replace the Act.  If it wants to claim the authority to 
designate security areas to protect persons, it should give consideration to creating 
an integrated statute that could be used not only to protect public works but that 
would clearly provide direct authority for ensuring the security of persons during 
public events when required.  The range of police powers conferred by the Act 
should also be considered, including whether it is appropriate to give police the 
authority to arrest those who have already been excluded entry to secured areas, 
and the authority of guards and peace officers to offer conclusive testimony, 
whether right or wrong, about the location of security boundaries.
21 I have also recommended that the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional 
Services develop a protocol that would call for public information campaigns when 
police powers are modified by subordinate legislation, particularly in protest 
situations.
22 On November 1, 2010, the Minister confirmed on behalf of the government his 
unequivocal commitment to act on my recommendations in a timely manner.  I am 
satisfied with the Minister’s response to my recommendations and will monitor the 
Ministry’s progress in implementing them. 14
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December 2010
Securing the Summit
23 On June 19, 2008, Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced that Hunstville, 
Ontario would be the venue for the 2010 G8 Summit, a gathering of eight of the 
world’s most powerful leaders to discuss issues of global concern.  In the fall of 
2009, the Prime Minister also signalled that Canada would host the 2010 G20 
Summit, a meeting to discuss financial issues of international interest, attended by 
leaders from 19 countries and the European Union as well as representatives of the 
International Monetary Fund and World Bank.  This second event was to take place 
in Toronto.  After considering other sites – including Exhibition Place, the location 
preferred by the City of Toronto – on February 19, 2010, the federal government 
confirmed that the G20 summit would be held at the Metro Toronto Convention 
Centre.  The G8 was to take place from June 25 to June 26, 2010, followed by the 
larger G20 summit from June 26 to June 27.  The summits were co-ordinated and 
organized by the Summits Management Office, a federal government agency. 
24 Traditionally, these international summit meetings have served as magnets for 
large-scale and at times violent protests.  In 2001, a demonstrator was shot and 
killed by police during a protest at the G8 in Genoa, Italy.  On the second day of 
the G8 meeting held in the United Kingdom in 2005, suicide bombers killed more 
than 50 people on the subway and on a bus in London.  Four years later, at a G20 
summit held in London, a newspaper vendor died after he was struck from behind 
with a police baton and knocked to the ground while police cordoned off protesters.
25 Given the high profile of these events, the history of terrorist threats upon world 
leaders, and the experience with summit protests in the past, planning for security 
presented a significant challenge to Canadian law enforcement officials.  The job of 
ensuring security for the G8 and G20 summits was assigned to the Integrated 
Security Unit, which was initially established in 2008 to prepare for the G8.  The 
ISU was a joint security team led by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in 
partnership with the Toronto Police Service, the Ontario Provincial Police, the 
Canadian Forces and the Peel Regional Police.
2
  
26 The RCMP had primary accountability for security at the summits.  A 
Memorandum of Understanding, entered into by the ISU partners, confirmed that 
the RCMP was responsible for protecting international dignitaries and the 
“controlled access zones,” sometimes referred to as “red zones,” where they were 
to be contained.  Local police services would be responsible for the areas 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
2
 The North Bay Police Service was replaced by the Peel Regional Police Service, as a partner in the ISU, 
when the proposed venue for the G8 meeting was shifted from North Bay to Huntsville. 15
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immediately adjacent to the “controlled access zones,” known as “interdiction 
zones” or “yellow zones,” as well as for security in areas surrounding the 
interdiction zones, referred to variously as surveillance, security or traffic zones.
27 For the G8 summit, the Ontario Provincial Police was the local police service with 
jurisdiction.  In the case of the G20 summit, the RCMP was to control an area 
within an interior security fence, to be constructed around the Metro Toronto 
Convention Centre, the attached Intercontinental Hotel, the Westin Hotel and the 
Royal York Hotel.  The RCMP was also responsible for security at the Sheraton 
Hotel, where a number of dignitaries would be located.  The Toronto Police Service 
was to have sole responsibility for the “interdiction zone,” extending outward from 
the interior security fence to an exterior security fence.  It would also be 
responsible for policing the surrounding areas.  The Peel Regional Police Service 
was to secure the area around Pearson Airport and the RCMP was responsible for 
security at the airport terminal to be used by dignitaries.  
28 The ISU headquarters were located in Barrie, but the RCMP also set up an office in 
Toronto for the G20 summit.  The Toronto and Peel Regional Police Services 
maintained their own control centres at their respective stations. 
29 On May 12, 2010, the Chief of the Toronto Police Service wrote to the Minister of 
Community Safety and Correctional Services requesting a designation under 
provincial legislation known as the Public Works Protection Act.   In the letter, he 
explained that one of the cornerstones of the security plan for the G20 summit 
would be the establishment of a security perimeter in the area around the Metro 
Toronto Convention Centre, to be staffed by Toronto Police Service officers.  The 
security perimeter would have gates allowing access into the security zone, which 
would be controlled by the Toronto Police.  Those wishing access into this zone 
would be required to identify themselves, their destination and the purpose for 
entering the zone.  The Chief noted that there were some businesses and residences 
within the security zone and that affected employees and residents would have the 
opportunity to obtain a registration card ensuring them quick passage through the 
security gates.   
30 On June 3, 2010, regulation 233/10 was issued under the Public Works Protection 
Act.  The regulation had the effect of reconfirming that the public works located 
within the interdiction zone were “public works” as defined by the Act, and 
designating three places within the interdiction zone that were not already public 
works as “public works.”  Under the Public Works Protection Act, guards 
appointed under the Act as well as peace officers have very board powers to require 
citizens to provide identification and submit to searches in connection with public 
works.16
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December 2010
Figure 5: June 26 - Police officer inspects wallet of civilian. 
(Photo still from YouTube video – for link, see Appendix A, No. 6)
31 In order to understand the context in which regulation 233/10 emerged as well as 
its significance, it is useful to first consider some of the events leading up to and 
taking place over the G20 summit weekend.  While accounts as to what transpired
differ substantially, what follows is a brief reconstruction based on media reports 
and information that we have obtained during our investigation. 
G20 Land
32 Gatherings of world leaders like the G8 and G20 summits invite considerable 
international attention.  Seeking to attract notice to a range of diverse social justice 
issues, various organizations had planned events to coincide with the summits in 
Ontario.  While some groups pursued formal channels, openly publicized their 
plans, and obtained necessary permits for peaceful protests, law enforcement 
officials were well aware that the events would also attract individuals intent on 
pursuing more clandestine and violent methods of demonstration.  Anarchist 
websites began to threaten militant and confrontational action, and on May 18, 
2010, a bank in Ottawa was firebombed.  The group claiming responsibility for this 
attack vowed that its members would be at the summit events to protest the 
“exploitation of people and the environment.”  
33 Toronto’s citizens watched with curiosity as construction of the massive security 
fencing got underway on June 7.  While initially bystanders snapped photographs 
of the fence unobstructed, by the week of the summit, many reported that they were 17
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December 2010
questioned when they neared the security perimeter and were required by police to 
delete any images of it that they had captured on their phones or cameras.   
Figure 6: June 8 - Fence under construction on Lower Simcoe St. near Bremner Blvd. 
(Photo by Tomasz Bugajski)
34 Tensions in the city increased on June 22, when a Toronto man (and on June 24, his 
wife) was arrested in connection with the G20 summit and charged with explosives 
and weapons offences.  
35 As security tightened around the city, many residents reported being stopped and 
questioned by police in the downtown core.  On June 24, Regulation 233/10 took 
centre stage, when Dave Vasey, a York University master’s student, was arrested
for failing to show identification to police.  After participating in a peaceful march, 
Mr. Vasey and a friend had gone to take a closer look at the security perimeter.  
They entered and left the security area without incident.  However, as they walked 
along the street outside of the fence, away from the entrance, they were stopped by 
police, and asked to produce identification.  While his friend’s press pass satisfied 
police, Mr. Vasey refused to identify himself.  In doing so, he followed the advice 
that had been widely distributed by civil liberties and advocacy groups, which 
counseled that demonstrators were not required to answer police questions or 
provide proof of identity.  By the next morning, news of Mr. Vasey’s arrest under 
the Act was everywhere, raising questions and inciting confusion about the scope 
of the “secret law” that appeared to give police new and extraordinary powers.  At a 
press conference on June 25, the Toronto Police Chief tried to dispel the notion that 18
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December 2010
the law was a secret, and advised that the powers granted under the Public Works 
Protection Act applied for a distance of five metres outside of the security fence. 
Figure 7: June 27 - Passersby peer through the fence at Bay and Wellington streets. 
(Photo by Karin Stonehouse)
36 While the G8 summit in Huntsville took place without major incident, there were
early signs that the G20 summit might not fare as well.  During the first major 
protest in Toronto in the afternoon on Friday, June 25, more than 1,000 
demonstrators embarked from Allan Gardens for an undisclosed location.  Police 
on bicycles accompanied the protesters as they set out.  Protest leaders made it 
clear that the march was peaceful, but police observers noted that a group of 
demonstrators outfitted in black was emerging from within the crowd.  Police were 
familiar with the “black bloc” tactic in which individuals embedded within a 
peaceful protest will dress in black and disguise their identities as a prelude to the 
commission of acts of violence and vandalism.  Some 30 people dressed in black 
and armed with rocks and golf balls soon broke off from this crowd and began 
moving toward the Coroner’s office, where a military repatriation ceremony was in 
progress.  In response, riot police were dispatched.  
37 Police diverted the protesters from travelling further south towards the exterior 
security fence.  By 6:30 p.m., the demonstrators began to return to Allan Gardens,
where many camped out awaiting the next day’s activities.  Some also made their 
way over to the Eastern Avenue Detention Centre, an old film studio converted to a 19
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December 2010
temporary jail for summit detainees, where it was reported that a deaf man was 
being held without access to a sign language interpreter, after being arrested for 
failing to obey a police order to move.   
38 Early on the morning of Saturday, June 26, police were already in the process of 
rounding up suspected violent activists before the massive labour rally organized 
for that day got underway.  It was reported that up to 30,000 people joined the 
labour march that afternoon.  However, by around 3:45 p.m., some individuals
within the crowd once again donned black apparel and broke away from the 
peaceful protest.  This time, the “black bloc” militants set off on a 90-minute crime 
spree, during which store windows were smashed, businesses looted and three or 
four police cruisers were vandalized and set on fire.  The police did not engage the 
group at this point, later explaining that they chose to focus their efforts on public 
safety, as opposed to containing property damage. 
Figure 8: June 25 - Protesters march along College St. (Photo by Mark Kari)20
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Figure 9: June 26 - Police car in flames on Bay St. (Photo by Stephen Forbes)
39 The individuals responsible for the carnage then apparently regrouped on the south 
lawn of Queen’s Park and quickly discarded their black apparel, blending back into 
the crowd.  Shortly after, police moved in en masse and ordered the protesters 
assembled at Queen’s Park to leave.  Some left immediately, but many remained, 
believing that since the police had earlier advised that Queen’s Park was a 
“designated speech area,” they had a right to stay.  It was reported that police used 
force to disperse the crowd, and there are accounts of pepper spray and rubber 
bullets being deployed.  A number of arrests were made at that time. 21
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Figure 10: June 26 - Police move in on protesters gathered on the south lawn of Queen’s Park. 
(Photo by Richard Lautens, Toronto Star)
40 While the Toronto Police Service was in charge of maintaining order in the city, 
apart from the “red zones” controlled by the RCMP, thousands of officers from all 
over the country had been deployed to assist.  Back at ISU headquarters in Barrie, 
commanders were awaiting word on what additional resources Toronto required in 
the face of the mounting conflict downtown.  The former RCMP official who was 
in charge of ISU security at the time advised us that by June 24 the Toronto Police 
Service representative on the ISU steering committee had left the ISU building, and 
that by noon on Saturday, June 26, communications between ISU and the Toronto 
Police had broken down.  By 4 p.m., the Toronto Police Service had gone 
completely off the ISU radar.  The ISU placed multiple calls to its Toronto Police 
contact, but it took 45 minutes of trying before they connected.  By that point, the 
situation was critical, and the ISU was asked to take over security in the 
interdiction zone.  While Toronto police focused on regaining control of city22
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December 2010
streets, at 4:45 p.m. the ISU quickly began deploying more than 1,000 officers from 
the OPP, RCMP and Peel Region to police the security perimeter.  We were 
advised that, in an unprecedented move, RCMP officers left the nation’s capital 
“bare” as they trekked south to provide relief for Toronto. 
41 The protests in Toronto continued into Saturday evening. Around 10 p.m., Toronto 
riot police surrounded demonstrators at the Novotel on The Esplanade.  Over the 
course of a few hours, police systematically arrested all of those involved in the 
protest, and by some accounts innocent bystanders as well.
42 Around 10 a.m. on Sunday, June 27, Toronto police raided a University of Toronto 
gymnasium being used as a hostel for out-of-town protesters who were primarily 
from Montreal, and reportedly arrested nearly 100 people.  By that point, hundreds 
of arrests had been made and the area around the temporary detention centre had 
become a gathering point for some 200 protesters, showing solidarity for the 
detainees.  Some of these protesters were in turn arrested, in one case, reportedly 
after being shot with rubber bullets.  
Figure 11: June 27 – Natalie Gray falls with police in pursuit outside the Eastern Ave. 
detention centre. (Photo submitted by Natalie Gray)23
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 12: June 29 - A cell at the Eastern Ave. detention centre. 
(Photo by Tim Shore, blogto.com)
43 On Sunday afternoon, a bicycle protest wound its way through the city.  Later,
Toronto police, apparently acting on reports that criminals had infiltrated a group of 
protestors, surrounded and contained a crowd of up to 250 in a “kettling” 
maneuver,  at Queen St. and Spadina Ave. around 6 p.m.  Over the course of the 
next few hours, protesters, journalists, casual observers and bystanders stood in the 
driving rain while individuals were selectively extracted from the crowd for arrest.  
The entire episode was televised and dramatically displayed on social networking 
websites as it unfolded.  By 9:40 p.m., the Toronto Police Chief ordered the 
remaining crowd to be unconditionally released. 24
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 13: June 27 – Protesters at Queen St. and Spadina Ave. being “kettled” by police. 
(Photo by Jonas Naimark)
Figure 14: June 27 – Ground-level view of police “kettling” of protesters at Queen St. and 
Spadina Ave. (Photo by Rob Kittredge)25
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
44 Stories circulated throughout the G20 weekend of citizens being stopped and 
searched at various locations in the downtown core, often simply because they were 
wearing an item of black clothing.  A number of people also reported that police 
cited the Public Works Protection Act as authority to conduct searches and require 
identification, despite the fact that they were nowhere near the security fence.  
Police confiscated a large variety of objects during the summit, including items 
such as umbrellas, eyewash, and goggles.  The Toronto Police Chief later displayed 
an impressive array of “weapons” seized from protesters at a press conference on 
June 29 – although some of the collection, including a crossbow and chainsaw, 
were later reported to have been unrelated to the event. 
45 In the days leading up to and over the course of the G20 summit weekend, some 
1,105 people were arrested; the largest mass arrest in Canadian history.  Many 
individuals were picked up for breach of the peace; others faced a variety of 
Criminal Code offences, and at least two found themselves in violation of the 
Public Works Protection Act.  Of those initially detained, just under 700 were 
eventually released without charge.  Many of the charges against the 315 accused in 
connection with the G20 summit have been stayed or withdrawn, including with 
respect to nine individuals who were apparently listed in error.  On October 14, 
2010, another 116 charges were dropped, leaving only 99 cases before the courts in 
relation to the summit.  Even Mr. Vasey found, when he attended court on July 28, 
that there was no record of his charge under the Public Works Protection Act.  A
Toronto Police spokesperson has since stated that the charges were “lost in the 
mail.” 
46 After the summit ended, the Toronto Police Service continued to search for 
ringleaders of the G20 riots, and made a number of high-profile arrests.
47 An estimated 20,000 security personnel were involved with security for the two 
summits, including private security guards contracted by the federal government.   
The staggering cost for hosting the events was estimated at more than $1 billion.  
The nearly 10 kilometers of security fencing around downtown Toronto alone cost 
an estimated $9.4 million.  26
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 15: June 28 – CN Tower behind the fence. (Photo by Alfred Ng)
48 As far as federal organizers were concerned, the summits were a success, although 
admittedly an inconvenience for Toronto.  For many Ontarians, the flood of images 
of Toronto over the G20 weekend, displayed in the news and live on the Internet, 
was surreal and disturbing.  Along with the burning police cars and scenes of 
rioters smashing windows, there was the infamous video of a police officer 
threatening to arrest a protester for assault if she touched him with the soap bubbles 
she was blowing, and of another masked officer using a crowd control weapon to 
shoot a projectile directly at a woman who was apparently standing peacefully in 
front of him, knocking her to the ground.  The sheer volume of arrests related to the 
G20 and the manner in which these were executed was unprecedented and, for 
many, alien to the traditional Canadian persona. As one eminent lawyer and 
academic observed, these events “might well have happened during a 
demonstration in Eastern Europe, but in the old days, but not here.  It’s a complete 
abuse of process.  Somebody should have been watching.”
3
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
3
 Interview of Julius Grey, (14 October 2010) on The National, CBC Television, Toronto.27
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 16: June 27 - Protester blows bubbles in front of police officers shortly before she is arrested. 
(Photo by Steve Russell, Toronto Star)
Figure 17: June 27 - Police fire a crowd control device at demonstrators. 
(Photo by Bernard Weil, Toronto Star)28
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Over the Summit and Beyond
49 While the G20 summit ended late Sunday afternoon, June 27, 2010, its impact 
continued to be felt long afterward. 
50 By Monday, June 28, the G20 delegates had left Toronto, and the security barriers 
were in the process of being dismantled.  But the aftermath of the G20 saw 
continued protests downtown.  This time, the focus was not on gaining the attention 
of world leaders, but on calling for censure and public inquiry into the conduct of 
law enforcement officials in connection with the summit.  Police were criticized for 
failing to intervene as “black bloc” activists damaged, destroyed and absconded 
with millions of dollars worth of property, for the tactics they deployed to contain 
protesters after that rampage, for their use of force and massive arrests that took 
place throughout the weekend, and for the poor conditions at the temporary jail. 
Figure 18:June 28 - Protesters march to Queen’s Park to call for public inquiry.
(Photo by George Tulcsik)
51 By June 29, when the Chief of the Toronto Police Service held his post-summit 
press conference, it was also clear that there had never been a “five-metre rule,” 
applying to the area around the security fence, leading many to charge that the 
public had been deliberately misled.  A number of MPPs also denounced the fact 29
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
that sweeping police powers appeared to have been conferred by way of a technical 
regulation, without notice, consultation or debate.   
52 There are mixed reviews on how the government, including its police agents, did 
with respect to the G20 summit.  While Toronto city council unanimously voted to 
commend the outstanding work of its police chief and his officers during the 
summit, and an Angus Reid poll disclosed that 73% of Torontonians and 66% of 
Canadians believed that the treatment of protesters was justified, there have been 
repeated calls by advocates as well as politicians for a full inquiry into the 
surrounding events.  While the federal government initially displayed no appetite 
for a G20 post-mortem, two parliamentary Standing Committees are currently 
holding hearings to consider costs and tactics relating to the summits.  The 
Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP has commenced an 
investigation relating to RCMP conduct during the summits.  A number of discrete 
reviews relating to the events surrounding the G20 summit have also been launched 
at the municipal and provincial levels.  
Figure 19: July 17 - Sign calling for G20 inquiry at civil liberties event. 
(Photo by Jackman Chiu)
53 On June 29, the Toronto Police Service advised that its Summit Management After 
Action Review Team (SMAART) would study, review and report on all aspects of 30
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
summit policing in Toronto.  On July 6, the Toronto Police Services Board 
announced that it would establish an independent civilian review focusing on 
matters of governance in relation to the G20 summit, and on September 23, the 
Board appointed retired Ontario Court of Appeal justice, Hon. John W. Morden, to 
conduct this inquiry.  
54 On July 22, the Office of the Independent Police Review Director, after receiving 
275 public complaints, announced that it would review systemic issues relating to 
allegations of unlawful searches, arrests and improper detention against police 
during the G20 summit.
4
Figure 20: June 26 - Police search man’s backpack on King St. West. 
(Photo by George Tulcsik)
55 The province’s Special Investigations Unit also investigated six incidents in which
protesters were injured by police during G20-related protests on June 26.  In late 
November, the SIU director announced that no charges would be laid against any 
officers.  Although he found excessive force had been used in two cases, the SIU 
was unable to identify the officers involved.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
4
 By October 5, the OIPRD had received more than 320 complaints. Interview of Gerry McNeilly (OIPRD 
Director) by Paul Jay (5 October 2010) on The Real News, The Real News Network, 
http://www.therealnews.com . 31
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
56 In addition, on September 22, the province announced that former Ontario chief 
justice and attorney general, Hon. Roy McMurtry, would lead a review of the 
Public Works Protection Act, scheduled for completion next spring.  
57 On October 5, NDP leader Andrea Horwath – and on October 19, MPP Peter 
Kormos – introduced private member’s bills calling for an inquiry to examine all 
aspects of government and law enforcement decision-making relating to the G20 
summit.
5
58 Civilian organizations have also responded to the events of the G20 weekend.  The 
Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) prepared a preliminary report of 
observations during the summit, titled A Breach of the Peace, and a citizens’ group 
announced that it would conduct a “people’s inquiry” called “Don’t Wear Black” to 
allow Toronto residents and visitors to tell their G20 stories.  The CCLA and the 
National Union of Public and General Employees also co-hosted public hearings in 
November to examine police activity during the summit. Two class action lawsuits 
have been launched – one seeking $45 million in damages for those wrongfully 
arrested, detained, imprisoned or held by police during the G20 summit; the other 
claiming $115 million for those detained and arrested and business owners whose 
properties were vandalized.  A third lawsuit has been filed by a woman alleging 
that she was shot twice by police using rubber bullets.  She is seeking $1 million in 
damages for assault, battery, unlawful arrest and detention, malicious prosecution 
and the violation of a number of Charter rights and freedoms.  In November, a 
Montreal-based community organizer, arrested during the summit, commenced a 
constitutional challenge to his bail conditions. 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
5
 Bill 111, An Act to require a public inquiry into government action and spending in connection with the 
G20 Summit, 2
nd
 Session, 39
th
 Leg., Ontario, (1
st
 Reading:5 October 2010).  Bill 121, An Act to require a 
public inquiry into government action and spending in connection with the G20 Summit, 2
nd
 Session, 39
th
Leg., Ontario, (1
st
 Reading:19 October 2010, 2
nd
 Reading: lost on division, 4 November 2010).32
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 21: July 10 - Civil liberties “day of action,” Queen’s Park. (Photo by Sarah Gould)
59 In the days following the G20 weekend, my Office received a constant stream of 
complaints and submissions related to the summit from a diverse range of 
individuals and groups, including concerned York University professors, the 
Ryerson University Anti-Racism Coalition, and a member of provincial parliament.  
Many of the complaints that we received were from people who were directly 
affected by the events over the G20 weekend.  One of the common complaint 
themes surrounded the lack of transparency, communication and clarity around 
Regulation 233/10.  On July 8, 2010, I notified the Ministry of Community Safety 
and Correctional Services that I would be investigating its involvement in the 
origin and development of Regulation 233/10 under the Public Works Protection 
Act, and its subsequent communication on that regulation with stakeholders.
Complaints
60 My Office received a multitude of complaints relating to a variety of issues 
concerning the G20 summit, including complaints about:
• the process used by the Ontario government to pass Regulation 233/10 under 
the Public Works Protection Act, including the absence of public debate, 
transparency and consultation;33
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
• the lack of notice to the public about the regulation and its effects on the 
general public;
• the lack of clarification by government and police around the regulation and 
the powers sought to be conferred by that regulation, after its existence came 
to light;
• the conduct of police officers during the period June 24-27 in the exercise of 
their powers under the regulation, including concerns about wrongful arrests 
and Charter violations;
• the alleged wrongful arrests of demonstrators at government-designated 
speech sites, including Queen’s Park North;
• the treatment of detainees held at the Eastern Avenue Detention Centre, 
including allegations of human rights violations;
• bail conditions, including bail amounts and time between arrest and bail 
hearings, and between bail hearings and release, for those detained during the 
G20 weekend; 
• the absence of a complaint mechanism for issues related to the G20, including 
in relation to the regulation and police conduct. 
61 In total, we received 167 complaints, including more than 100 complaints, 
information submissions and expressions of support from members of the public, 
MPPs and various civil liberties organizations and groups, which were received 
after we publicly announced our investigation. 
62 A number of the complainants who approached our Office gave dramatic first-hand 
accounts of their experiences with police over the G20 weekend.  John Pruyn, a 57-
year old Revenue Canada employee from Thorold, Ontario, had come to Toronto to 
participate in Saturday’s labour march and rally.  Mr. Pruyn is an amputee and
walks with the assistance of walking sticks.  After participating in the march down 
University Ave., he returned to the designated speech area at Queen’s Park with his 
daughter, and sat down to rest.  A few minutes later, police arrived, yelling 
“Move!”  He told us his daughter and two young men sitting next to him jumped up 
and tried to pull him to his feet, but he lost his balance and fell.  Mr. Pruyn’s 
daughter asked police to wait while she helped him up, explaining that he was an 
amputee.   Suddenly he was face down on the ground with officers piled on top of 
him.  When he was later unable to obey police commands to walk without the aid 34
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
of his walking sticks, an officer grabbed his artificial leg and “yanked it off.”  He 
recalled the officer shoving the leg at him and telling him to put it back on.  When 
he explained that he was unable to do so, he was dragged backwards to the paddy 
wagon.  He claimed he was kicked several times, and heard officers say he was 
resisting arrest and in possession of a weapon.  He was searched and detained for 
several hours before he was released without charge.  He told us police still have 
his glasses, walking sticks and $33 he had in his pocket when he was detained. 
Figure 22: June 26 - Police officer holds John Pruyn’s prosthetic leg (far right) during his arrest at 
Queen’s Park protest. (Photo by Gerry Broome, AP)
63 Many of those who contacted us said they had been stopped, asked for 
identification and searched in connection with the G20 summit.  Some of the 
searches occurred within the “interdiction zone,” others within five metres of it, 
and still others well beyond the security perimeter.  Complainants generally 
expressed confusion regarding the origins and scope of Regulation 233/10 under 
the Public Works Protection Act, and the exceptional powers it apparently 
conferred on police. 
64 During the week leading up to the summit, Rob Kittredge, a lawyer and hobby 
photographer who worked just outside of the secure area, was taking photographs 
within the security zone one evening after work.  According to Mr. Kittredge, two 
police officers approached him and asked what he was doing.  He politely declined 35
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
to provide identification, believing that he was within his rights to do so.  The 
officers told him that under the Public Works Protection Act they could search him 
without a warrant and demand that he show identification.  He answered that 
perhaps the best way to end the situation would be for them to use their authority to 
take his wallet out of his front left pocket and look at his identification.  The 
officers then proceeded to subject him to a complete search, including reviewing 
the photographs on his camera, proclaiming them to be “suspicious.”  After the 
search, one of the officers advised him that he was “banned” under the authority of 
the Act.  When Mr. Kittredge asked what area he was banned from, the officer 
failed to respond. 
65 We spoke with Mr. Vasey, who was arrested on June 24 under the Public Works 
Protection Act for failing to provide identification.  Mr. Vasey was close to the 
fence but not near an entry point when he was stopped.  He advised us that he had 
never heard of the Act before this incident.  In fact, complainants consistently told 
us that the first time they learned of its existence was after Mr. Vasey’s arrest was 
publicized.  Some even said they deliberately avoided going anywhere near the 
fence after hearing of the “five-metre rule” – only to find themselves subject to 
questioning and search at other locations around the city.
Figure 23: June 27 - Police search bags belonging to two men on Queen Street West. 
(Photo by Timothy Neesam, CBC)
66 Some were stopped close to the fence, under the express authority of the Public
Works Protection Act.  Police asked 26-year-old Aaron Adams for identification on 
Friday, June 25, at the York Street underpass.  He said he was told that because of 
“an amendment made to the Public Works Protection Act,” and because he was 36
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
within five metres of the security fence, he was required to either show 
identification and submit to a search, or face arrest.  Similarly, police stopped 36-
year-old Vladimir Cubrt as he travelled west on his bike on Wellington St. between 
Bay and York streets on Saturday, June 26, around 6 p.m.  He said officers told him 
they had the authority under the Public Works Protection Act to search him because 
he was within five metres of the security perimeter.  He was warned that he could 
be arrested if he failed to comply.  Police detained 23-year-old Walter Stone
6
the 
same day, while he was on his way home after watching a World Cup soccer 
telecast with friends.  He was searched and arrested on weapons charges, which 
were subsequently withdrawn.  His Supplementary Record of Arrest confirms that 
he was searched under the Public Works Protection Act.  All three men maintain 
that they were not attempting to enter the secure area when they were stopped. 
Figure 24: June 26 - Police search cyclist near University Ave. (Photo by Alfred Ng)
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
6
 This person’s name has been changed for reasons of confidentiality.37
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
67 According to numerous reports, police routinely searched protesters converging at 
Allan Gardens, starting as early as Friday, June 25.  One woman who came forward
told us that when she was there on Sunday, June 27, she overheard police 
specifically advising people they were searching backpacks under the authority of 
the Public Works Protection Act – despite the fact that the security zone was more 
than two kilometres away and the Toronto Police Service had been aware since 
Friday that Regulation 233/10 was only intended to apply in the area within the 
perimeter fence. 
68 In many instances, complainants advised us that they were not told what authority 
police were acting under when they were stopped.  Twenty-seven-year-old Nancy 
Ryan was walking home on Sunday, June 27, after shopping at Loblaws at Queens 
Quay.  She claims police asked to search her grocery bags when she was about 200 
metres away from the security fence.  She was allowed to pass only after showing 
identification.  That same day, 60-year-old David King, a photojournalist and 
college instructor, was searched by police at the corner of Queen St. and Spadina
Ave., and Parkdale resident Alexander Wolfson had to ask a family member to 
bring him his identification after police stopped him in his own neighborhood. 
69 For the estimated 40,000 people
7
 who either worked or resided in “the zone,” the 
situation was no less confusing.  A number of workplaces within the interdiction 
zone remained open over the G20 weekend.  A man who worked in the CBC 
building on Front St. over the course of the G20 weekend expressed frustration 
over the information provided to those who had to work in the zone:
We didn’t understand from what they were communicating what the zone 
was, what they wanted from us outside the zone, what they wanted from 
us inside the zone, what the implications were if we didn’t or couldn’t 
comply with what they wanted from us, particularly around the area of 
identification.
70 To illustrate the uncertainty that those in the zone had to contend with, he gave the 
example of a colleague who stepped outside the building for a quick cigarette 
break, only to be approached by police who told her she could not leave the 
building at any time without identification. 
71 Unlike the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services, which comes 
squarely within my Office’s authority, police services are part of the MUSH 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
7
 Canadian Civil Liberties Association, “Protecting Civil Liberties and Human Rights at the G-20: CCLA 
Statement of Concerns”, 21 May 2010 at 3 [CCLA Statement of Concerns].38
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
sector
8
, which operates beyond Ombudsman scrutiny.  Accordingly, our Office had 
to refer Mr. Pruyn and other complainants who were concerned primarily about the 
conduct of police to the Ministry of the Attorney General’s Office of the 
Independent Police Review Director.  As courts are beyond my Office’s 
jurisdiction, we were also unable to assist with complaints relating to bail 
conditions.  However, the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services 
played an important role in one of the more controversial aspects of the G20 
security plan – at the request of the Chief of the Toronto Police Service, it 
sponsored the adoption of a regulation relating to the erection of an impenetrable 
security fence around a broad swath of downtown Toronto.  The Ministry’s conduct 
leading up to the issuance of Regulation 233/10, and in communicating its 
significance to stakeholders, comes squarely within the Ombudsman’s investigative 
mandate.  Accordingly, our investigation focused on these issues.  
Figure 25: June 26 - Police arrest demonstrator at Queen's Park. (Photo by Vincenzo D'alto)
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
8
 MUSH refers to the broader public sector, including municipalities, universities, schools, hospitals, as 
well as the police and children’s aid societies. 39
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Investigative Process
72 The investigation of this matter was assigned to a Special Ombudsman Response 
Team (SORT), and was conducted by 7 investigators and 2 early resolution 
officers.  The team carried out 49 interviews with senior Ministry staff, City of 
Toronto officials, senior OPP officers (including the former Assistant 
Commissioner of the RCMP who was the lead on the Integrated Security Unit 
steering committee), complainants and stakeholder groups.  SORT staff received 
excellent co-operation from both the Ministry and the Ontario Provincial Police. 
Most interviews were tape-recorded and transcribed. 
73 We also extended invitations to the Toronto Police Service and York Regional 
Police to speak with us and share their experiences and comments in relation to the 
issues that we were investigating.  We asked to speak with specific police officers 
who appeared to have been involved in incidents where the Public Works 
Protection Act had been applied.  The Toronto Police Service declined this 
invitation.  The York Regional Police provided us with a written response dated 
October 12, 2010.
74 The team also reviewed more than 1,000 pages of documentation provided by the 
Ministry.  Under the Ombudsman Act, the Ministry was entitled to claim solicitorclient privilege with respect to documents relating to legal advice.  A number of 
documents we received were heavily redacted on this ground.  However, in some 
cases we found information withheld as being “irrelevant” or “non-responsive.”  In 
other cases, we received multiple copies of the same document redacted to different 
degrees.  At our request, the Ministry reviewed a number of documents to respond 
to our concerns around disclosure.  Further information was released as a result.
75 SORT also conducted extensive independent research, including looking at what 
had occurred at previous summit meetings.  As well, investigators employed oldfashioned evidence-gathering techniques such as visiting the “zone” and informally 
interviewing business people, employees and residents who had been within the 
boundary of the fence. 
Strategic Use of Social Media
76 In addition to traditional investigative techniques, this investigation represented a 
significant departure for our Office in the collection of evidence.  It provided a 40
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
unique opportunity to employ various social media, such as Facebook, YouTube, 
websites, podcasts, blogs, and microblogging services such as Twitter.  This proved 
to be a tremendously successful approach.
77 A vast array of images bombarded television screens and social media sites during 
the G20 summit and in the ensuing days, many of them gathered and circulated by 
people who were directly involved in and/or witnessed the events firsthand.  We 
identified more than 5,000 videos relating to the G20 that were posted to social 
networking websites, and these proved to be a useful and innovative investigative 
tool.  Social media enabled SORT investigators to tap into a wide audience, and 
gain access to real-time evidence at the stroke of a key.  We also received
numerous videos and some 500 photographs directly from members of the public.  
Figure 26: June 25 - Reporters and civilians photograph demonstrators and police on College St. 
(Photo by Mark Kari)
78 At the outset of the investigation, I used Twitter to invite people to contact our 
Office with information relating to the issues under investigation.  This novel form 
of outreach raised awareness beyond our traditional audiences.  SORT assigned 
two investigators to work in close conjunction with our Communications team to 
monitor G20 social media traffic and review the content of social networking sites.  
These sites also proved to be an effective way to reach people of potential interest 
to our investigation; most of the people we contacted through social networking 
sites responded.   41
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
79 Like Twitter, Facebook was a useful resource for us during this investigation.  The 
announcement of our investigation was posted on the Office’s Facebook page, 
along with an invitation for the public to share their experiences and videos.  We 
received a large number of responses and comments as well as expressions of 
support for the investigation. We received video links from the public through this 
medium as well.
80 Our website has received thousands of additional visits as a result of the 
announcement of the investigation.  There was a significant spike in our website 
traffic, with almost 2,000 visits to our site on the day of the announcement and 
37,270 page views in the month of July alone. 
81 From the outset of our investigation, efforts were made to ensure the preservation 
of electronic evidence.  In order to avoid losing access to Internet evidence that
might be updated or removed, software was installed to ensure Internet videos were 
saved.  Investigators spent many hours reviewing G20-related videos downloaded 
from YouTube, assessing their relevance to the issues under investigation.  Some 
videos showed people being asked for their identification and being searched by 
police in areas far from the security perimeter.  Some included specific references 
made by authorities to the Public Works Protection Act.  For example, Charlie 
Veitch of the “Love Police” from England is shown on camera being arrested 
outside of the security fence on June 24 for failing to comply with an officer’s 
request to identify himself.  The video includes an image of his Undertaking to 
Appear charge sheet, stating he was charged under the Public Works Protection Act 
s.5(1).
Figure 27: June 24 - Charlie Vietch of The Love Police talking with police shortly before his arrest. 
(Photo still taken from Youtube video – see Appendix A, No. 1b)42
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
82 Descriptions and links for videos relating to the Public Works Protection Act, 
identification and property search requests, witness accounts, arrests, media reports 
and other images relating to the G20 summit are contained in Appendix A to this 
report.
83 While many videos provided valuable evidence of events as they occurred, there 
were limitations in working with this medium.  People shown in the videos were 
not always identifiable, nor were the locations always discernible.  While the 
images provided insight into the events occurring around the G20, video evidence 
was not a substitute nor did it replace the need for a thorough field investigation. 
Nevertheless, social media have transformed the way we conduct investigations, 
and communicate with the public.  We anticipate using social media as both an 
outreach and an investigative tool in future SORT investigations. 
Extraordinary Times Call for Extraordinary 
Measures
84 During our investigation, we learned that while it is not the province’s oldest 
statute, the Public Works Protection Act is certainly not new.  It has been in place 
for more than 70 years.  At the time of its creation, parliamentarians were not 
concerned with security for international dignitaries attending global summits. 
They were implementing martial law in the wake of Canada’s entry into World 
War II.
85 On September 10, 1939, Canada declared war against the German Reich.  Nine 
days later, Ontario’s Legislative Assembly convened an emergency session to 
consider a series of war measures.  The Public Works Protection Act, 1939 was one 
of the statutes the Assembly passed during that session to enable government “to 
proceed immediately with those activities incidental to War, which come within 
Provincial jurisdiction.”   
86 This was an exceptional time, which called for exceptional action.  As the session 
concluded, the Lieutenant Governor observed:
We are now engaged in a life-and-death struggle with a boastful, arrogant 
enemy who would ruthlessly crush out all personal, civil, and religious 
freedom.  No one who has followed events of the past few years can doubt 
that.  He must be decisively defeated if we are to preserve all those things 
we hold most dear. 43
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
87 During wartime, a certain degree of intrusion on civil liberties is expected and no 
doubt necessary to preserve order and ensure public safety.  With this in mind, it is 
not that surprising that the Public Works Protection Act, 1939, conferred very 
broad powers to secure a large array of public property, including public 
transportation, utilities, and government buildings.
88 The Act authorized various public officials, and even private entities in some cases, 
to appoint guards to protect public works, which were defined by the Act as 
including:
(a) any railway, canal, highway, bridge, power works including all 
property used for the generation, transformation, transmission, 
distribution or supply of hydraulic or electrical power, gas works, 
water works, public utility or other work, owned, operated or carried 
on by the Government of Ontario or by any board or commission 
thereof, or by any municipal corporation, public utility commission or 
by private enterprises,
(b) any provincial and any municipal public building, and
(c) any other building, place or work designated a public work by the 
Lieutenant-Governor in Council.(s. 1)
89 In the case of highways, the term was further defined to include common or public 
highways, as well as any streets, bridges and any other “structures thereon.” 
9
90 Under the Act, guards and other peace officers were entitled to require any persons
entering or attempting to enter any public work or any approach to a public work to 
furnish their name and address, identify themselves, and state the purpose they 
desired to enter the public work in writing or otherwise.
10
91 They were also authorized to search without warrant anyone entering or attempting 
to enter a public work, as well as vehicles they were suspected to have had charge 
of or control over or had been a passenger in.
11
In addition, guards and peace 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
9
 This definition was initially incorporated through reference to the definition of “highway” in The
Highway Improvement Act, R.S.O. 1927, c.54, and was later amended and set out expressly in section 1 of 
the Public Works Protection Act.
10
 This section now appears with minor amendments as subsection 3(a) of the Public Works Protection Act, 
R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55 [Public Works Protection Act].
11
 This section now appears with minor amendments as subsection 3(b) of the Public Works Protection Act.44
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
officers were given the power to refuse entry to a public work and to use necessary 
force in doing so.
12
92 Failure to comply with a request or direction of a guard or peace officer or being 
found upon a public work or on an approach to a public work without lawful 
authority was an offence under the Act that could lead to arrest, and a fine of $100 
and/or imprisonment for two months.
13
In proceedings under the Act, the statement 
under oath of an officer or employee of the body operating or having control of a 
public work regarding its boundaries was also deemed to be conclusive evidence 
against an accused.
14
93 The Act did not define what was meant by the term “approach to a public work,” 
but it contemplated that regulations could be issued “defining the areas which 
constitute approaches to public works, either generally or with regard to any 
particular public work.”
15
Regulations could also be made under the Act to deal 
with oversight of guards, and respecting “any matter necessary or advisable to carry 
out effectively the intent and purpose of the Act.”
16
94 While there is very little recorded concerning the legislative intent behind the Act, 
clearly its primary purpose was to ensure that Ontario’s infrastructure was safe 
from the threat of sabotage.  It might also be presumed that the expansive definition 
of “public work,” which enabled guards and peace officers to require anyone 
entering or on any highway or street to provide identification, and submit to search, 
was also generally directed at uncovering weapons and rooting out enemies of the 
state. 
The War Ends, but Martial Law Lingers
95 When the war ended in 1945, and the nation returned to a peaceful existence, the 
Public Works Protection Act lingered – a remnant of a world in conflict.  With the 
exception of some relatively minor amendments, including in 1990 when the fine 
that could be levied was increased to $500, the Act has remained largely intact.
17
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
12
 This section now appears with minor amendments as subsection 3(c) of the Public Works Protection Act.
13
 This section now appears with minor amendments as section 5 of the Public Works Protection Act.
14
 This section now appears with minor amendments as section 4 of the Public Works Protection Act.
15
 This section now appears with minor amendments as subsection 6(b) of the Public Works Protection Act.
16
 These sections now appear with minor amendments as subsections 6(a) and (c) of the Public Works 
Protection Act.
17
 A copy of the Public Works Protection Act as it appears today is attached as Appendix B to this report.45
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
96 Yet it has been rarely used.  Since 1939, the government has used the Public Works 
Protection Act to appoint guards to secure a variety of government buildings, 
including Queen’s Park.  Another area where the Act has been employed, together 
with specific provisions in the Police Services Act, is to support enhanced 
courthouse security.  Increased security measures were put in place in the province 
following a series of violent incidents and threats against justice system 
participants, including fatal shootings, occurring in Ontario courthouses, and the 
authority to do so was said to be found in part in the Public Works Protection Act.
18
97 Ontario’s Public Works Protection Act is unique in Canada in terms of the breadth 
of its reach and the powers it confers.  While some jurisdictions have adopted 
statutes to specifically address the security of courthouses, no other Canadian 
statute defining “public works” contains provisions similar to those found in 
Ontario’s Act.
19
98 While some law enforcement officials were doubtless familiar with this 
extraordinary legislation, it was certainly not on the public radar prior to the 2010 
G20 summit.  If not for the events unfolding around the summit, it is quite likely 
that most Ontarians would have gone about their lives without ever knowing of the 
Act’s existence.  
Preparing to Scale the Summit
99 In the months leading up to the G20 summit, lawyers and advocacy groups 
counseled demonstrators, distributed pamphlets, held workshops, and maintained 
websites providing advice on civil rights.  Demonstration organizers also conferred 
with ISU and Toronto Police Service officials, seeking approval for protest routes 
and information on security measures that would affect the rights and freedoms of 
tens of thousands of people readying for protest.  
100 On May 21, 2010, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) issued a paper 
entitled “Protecting civil liberties and human rights at the G-20: statement of 
concerns.”  In this paper, the CCLA observed that the proposal to cordon off large 
areas of Toronto for security reasons would engage a number of Charter rights, 
specifically, section 7 which guarantees individual liberty, including freedom of 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
18
R. v. Campanella, [2005] O.J. No. 1345 (Ont. C.A.) (QL) [ R. v. Campanella].
19
 Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, and 
Saskatchewan all have legislation defining “public works” for certain purposes.  At the federal level, the 
Public Works Nuisances Regulations C.R.C. c.1365, made under the Department of Public Works and 
Government Services Act, S.C. 1996, c.16, regulate conduct in relation to defined public works. 46
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
movement, and sections 2(b), (c) and (d), which guarantee freedom of expression, 
freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of association. 
101 While the CCLA acknowledged that security perimeters could be established to 
protect foreign dignitaries, it was concerned about their scope.  It was aware that 
under the federal Foreign Missions and International Organizations Act the RCMP 
had broad authority to “take appropriate measures, including controlling, limiting 
or prohibiting access to any area to the extent and in a manner that is reasonable in 
the circumstances.”
20
102 It also noted that the APEC Interim Commission report
21
 had endorsed a guiding 
principle that a “security perimeter [may] be enlarged for non-security reasons to 
the extent necessary to ensure that the participants are able to conduct their 
business effectively….”  However, the CCLA cautioned that the APEC report had 
also warned that a fence line designed to significantly distance protesters and 
maintain a “retreat-like atmosphere” could well violate the Charter. 
103 The CCLA asserted that any extension of the security perimeter beyond what was 
needed to ensure the safe and effective conduct of the summit would “unjustifiably 
infringe individuals’ freedom of movement, expression, peaceful assembly and 
association.”  The CCLA was particularly concerned about the prospect of “ad hoc” 
searches without reasonable and objective security grounds.  It stated in its paper:
… under no circumstances should individuals be denied entry to a public 
area simply because they refuse to be searched, or the government 
believes they will engage in non-violent protest and dissent.  To the extent 
that there is evidence of specific individuals posing serious  threats to the 
safety of persons and property, CCLA accepts that some form of nonintrusive screening could take place.  However, it is imperative that the 
criteria for exclusion be publicized in advance.  
104 On June 4, the CCLA wrote to both the RCMP and the Toronto Police Service to 
request further information about the external security fences that had been 
announced the week before.  The CCLA posed a series of questions relating to 
what the public could expect in relation to identification and search powers during 
the summit, including the question:
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
20
Foreign Missions and International Organizations Act, S.C. 1991, c. 41, s. 10.1(2).
21
 Canada, Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP, APEC – Commission Interim Report (21 
July 2001) at 3 (Commissioner: Ted Hughes, Q.C.) [APEC – Commission Interim Report].47
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Will individuals be given the option of leaving without being searched if 
they refuse consent?  
105 On June 13, the Toronto Police Chief responded to the CCLA’s inquiries with 
general information about the legal authorities that would be used to ensure the 
security of those participating in the summit, including the Police Services Act, the
Foreign Missions and International Organizations Act and the common law.  As 
for searches at the security perimeter, he said they would be based on the discretion 
of the officer and the circumstances presented, and that anyone requesting access 
into the security perimeter might be subject to search.  He explained that the 
searches would be done for security purposes to assist police in providing a safe 
environment for the summit.  There was no mention of the Public Works Protection 
Act.  Nor was the Act ever mentioned in any of the numerous meetings that the 
CCLA held with Toronto Police Service officials as it prepared for the summit.
106 While the ISU’s G8-G20 website referred to the Criminal Code of Canada, 
Ontario’s Highway Traffic Act, and the common law as authorities limiting Charter
rights and freedoms in a section on “Information for Demonstrators,” it made no 
reference to the Public Works Protection Act.  The Toronto Police Service website 
as well as the City of Toronto website also contained no information about this Act. 
107 Advocacy groups were vigilant in seeking to minimize interference with Charter
rights during the summit and to prepare demonstrators with necessary information 
for their protection while exercising their right to protest.  When they learned that 
the police had purchased and planned to use long-range acoustic devices, for 
instance, they took steps to mount a court challenge to mitigate risks associated 
with these devices.  However, these organizations had no knowledge that the 
Toronto Police Service had another tool in its arsenal – the little-known, little-used 
Public Works Protection Act.  If they had known about the Act, they would likely 
have taken similar measures to challenge its propriety. 
108 In the months, weeks and days leading up to the G20 summit, unsuspecting civil 
rights and advocacy groups advised protesters that unless they were under arrest, 
they did not have to answer any questions or identify themselves to police while 
participating in demonstrations and they did not have to allow police to search 
their belongings.  While this information was consistent with the widely held 
understanding of the scope of Charter protections, it did not take into account the 
extraordinary powers set out in the Public Works Protection Act. 
109 It was as if the exceptional nature of the Act had lain dormant for decades, until 
someone who thought its potential could be mobilized for G20 summit security
decided to dust off this war relic, and get creative.48
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 28: June 26 - Police arrest demonstrator at Queen’s Park. 
(Photo by Carl William Heindl; eroder.com)
110 Because much of the discussion of the Act prior to the issuance of Regulation 
233/10 involved lawyers and is properly protected by solicitor-client privilege, our 
understanding of what transpired is incomplete.  What we were able to determine 
was that in the early spring of 2010, security planners and legal counsel began to 
discuss the legal framework for erection of the perimeter fence for the G20 summit. 
Good Fences Make Good Neighbours
111 While the Police Services Act and related statutes such as the Criminal Code of 
Canada say nothing about the power to erect and administer security perimeters, 
the common law compliments these statutes by providing officers with the 
authority to use “justifiable powers” in discharging their general policing 
obligations, including their duties to preserve peace and prevent crimes.
22
   
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
22
 see Police Services Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.P.15. s. 42.49
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 29: June 28 – CBC’s Front St. building behind the fence. (Photo by Alfred Ng)
112 In the case of security for international leaders, there is authority directly on point 
in the pre-Charter decision in R. v. Knowlton.
23
  Knowlton involved the 
establishment and administration of a security perimeter.  The police had cordoned 
off an area, including part of a public street, for security purposes related to the 
impending visit by the premier of the U.S.S.R.  Mr. Knowlton wanted to enter the 
area to take pictures and he told the officers so.  He was warned that he could not 
enter and that if he tried he would be arrested.  Mr. Knowlton questioned the 
authority of the officers to prevent his entry onto public property.  The police 
refused to explain their lawful authority.  Mr. Knowlton therefore ignored the 
warning, entered, and was arrested and charged with obstructing a peace officer in 
the course of his duties.  He sought to defend that charge by arguing that the police 
had no power to prevent his entry and therefore were not acting in the execution of 
their duty when he disobeyed them. 
113 The Supreme Court of Canada recognized that the police had a general policing 
duty to protect the premier and were acting in the course of that duty at all times.  
The question was whether it was justifiable for them to establish the perimeter in 
discharging that duty.  The Supreme Court of Canada held that it was:
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
23
R. v. Knowlton, [1974] R.C.S. 443 (S.C.C.).50
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
It is notorious and of common knowledge that the official visit of the head 
of state or high rank dignitary of a foreign country, friendly as either may 
be, is an event that frequently engenders a real or apprehended threat to 
the preservation of peace and that calls, therefore, for the adoption of 
proper and reasonable security measures in and by the host country.
24
  
114 The court noted that it was well known to Canadian officials that the Russian 
premier had been assaulted when in Ottawa and stated that “these official 
authorities were not only entitled but duty bound, as peace officers, to prevent a 
renewal of a like criminal assault” and that they had “a specific and binding 
obligation to take proper and reasonable steps” including restricting the right of 
free access of the public to public streets.  The court concluded that the police 
conduct in restricting public access clearly fell within the general scope of the 
duties imposed upon them and that the use of police powers was not unjustifiable in 
the circumstances.  
115 In accordance with international law, Canada is also obligated to protect foreign 
dignitaries on Canadian soil.
25
  Consistent with this requirement, the federal 
Foreign Missions and International Organizations Act states that the RCMP has 
primary responsibility for the security of intergovernmental conferences and 
provides the RCMP with relatively broad authority to carry out this security 
objective.
26
116 However, as the CCLA noted in its pre-summit paper, any measures taken by local 
police or the RCMP in erecting security barriers must be reasonable in reach and 
design to be justifiable. 
117 We were advised by former ISU members that while they were discussing use of 
the Foreign Missions and International Organizations Act to establish security
perimeters for the G8 and G20 summits, lawyers at the Ministry and their federal 
counterparts were having difficulty reaching agreement on the proper interpretation 
of that Act.  The federal Act does not confer authority on the municipal and 
provincial police officers who work alongside the RCMP in administering a 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
24
 Ibid. at 447.
25
These obligations arise under international instruments such as the Vienna Convention on Consular 
Relations, 24 April 1963, 596 U.N.T.S. 261 (entered into force 19 March 1967), online: United Nations 
Treaty Collection http://untreaty.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/conventions/9_2_1963.pdf, and the 
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes against Internationally Protected Persons, 
Including Diplomatic Agents, 14 December 1973, 1035 U.N.T.S. 167 (entered into force 20 February 
1977), online: United Nations Treaty Collection 
http://untreaty.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/conventions/9_4_1973.pdf.
26
Supra note 20, subsection 10.1(1).51
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
security perimeter.  This is because a federal statute cannot grant police powers on 
provincial peace officers.  However, this limitation appears to have been the source 
of some debate amongst counsel.  Under the Foreign Missions and International 
Organizations Act, the federal government may enter into security arrangements 
with any province in connection with international meetings taking place in 
Canada.
27
 An internal Ministry business case notes that the “local police forces” 
had requested that the province seek an agreement under the Act.  The Toronto 
Police Service and the provincial Ministry appear to have believed that if an 
agreement could be reached, this would enhance security for the summits and 
further legitimate the erection of the perimeter security fence.  Federal lawyers 
apparently disagreed with the suggestion that the Act could be applied in this 
manner, and expressed concern about the precedent that this would set.   
118 On May 7, 2010, Ontario’s Deputy Minister of Community Safety wrote to Public 
Safety Canada about entering into a security agreement.  City of Toronto lawyers, 
acting as counsel for the Toronto Police Service, also apparently attempted to have 
the service mentioned in an order-in-council under the legislation relating 
specifically to G20 security.  However, the federal government declined both of 
these requests.  In denying the Deputy Minister’s request, federal officials noted 
that an arrangement would not increase the power of provincial or municipal 
officers.  It was also explained that arrangements under the federal Act are intended 
solely to facilitate consultation and co-operation between police forces for 
integrated projects, and noted that consultation and co-operation had already been 
achieved without the kind of formal arrangement contemplated by the statute. 
119 It appears that the federal government’s reluctance to enter into an agreement under 
the Foreign Missions and International Organizations Act provided increased 
incentive for officials to look to the Public Works Protection Act.  Under the 
federal Act, the RCMP appeared to have clear authority to construct and control the 
interior security barrier for the “red zone,” but the Toronto Police Service believed 
that unless it was somehow delegated power under that legislation, it would have to 
look elsewhere for incontrovertible legal support to construct and control the 
exterior security fence.   
120 During our investigation, one Ministry official expressed the view that reliance on 
the Public Works Protection Act would have been unnecessary had the federal 
government entered into an agreement with the province under the federal Act.  
Based on OPP documentation, it appears that by late March the provincial Act was 
seriously being discussed as an alternative. 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
27
Supra note 20, subsection 10.1(4).52
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
121 Internal OPP email communications, dated March 28, 2010, relating to “G8/G20 -
Public Works Protection Act,” indicate that the OPP was not particularly interested
in exercising authority under this arcane legislation in connection with the G8 
summit.  An OPP superintendent wrote to his Chief Superintendent that day, 
commenting: 
I am familiar with the Act.  It is a wartime piece of legislation that was 
revised and updated during the NDP era.  We have looked at it extensively 
in the context of Public Order.  We have always believed we would save it 
for a critical time as it would not likely stand up to a constitutional 
challenge the first time it is used.  Having said that, I do not believe we 
require any implementation for G8.  With the Foreign Missions Act and 
other current legislation there is nothing required for G8 at this time.  
122 Consistent with this view, when the OPP were asked by Ministry counsel whether 
they wished to pursue a designation under the Public Works Protection Act for G8 
security, they politely declined. 
123 Ministry records indicate that it was known well before the Toronto Police Chief’s 
letter was received on May 12, 2010, that the Toronto Police Service was looking 
for a designation under the Public Works Protection Act.  Internal Ministry 
documents suggest that the approval process relating to this designation was 
already being planned for by April 9.  
Securing the Perimeter
124 In his May 12 letter to the Ministry requesting a designation under the Public 
Works Protection Act, the Toronto Police Chief noted that various legal authorities 
would be used by the Toronto Police Service and the Integrated Security Unit to 
support the establishment and control of the security perimeter for the G20 summit, 
including the common law, and “provided certain conditions are met, the federal 
Foreign Missions and International Operations Act.”  (It would appear that the 
Toronto Police Service was still holding out hope at that point that some form of 
agreement could be obtained under the federal Act.) 
125 The Chief went on to say:
… we believe that the provisions of the Ontario Public Works Protection 
Act (PWPA) would also offer legal support for the extraordinary security 
measures being undertaken for this unusual event.  Section 3 of the PWPA 53
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
explicitly confers powers on police officers in respect to controlling access 
to “public works” that would be extremely helpful in reinforcing the 
existing legal authority for police officers to control the security perimeter.  
Those powers include requiring persons entering the public work to 
identify themselves and state their purpose for entering and authority to 
search people and vehicles attempting to enter. 
126 The Chief observed that the Act authorizes the Lieutenant Governor in Council to 
designate any “building, place or work” as a public work for the purposes of the 
statute and requested that this section be used to designate the area of or highways 
within the intended security perimeter (as set out in an appendix to the Chief’s 
letter) as a public work for the period from June 21 through the end of the summit 
on June 27.  He noted:
This would provide valuable additional support for the Integrated Security 
Unit and the Toronto Police Service’s efforts to ensure a firm legal basis 
for the exercise of the powers necessary to protect summit attendees and to 
provide the high level of security required for this event. 
127 The Chief went on to explain that although the control of access to the secured zone 
was intended to be limited to the two days of the G20 summit, the designation for 
the longer period was designed to “ensure that there is a firm legal basis for 
controlling access to the perimeter, if increased security concerns require a longer 
period of restricted access.”
128 We do not have full insight into the reasoning of the Toronto Police Service in 
attempting to secure the designation under the Act.  However, in an internal OPP 
email exchange of May 17, there is an interesting reference to the motivation 
behind obtaining the designation.  In the email, an OPP Deputy Commissioner 
advises his Superintendent:  
The way their email is worded is that it will help with the authority to keep 
people out of the CAZ [controlled access zone] and interdiction zone.  I 
thought they were only looking at it to put off any strike action.54
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 30: June 23 - Police officers behind the fence. (Photo by Alfred Ng)
129 At the time, workers at a number of hotels in the city were threatening strike action.  
In fact, at the Novotel, host to a number of G20 attendees, pickets went up on the 
Thursday before the summit until it got underway.   
130 On May 20, several Ministry officials met to brief the Minister concerning the 
Chief’s request.  Two senior OPP officials also participated by way of 
teleconference.  Ministry counsel took the lead at the briefing, and all the versions 
that our Office received of the slide deck used for the presentation have been 
redacted to varying degrees to remove “privileged” information.  However, the 
following “communications considerations” are set out in the briefing material:
… The ministry has been largely silent on G8/G20 and has deferred to 
ISU on security matters.
A designation under the PWPA could bring the Ministry, and more 
specifically the Minister to the fore in the public conversation on summits 
security.
The Minister could be criticized for invoking a piece of legislation –
designed to protect the province in time of war – as a means to increase 
police powers during the G20 summit.55
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Should there be criticism of police actions in the G20, the Minister would 
be vulnerable to criticism that the use of the PWPA contributed to the 
action.  
Invoking the Act could lead to the perception that police do not currently 
have the power to stop and search people coming into the interdiction 
zone.
If the use of the PWPA is perceived to be successful from a policing point 
of view, police services could begin asking the ministry to take similar 
steps for future events, which could lead to the perception that the 
Ministry is becoming more closely involved in public order police 
operations.
RECOMMENDATION: If the decision is made to designate under the 
PWPA, the communications strategy should be wholly reactive.  Strong 
messaging would need to be developed and the support of all ISU partners 
and the federal government should be secured.  
131 The briefing document also indicates that a designation would be a change from the 
Ministry’s current position of general non-involvement in the G20 and that there 
were no known previous instances of a designation of a public work occurring 
under the Act.  It also notes:
…It is possible that authority for these steps already exists under the 
common law or the FMIOA.  The presence or absence of a designation is 
unlikely to have any affect on operational planning for the G20.  
132 A number of options were also set out for the Minister.  It was understood that the 
Chief’s preferred option involved designating the entire interdiction zone as a 
public work, including private residences and offices.  It was noted that such a 
broad designation might attract significant criticism.  Another option would result 
in only the highways within the interdiction zone being designated as public works.  
A third option would see everything in the interdiction zone that was already a 
public work under the Act – including highways, sidewalks, bridges and railways, 
as well as a limited number of locations on the perimeter of the zone, which were 
not public works – designated for the purposes of the Act.  This option was seen as 
satisfying the Chief’s request as well as being less likely to attract criticism.  A 
fourth option was to deny the designation outright.  The one “con” listed to this
approach, which was not redacted from the materials we received, was that it 
“would be perceived as not supporting TPS [Toronto Police Service].”  56
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
133 The next steps outlined in the presentation included scheduling the regulation for 
consideration by the Cabinet’s Legislation and Regulations Committee by May 31, 
having the Minister sign off on the regulation and committee materials, and 
publishing the regulation on the government e-Laws site – which, it was noted,
could occur “shortly before the TPS erects the fence.”
134 We interviewed a number of individuals who attended the May 20 briefing and 
took part in earlier discussions relating to the Chief’s request.  The former 
Commissioner of Community Safety (currently the Deputy Minister
28
), who was in 
charge of continuity of government operations during the G20 summit, explained 
that during its internal discussions, the Ministry had considered the justification and 
necessity for the designation as well as the impacts on the civilian population.  He 
observed that the G20 was seen as an “unprecedented security event from a police 
perspective, from a political perspective and from an international perspective.”  
The world leaders who would be attending had all received “legitimate threats to 
their safety.”  Canada was at war with a country with terrorist affiliations, and an 
Ottawa bank had recently been fire-bombed, followed by threats of further 
violence.  In addition, Toronto had considerable infrastructure, was the centre of 
the Canadian banking industry, was adjacent to a nuclear facility, and had the 
largest population in Canada.  While the Commissioner emphasized the exceptional 
nature of the G20 summit and the need to ensure the safety of the dignitaries as 
well as the public, he also stressed that the designation of “public works” was 
viewed as more of a “backstop” to reinforce the powers already contained in the 
Public Works Protection Act and existing under the common law.  
135 An OPP superintendent who also represented the OPP on the ISU took part in the 
Minister’s briefing.  He advised us that he had promoted the need for training for 
frontline officers on the Public Works Protection Act.  He observed that the Act 
was “an old piece of provincial legislation,” and that “unless you were in a 
specialized area of policing,” officers would not be familiar with it, and in fact, 
“very, very few people would know that this legislation even exists.”  An internal 
Ministry email commenting on the briefing later that day confirmed that the 
Minister “liked” the OPP Superintendent’s suggestion of Toronto officers receiving 
training on the Act to ensure that “they act appropriately.”  The Commissioner of 
Community Safety informed us that at some point during the discussion of the 
regulation, he had spoken to the Chief about the need for officers to be familiar 
with the legislation.  He advised that he received assurances from the Chief in this 
regard.  He also obtained confirmation that the regulation would only be applied by 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
28
 For ease of reference in this report, this official will be referred to as the Commissioner of Community 
Safety. 57
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
police officers, and that the Chief had no intention of appointing civilian “guards” 
under the Act (the potential to appoint civilians to exercise the extraordinary 
powers under the Act was apparently a point of concern for some Ministry 
officials). 
136 By May 21, the Minister had signed off on the third option presented at the 
briefing, designating all those public works and a few other areas within the 
security perimeter, as public works.  This was viewed as a compromise on the 
Chief’s request.  By then, the Premier’s office had also been consulted and 
provided conditional approval.  A Ministry email recounting this discussion notes:
…[the Premier’s office] are fine with this moving forward, but wanted 
assurances that if there was a public outcry or if something went south on 
this, that [the Chief] would be able to publicly say that he requested this as 
he felt the TPS needed this designation.
137 According to a Ministry email, the Chief had provided assurance to the 
Commissioner of Community Safety that he was “prepared to publicly say that the 
TPS needed the PWPA designation.”   
138 The regulation went to Cabinet’s Legislation and Regulation Committee on May 31 
as initially planned.  The Ministry approval form prepared for the committee noted 
that the public interest in the regulation was “moderate” and the key stakeholders’ 
interest “very high.”  In the confidential briefing note prepared for the committee, 
in a section entitled “Stakeholder Consultations,” it was noted that the OPP, RCMP 
and Public Safety Canada were aware of the Toronto Police Service request for the 
regulation.  Under “contentious issues,” the concerns highlighted at the time of the 
Minister’s briefing were set out.  The “mitigation strategy” proposed was for the 
Ministry to be “low-key and reactive” and to “ensure support of all ISU partners 
and the federal government (Public Safety Canada).”  
139 We received various redacted versions of speaking notes prepared for the Minister 
in anticipation of his attendance at the committee.  The most comprehensive 
version of the notes emphasizes the need to ensure the safety of the G20 summit.  
They refer to the Public Works Protection Act as having been around since World 
War II, and to the fact that it “has never been invoked because we have not seen the 
need to do so in the past.”  The purpose of the regulation is generally described as
“simply to ensure police have clear and unquestioned authority to take whatever 
steps are necessary to ensure a successful summit.”  Regarding the regulation’s
impact on citizens, it is noted:58
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
We are not taking drastic measures to curtail individuals’ rights or to give 
police unlimited powers to arrest and detain people.  We are simply 
indicating to the public that there are good reasons for enforcing the 
interdiction zone restrictions and that we support the Toronto Police 
Service – and other members of the ISU – in their efforts to ensure the 
success of the G20 summit.  
140 In another version of the notes, it is emphasized that the regulation would not 
change the security measures that the Toronto Police Service intended to take. 
Figure 31: June 27 - Police search man near University Ave. and College St. (Photo by David King)
141 On June 2, the regulation was discussed and voted on at a special five-member 
meeting of Cabinet.  The following day, the Lieutenant Governor formally signed 
off on it.    
142 The Minister did not officially inform the Toronto Police Chief that the regulation 
had been issued until he wrote to him on June 15, saying:
I agree that there are various sources of legal authority to support the 
security perimeter.  I also recognize the desirability of having additional 
sources of legal authority to ensure clarity regarding the ability of the 
Toronto Police Services to take the steps that it will be taking. 59
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
143 While the regulation was intended to provide “clarity,” we found that Ministry 
officials did not share a uniform understanding of what it actually accomplished.  
Some were under the impression that the regulation designated the entire exterior 
security fence as the “public work,” while others indicated that it was the whole 
area within the fence, and still others explained that it pertained only to a few 
specific places in the security perimeter which would not otherwise have been 
subject to the Act.  A copy of the full regulation is found at Appendix C to this 
report.  The regulation appears, at first glance, to present a challenge to anyone 
without a formal education in land surveying.  Even the Commissioner of 
Community Safety acknowledged that it was an “articulation of lawyers who 
deemed that these places need to be designated,” and as such it was “quite 
complicated,” “confusing,” and easiest understood by reading along with a map of 
the area.   
A Public Work By Any Other Name is Still a Public Work
144 The first section of Regulation 233/10 does not actually purport to create any new 
areas as public works.  It essentially designates as public works the infrastructure 
for transportation, including highways, streets, railways and bridges as well as 
utility works, which were already public works under s. 1(a) of the Public Works 
Protection Act, and which fell within the geographic area described in Schedule 1 
to the regulation (the security perimeter).  To the extent that this section merely 
confirmed that the public works in the interdiction zone were public works, it 
appears to have been redundant.  However, the description then goes on to state 
“for greater certainty this includes every sidewalk in the area.”  The definition of a 
public work in the Act included any part of or structure incidental to a street, but 
did not specifically refer to sidewalks.  While sidewalks would likely be viewed as 
structures incidental to a street, this section of the regulation appears to have been 
intended to leave no doubt that this was the case. 
145 The second paragraph of the section provided that three places described in 
Schedule 2 were also public works for the purposes of the Act.  Two of these were 
described as an area “within five metres of a line drawn” from various geographic 
orientation points.  The third description does not contain any reference to “five 
metres.” A copy of a map, received from the Ministry, showing the three “public 
works designated places” is attached at Appendix D. 
146 The regulation provided that it was only to be in effect from June 21 through June 
27, 2010.  After that point, the three areas specified in section 2 would revert to 
their normal status.  However, anything that was a public work prior to the 60
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
regulation coming into effect would presumably retain its protected position under 
the Act after the regulation had expired. 
147 A Ministry email dated June 25 – after the controversy concerning the regulation 
had erupted – provides one of the better descriptions of what public works the 
regulation was intended to designate.  It refers to the public works covered by the 
regulation as comprising:
1. All streets and sidewalks inside the fence, i.e., all streets and sidewalks 
within the “interdiction zone.”
2. A five-metre strip inside the fence where the fence runs along two 
places that are not streets or sidewalks, specifically, land near a Rogers 
Centre parking lot and the land behind a building near the Rogers 
Centre.
3. The “moat” between union station and Front Street.
4. In terms of 1 above, the fence runs along the centre of some streets. 
The portion of the street inside the fence would be designated. The 
portion outside would not.
148 A number of senior Ministry officials we interviewed said that given the limited 
scope of the regulation, they did not view it as particularly intrusive or 
controversial. A senior government official explained that as only three discrete 
places were added as public works, representing gaps along the security perimeter, 
he didn’t perceive it as significant.  He proffered the opinion that had the Chief not 
misinterpreted the boundaries of the public works covered by the regulation, no one 
would likely have taken much issue with the regulation itself.
149 As for the identification and search powers that apply to public works, Ministry 
officials suggested that similar security measures are commonly encountered these 
days at airports and rock concerts. 
150 While the Ministry appears to have considered that the regulation’s impact on the 
public would be minimal, it recognized that the optics of using a war measures 
statute to assist the Toronto Police Service with G20 summit security were not 
necessarily ideal.  As one Ministry official later said in an internal email on June 
28:61
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December 2010
…even with hindsight, we would not have gone out proactively. We 
would have been the story pre-summit: “Province enacts war measures for 
TPS in advance of summit.”
The Sound of Silence
151 Consistent with the advice to the Minister at the May 20 briefing, the Ministry 
adopted a reactive communications strategy.  This strategy involved not 
communicating any information about the regulation publicly unless the Ministry 
was specifically asked about it.  In justifying the Ministry’s silence around the 
regulation, we were told by one Ministry official that it never pursues a proactive 
strategy in the case of regulations, and that Regulation 233/10 simply followed the 
standard course.  However, another Ministry official contradicted this information, 
telling us that at times it had announced regulations through press releases or public 
statements.  One official was quite candid, noting that keeping things quiet was 
normal, in the circumstances, since “a mixed reaction” to the regulation was 
expected. 
152 The Commissioner of Community Safety told us the Ministry’s reluctance to draw 
attention to the regulation was consistent with the fact that the province was not 
directly involved with the G20 summit, which was a federally organized event with 
the Integrated Security Unit in charge of security.  He indicated that it was really up 
to the ISU to decide whether or not to publicize information about the authority it 
was operating under.  However, from what we can surmise, the Ministry’s primary 
contact both prior to and after the enactment of the regulation was the Toronto 
Police Service rather than the ISU.
29
   While individual OPP, RCMP and Public 
Safety Canada members may have had some involvement during the Ministry’s 
review of the Chief’s request, the time period between the request and the issuance 
of the regulation was very short, and there is no record of there having been any 
formal consultation process engaging the ISU or other parties. 
153 There was some suggestion following the summit that the ISU had been the driving 
force behind the request for the public works designation.
30
However, the evidence 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
29
During its review of the regulation, the Ministry did consult with the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and 
Housing because a municipal police force was involved, and the Ministry of Economic Trade and 
Development to determine if business would be affected, which might require that the regulation be posted 
on the Ontario Regulatory Registry.
30
 According to an internal OPP media summary, the Chief referred to the regulation as the ISU’s 
legislation in a CFTO interview on June 30, and a Toronto Star article on July 10 reported that the ISU had 62
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
obtained during our investigation indicates that it was indeed the Toronto Police 
Service that led this initiative.  While some officials involved with the ISU were 
aware of the Toronto Police Chief’s request, it does not appear that the designation 
request nor the regulation were general knowledge within the Unit.  ISU 
spokespeople did not mention the Public Works Protection Act when specifically 
asked about their authority for the G20 security measures by the media in advance 
of the summit,
31
 and there was no reference to the Act or the regulation on the 
ISU’s website.  We found no Ministry records confirming that the ISU had been 
provided with official notification that the regulation had passed, and email 
exchanges amongst the ISU Public Affairs Communications Team (PACT) dating 
from June 24 suggest that they were completely unaware of the Act or the 
regulation until that day.
32
   In fact, on June 29, an ISU PACT official wrote to the 
Ministry, stating:
We at PACT didn’t know about the regulation until the story broke 
including the RCMP.  TPS kept it very tight and nobody from Ministry 
told us.  
154 On July 1, an OPP official wrote an email confirming that the regulation “was 
clearly a TPS request.”  Remarkably, when we spoke with the former RCMP 
official who had led the ISU steering committee, he said he was “gobsmacked” as 
he watched the Toronto Police Chief’s June 25 press conference from ISU 
headquarters at Barrie – and heard about the regulation for the first time.  
155 Although Regulation 233/10 affected a large segment of downtown Toronto, the 
Ministry made no attempt to consult city officials about the impact of the public 
works designation.  Ministry records indicate that the Commissioner of Community 
Safety had asked the Chief whether he had briefed City Hall.  However, a May 25 
Ministry email confirms that the Chief said he had not consulted Toronto council 
“due to time limits.”  During our investigation, city officials maintained that they 
too only learned of the regulation after it was reported in the news.  
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
requested that the Chief ask for the designation (Robyn Doolittle, “Chain of command questioned in G20” 
The Toronto Star (10 July 2010), online: The Toronto Star 
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/torontog20summit/article/834287--chain-of-command-questioned-ing20.)
31
 Adam Radwanski, “A Timeline on the G20 Five-metre rule that didn’t exist” The Globe and Mail (1 July 
2010), online: The Globe and Mail http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/adam-radwanski/atimeline-on-the-g20-five-metre-rule-that-didnt-exist/article1626001/.
32
 For instance, around 10 p.m. that evening, one RCMP official on the team asked another member, “Have 
you figured out what this Act is?”63
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
156 Aside from Ministry and Toronto Police Service officials, it appears that only 
isolated staff – predominantly lawyers from other organizations involved with G20 
planning – knew about the regulation, and that this information had not filtered up 
to the senior operational level of either the city or the ISU.  The Ministry appears to 
have taken a “hands-off” approach with respect to G20 security organizers, leaving 
it to the discretion of the Toronto Police Service to notify its ISU partners and 
others about the regulation.    
157 At the Minister’s briefing on May 20, it was suggested that the publication of the 
regulation should be timed to occur shortly before the perimeter fence was erected. 
One Ministry official told us that the relevant information supporting delaying 
publication was “privileged” and couldn’t be disclosed to us.  However, this 
recommendation to delay publication was likely related to concerns about keeping 
the location of the perimeter fence confidential for security reasons.  In support of 
this, we found a Ministry email of June 30 confirming that a low-key approach was 
taken to provide “sufficient time to finalize the exact perimeter … and allow TPS 
sufficient time to communicate the applicability of regulation to incident 
commanders and frontline officers.” 
158 The transcript of an exchange between the Minister’s Office and the Deputy 
Minister’s Office on June 7 contains this reference to the Ministry’s quiet 
approach:
…Following up on [our] conversation we had earlier about the Public 
Works designation.  Yes, we agree, everyone was on board with drawing 
out the actual release of that knowledge to the public for as long as what is 
reasonable.  So yeah, let’s not run out the door right away.  Yes, 
communicating quietly to [the Chief] so he can carry [on] with his 
planning is fine.  So long as we can stress as best we can that this should 
be kept under wraps until we are ready for it to be known to the public,
that would be great…”
Keeping Things Under Wraps
159 Statutes are passed by the Legislative Assembly, and are considered and debated in 
public view.  Generally, when new policing powers are created or existing powers 
are modified legislatively, it is done through this open process.  Subordinate 
legislation including orders-in-council and regulations is typically considered 
during confidential Cabinet sessions, and then officially signed off by the 
Lieutenant Governor.    64
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
160 The Ministry had initially considered using an order-in-council to accomplish the 
public works designation.  If it had taken this route, the designation might never 
have surfaced, since there is no requirement for these instruments to be published.  
Generally, regulations are confidential until they are filed with the Registrar of 
Regulations under the Legislation Act,
33
 at which point they are available for public 
inspection, provided someone is actually aware of their existence.  Once filed, 
regulations are posted on the government’s e-Laws website, and later printed in The 
Ontario Gazette. 
161 In the case of Regulation 233/10, although it received formal approval on June 3, it 
was not filed with the Registrar until June 14.  It took two more days for the 
regulation to be posted to the government e-Laws site.   At the last instant of June 
16, the public was deemed under the Legislation Act to have knowledge of 
Regulation 233/10 by virtue of its publication on e-Laws.  The regulation later 
appeared in the July 3 edition of The Ontario Gazette, but by then it was old news, 
and had already expired. 
162 While Regulation 233/10 was accessible on e-Laws by June 16, in order to find it, a 
member of the public would have had to have known about the site as well as the 
existence of the Public Works Protection Act, and then searched under the Act for 
the regulation.  Given its technical legal content, it is uncommon for members of 
the general public to be knowledgeable about e-Laws, and even more rare for them 
to scan it with any regularity.  Even lawyers tend to resort to the site only when 
they are looking for something specific.
163 While filing and publication of the regulation altered its legal character and 
provided technical notice to the public, it would have been highly unusual for 
anyone to have located and read the regulation before June 24, when Dave Vasey’s 
arrest brought it into the public spotlight.  Mr. Vasey had certainly never had 
occasion to review the e-Laws site before his arrest, and would not have known to 
look for the regulation if he had.  As Ministry counsel said in an internal email on 
June 28:
…it’s important to remember that filing the regulation itself would not 
have resulted in practical notice to the public at large.  Nobody is out there 
reviewing e-Laws on a daily basis looking for new regulations under the 
PWPA… once filed, though, it can no longer be considered confidential 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
33
 Proposed regulations may be posted on the Ontario Regulatory Registry if they are considered to have 
the potential of affecting businesses in the province, and it is in the public interest to publicize them before 
Cabinet has provided its approval.  We were advised that the Ministry determined Regulation 233/10 did 
not come within this category of regulation.65
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
in law.  The effect of filing is not really notice to the public, but rather it 
officially loses its status as confidential/privileged. 
164 The Ministry had been closely monitoring the media and social media sites for 
information on the summit.  There was a notable absence in the days leading up to 
the summit of any mention of the Public Works Protection Act or Regulation 
233/10.  In fact, on Wednesday, June 23, an article appeared
34
 reporting that there 
was no legislative support for security measures in the “yellow” interdiction zone.  
This prompted a Ministry counsel to send an email the next day, observing: “This is 
a heads-up for us to be ready from a communications point of view when the 
regulation becomes public knowledge.”  Another Ministry official suggested that 
the Toronto Police Service might wish to refer to the Public Works Protection Act
as one of the legislative tools available to it for security.  This sparked a frenetic
discussion within the Ministry about “touching base with the Toronto Police 
Service” to find out about their communications strategy.  Shortly thereafter, a 
Ministry official contacted the ISU Public Affairs Communications Team to 
facilitate a call with the Toronto Police Service concerning the Act.  The ISU 
representative duly contacted the Toronto Police, but in doing so, expressed that he 
wasn’t familiar with the Act that the Ministry was referring to.  
165 The Commissioner for Community Safety told our investigators that he had spoken 
with the Chief on Thursday, June 24, to confirm what communications route the 
Toronto Police intended to follow.  Ministry records suggest that the call took place 
around 3:50 p.m.  At that point it appears that both organizations were still content 
to maintain a “low-key approach” and refrain from making any public comments 
about the Act or regulation.  
166 At 3:54 p.m., a Ministry official alerted the Minister by email to the fact that the 
Toronto Police Service had been criticized about its searches, and observed, “I’m 
not sure this is what we anticipated in granting this to them.  It puts us in the 
limelight.”  This comment proved prescient – occurring, as it did, simultaneously 
with Mr. Vasey’s arrest.  
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
34
 Adam Radwanski, “When It Comes to Summit Security, Police Answer to No One” The Globe and Mail
(23 June 2010), online: The Globe and Mail http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/g8-
g20/opinion/when-it-comes-to-summit-security-police-answer-to-no-one/article1613960/ .66
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 32: June 26 - Demonstrator arrested near the fence. (Photo by Lefteris Pitarakis, AP)
167 After the ISU Public Affairs Communications Team was alerted to the Act’s 
existence, it also conferred with Toronto Police officials about communications 
strategy.  In an email at 4:19 p.m., a member of the team noted:
I spoke to TPS and the Chief is very… very clear that they will not be 
speaking to that PWP Act nor will any of our media officers.  Thus far no 
calls so no “pressure.”
168 By 5 p.m. that day, the Law Union’s Movement Defence Committee had issued an
urgent warning on its website, summarizing the Act for protesters.  A while later, 
the Canadian Civil Liberties Association posted similar advice.  The Ministry 
picked up on this Internet communication, and braced for the inevitable media 
calls.  The first inquiry about the regulation was received around 8 p.m. that 
evening from a reporter based at Queen’s Park.  67
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
169 A couple of hours later, a member of the ISU’s Public Affairs Communications
Team predicted that the “issue” of officers using a “specially granted regulation” to 
“challenge people for ID, etc.” would “gather steam,” and suggested to the Toronto 
Police Service that it “would be a good idea to brief officers on the sensitivity” of 
this “emerging issue.”  
170 Before the night had ended, media reports were circulating about the Public Works 
Protection Act and the G20 regulation.  By Friday morning, the Ministry was 
receiving inquiries from reporters as well as members of the public about the 
“sweeping police powers” and the “secret law” operating in the security zone. 
Going South at the Summit
171 In the face of media interest in the regulation, the Ministry continued to abide by its 
reactive strategy, responding to reporters one at a time. 
172 While some Ministry documents refer to Regulation 233/10 as giving the Toronto 
Police Service “additional legal authority” to enforce security in the interdiction 
zone, the Ministry downplayed the effect of the designation in its communications 
with the media.  The Ministry emphasized to reporters that the regulation was 
passed in response to an extraordinary request by the Chief, didn’t create additional 
powers for police, but simply defined property, and that the powers only applied to 
those trying to cross the perimeter and enter the designated zone.  The Ministry also 
clarified that the regulation was not a “secret law,” but enacted in the same way as 
other government regulations.   
173 That Friday morning, the Ministry believed that it was on top of the media 
situation, only to have things shift when the Chief held his press conference at 11
a.m.  There, the Chief remarked that “the five-metre zone around the fence is for 
the protection of the security barrier.”  This in turn led the media to understand and 
mistakenly report that the security zone extended five metres out from the 
perimeter fence. 68
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 33: June 25 - Toronto Police Chief William Blair speaks with reporters. 
(Photo by Robyn Doolittle, Toronto Star)
174 The Chief’s comment caught the Ministry by surprise.  The Commissioner of 
Community Safety told us that the “last thing” the Ministry had wanted was for 
Regulation 233/10 to be applied “beyond the fence.”  He said he called the Chief to 
find out what was going on.  By the time they connected, the Chief was already 
aware of his blunder and assured the Commissioner that he was taking steps to 
ensure his officers were properly informed about the scope of the Public Works 
Protection Act.  The Commissioner told our investigators that he was left with the 
impression after this call that the Chief would correct the misstatement publicly.   
175 By Friday afternoon, some Ministry officials believed it was time to change 
direction and issue a clarification of the regulation in order to set the record 
straight.  Communications staff drafted a press release, including the following 
information:
The G20 is an unprecedented event for Toronto, and has brought unique 
circumstances and challenges for the Toronto Police Service.  In making 
the regulation, the Ontario government responded to a request from 
Toronto Police Service to designate the security zone a public work under 
the Act.
The temporary regulation, which expires on June 28, only applies to 
individuals wishing to enter the security zone.  It does not authorize police 
officers to require individuals to submit to searches on roads and 
sidewalks outside the zone. 69
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
176 The draft also contained this quote from the Minister:
This regulation is in place to ensure that the police have clear, legal 
authority to undertake certain security measures to keep the community 
safe and maintain public order.  Authorization is limited and applies only 
to those seeking to enter the security zone.     
177 The Ministry was careful in drafting the release to avoid drawing attention to the 
fact that the Act was “a war measures piece of legislation” and to keep it at a “high 
level.”  Later that day, Ministry officials began redrafting the press release as a 
Minister’s Statement, and using the information in the statement to field media 
inquiries.  By the end of the day, the Ministry had decided to scrap the idea of 
going public altogether.  As one official explained it to our Office, the Ministry 
believed that it had contained the situation.  It had only received one media call 
asking specifically about the five-metre rule, the news cycle appeared to have 
finished, and the Ministry believed it had “fixed” things through its individual 
media responses.  
178 Friday, June 25 was also the same day that the Canadian Civil Liberties 
Association and other applicants were partially successful through their court 
application in obtaining restrictions on the Toronto Police Service’s use of longrange acoustic devices.
35
  While buoyed by this result, the CCLA was deeply 
concerned about the passage and effect of Regulation 233/10.  The organization 
wrote to the Minister that day seeking clarification of the Ministry’s intentions and 
expressing alarm that:
… the public was not in any way put on notice that the Public Works 
Protection Act would be used as legal authority to detain, question, search 
and arrest individuals on public streets and sidewalks.
179 In its letter to the Minister, the CCLA noted that “the powers granted by the 
legislation significantly depart from common understandings of what individuals’ 
constitutionally guaranteed rights are on a public street or sidewalk,” and was 
highly critical of the lack of consultation and general secrecy surrounding the 
passing of Regulation 233/10:
Secretly drafting and passing regulations that substantially erode 
democratic rights, and then enforcing these new laws without giving the 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
35
Canadian Civil Liberties Association v. Toronto (City) Police Service, [2010] O.J. No. 2715, 2010 
ONSC 3525; supplemental reasons at [2010] O.J. No. 2716, 2010 ONSC 3698 (Ont. Sup. Ct.) (QL).70
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
public or legal community any warning, circumvents democratic 
accountability and puts innocent individuals at risk of criminal arrest and 
conviction.     
It is quite clear that the government has taken steps to significantly 
decrease individuals’ legal rights on public property in a manner that is 
quite divergent with common understandings of civil liberties.  The failure 
to cite this novel and highly controversial legal authority, or to clarify the 
government’s position regarding legal limits on individuals’ constitutional 
rights is unprecedented.  We urge you to investigate this matter.  In our 
view, Torontonians have been misled. 
180 While the Toronto Police Service had stressed that it did not want the ISU speaking 
publicly about the Act, ISU’s communications team had also been caught off guard 
by news of its existence, and were left scrambling to prepare for potential inquiries.  
Recognizing the constitutional issues that this regulation posed, on Friday, June 25,
a federal government lawyer recommended that the ISU adopt media lines that 
would pass the buck on questions about the constitutional validity of the regulation 
to the province.  Those draft questions and answers for media responses read: “Q:
Do you think use of this regulation by the TPS is constitutional? A: You may wish 
to address this question to the Government of Ontario….” The federal proposal 
embarrassed Ontario officials.  After reviewing the draft media lines late that night,
a Ministry counsel wrote in an email, “I don’t think this kind of messaging created 
by federal lawyers helps Ontario in the least.”  In the end, the ISU media lines 
finalized on Saturday, June 26 simply said: “Q: Do you think use of this regulation 
by the TPS is constitutional?  A: Those kinds of questions are ultimately settled by 
the courts….”
181 There was still no public clarification by the Chief on Saturday, June 26.  In 
addition, despite the ongoing efforts of Ministry officials to explain the scope of the 
regulation to individual journalists, the media continued to mistakenly refer to the 
“five-metre rule.”  The Ministry’s monitoring of social media also disclosed that 
people were being stopped and searched by police under the Public Works 
Protection Act well outside of the security zone. 71
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 34: June 26 - Stack of newspapers from June 25 with headline “Sweeping police powers 
demanded by Blair.” (Photo by Alfred Ng)
182 While the Chief did not make any public announcement to correct his earlier 
comments about the “five-metre rule,” he did provide the Ministry with evidence 
that it had been clarified for Toronto Police officers.  Around 11 a.m. Saturday 
morning, the Chief provided the Commissioner with a copy of an email containing 
advice from the Chief’s legal counsel that the Act “does NOT extend outside the 
fence,” as well as a document containing revised instructions being given to 
officers with respect to the Act.  The instructions summarized the Act and the 
regulation and detailed where the powers under the Act could be exercised:
The PWPA and the Regulation do not confer authority on a police officer 
to compel people to identify themselves, be searched and be exposed to 
arrest for failing to comply other than in situations where a person is 
entering or trying to enter the designated area.  The area designated by 
the Regulation as a public work does not extend outside the boundary of 
the fence.
In general, this covers an attack on the fence line. 72
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
183 The instructions also stated:
With respect to search provisions, as always, officers must be able to 
articulate their reasons for carrying out the search such as observations or 
description of circumstances that lead the officer to believe the person 
may pose a threat to the public work.  As in any case, the search must be 
authorized by law, the law must be reasonable and the manner in which 
the search is carried out is reasonable. 
184 The instructions ended with a list of “reasons for utilizing the Act and obtaining a 
designation for the IZ [interdiction zone] and fence.”  This section referenced the 
fact that police have always had authority under the Act to protect public works, 
while at the same time emphasizing that the authority was only to be exercised in 
the interdiction zone for the purpose of ensuring the safety and security of 
individuals lawfully within the zone as well as to secure the fence.  The list also 
included reference to public messages about threats to “tear down the fence,” and 
indicated that the intention of the regulation was not to limit peaceful protest near 
the perimeter.  
185 It is not clear how or when these amended instructions were transmitted to frontline 
officers.  Police obviously received some training on the Public Works Protection 
Act prior to the summit, since the Act had been cited as a basis for searches in the 
days leading up to it.  The information we obtained during our investigation also 
indicates that some officers continued to apply the Act well beyond the security 
perimeter even after the scope of Regulation 233/10 had been clarified. 
186 By the afternoon of June 26, the controversy over Regulation 233/10 and the “fivemetre rule” had taken a back seat to the furor incited by the “black bloc” rampage 
and the mass arrests and detentions.  It wasn’t until June 29, after the summit had 
ended and the public works designation had expired, that the Chief acknowledged 
that the “five-metre rule” had never existed.  At that point, the story of the day was 
that the police had deliberately misrepresented the boundary of the designated 
public works to, in the Chief’s words, “keep the criminals out.” 73
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 35: June 25 - Masked protesters prepare to march on Carlton St.
(Photo by David King)
187 As the aftershocks of the G20 summit weekend subsided, the Ministry turned its 
attention to damage control concerning its role in enabling the unprecedented use 
of the Public Works Protection Act. 
Tell Me No Secrets, I’ll Tell You No Lies
188 At his June 29 press conference, the Toronto Police Chief spoke forcefully in 
defence of the security action undertaken during the summit.  To deflect criticism 
that the legal authorities used to police the security zone had been kept secret, he 
stressed that the city had taken out advertisements in several languages and 
distributed more than 1 million flyers explaining the authority applying during the 
summit and what citizens could expect in the security zone. 
189 The next day, the Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services wrote 
to two newspapers, similarly emphasizing that information about searches in the 
security zone had been widely publicized through public notices, including 
advertisements in local newspapers and on the City of Toronto’s G20 website.  In 
the days following the summit, the government continued to refer to these 
advertisements and website notices to support its position that information about 
the impact of the regulation had been publicly available in advance of the summit.  
During our investigation, the Commissioner of Community Safety also indicated 74
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December 2010
that the Ministry thought the effect of the regulation had been clearly articulated 
through handouts, leaflets and websites.  
190 One of the primary sources for local information about the G20 summit was the 
City of Toronto.  City officials had indeed engaged in extensive public outreach in 
advance of the Summit.   
191 On May 31, 2010, the City of Toronto commenced delivery of 1 million copies of 
the summer issue of the its publication Our Toronto, containing an article entitled
“What to expect during the G20 – June 26 & 27, 2010.”  The article discussed the 
security zones and traffic and public transportation relevant to the summit.  At the 
time, it was anticipated that increased security would not affect movement in the 
security zone until Friday evening, and the article noted:
The Toronto Police Service hopes that members of the public will be able 
to move freely throughout the fenced perimeter until the evening of 
Friday, June 25.  
192 The city also distributed some 10,000 flyers to residents in the affected area.  These 
contained general information about security for the summit and expected effects 
on traffic.  
193 Neither the article nor the flyers mentioned the Public Works Protection Act,
Regulation 233/10 or the possibility that citizens might be required to identify 
themselves and submit to searches if they wished to enter the security zone from 
June 21 through June 27.  City officials told our investigators that the information 
in the article and the flyers had come from or been approved by the ISU, and that 
the city had been completely unaware in preparing these documents that the Chief 
of Police had requested a designation under the Public Works Protection Act.
194 The city had also prepared advertisements about the G20 summit for local 
newspapers in consultation with the ISU.  City officials advised us that on June 13, 
the Toronto Police Service contacted city communications staff and asked that the 
following information be inserted into their G20 advertisements:
…based on the discretion of the officer and the circumstances presented, 
anyone requesting access to the security perimeter may be subject to 
search.  Vehicles will be subject to an external search using a mirror to 
access the undercarriage and trunks will be searched.  These searches are 
being done for security purposes, to assist police with providing a safe 
environment for the summit.75
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December 2010
195 Apparently, no explanation was given as to why the police felt this additional 
information was necessary, and at that point, it was too late to change the 
advertisement, which had already been finalized and distributed for release.  The 
original version of the advertisement, which did not mention searches, ran from 
June 16 to June 25 in the ethnic press in 11 different languages.  It also appeared in 
the Toronto Star and Toronto Sun on June 16 and in Metroland community papers
on June 17.  
196 A revised advertisement including the additional wording proposed by the Toronto 
Police appeared for the first time on June 19 in the Toronto Star.  It later ran in both 
the Toronto Star and Toronto Sun on June 21, and again in the Toronto Star on 
June 26 and 27.  The amended version of the advertisement only appeared in 
English.  Similar information was posted on the City of Toronto’s website.
197 As noted previously, the ISU’s website, which contained information for 
demonstrators about the G20 summit, did not refer to the Public Works Protection 
Act, Regulation 233/10 or set out the police powers conferred by the Act.  
However, at some point, the ISU site was updated to provide a link to the City of 
Toronto’s revised advertisement.  The Toronto Police Service website did not 
contain any information on the Act or Regulation 233/10.
198 By the evening of Saturday, June 26, the Ministry was desperately seeking to 
defend its actions in relation to Regulation 233/10 and searching for evidence that 
the public had been notified about the increased security measures at the summit. 
To this end, a teleconference with city officials was scheduled for the next day.  
The discussion that took place on June 27 appears to have been rather heated.  As 
one witness described it, city officials made it clear that they had no knowledge of 
Regulation 233/10 at the time the advertising was done, and that it would be 
“disingenuous” to suggest that the advertisements were intended to give “any kind 
of notification” about it.  This version of events is supported by an email sent later 
that day to the Ministry by a city official who had participated in the meeting, in 
which he stated:
the City’s communications related to the G20 were designed to augment 
and supplement the lead communication role of the RCMP-led ISU 
communications group … the communications staff that worked on G20
… learned of the regulation when it was reported in the media.  Therefore, 
no link in any manner – either direct or indirect – should [be made] 
between the regulations and the City’s advertisement or communications
… none of the City’s communications should be characterized as having 
served as “notice” or “notification” of the regulation… we do not see how 
pointing out the City’s public communications in a discussion of the Act 76
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December 2010
or regulations serves the objective of explaining the existing powers in the 
Act or the new regulation.
199 The revised advertisement referred to the possibility that people might be searched 
when accessing the security perimeter.  Given that the advertisement was received 
two days before the Chief received formal confirmation that the regulation had 
passed, it is impossible to take seriously any suggestion that it was intended to give 
notice of Regulation 233/10 or the provisions of the Public Works Protection Act. 
Aside from making no reference to the Act or regulation, the information about the 
scope of the police powers under the Act is also too incomplete to serve that 
purpose.  There is no information about the identification requirement, nor is there 
reference to the possibility that individuals could not only be turned away but 
actually arrested for merely declining to provide identification or to submit to a 
search.  Nor is there information about the time frame during which the increased 
security measures would apply.
200 In the days after the summit, Ministry communications staff continued to respond 
defensively to media inquiries.  In one case, an official advised a reporter –
inaccurately: “Our regulation did not give police one iota of extra power that they 
did not have prior to the regulation.”  In another, a government spokesperson 
advised that the application of the regulation by police over the weekend was 
operational in nature, and the Ministry could not interfere in operational decisions, 
and also stressed that “the language of the regulation is very clear.”  In contrast, the 
same official acknowledged that the regulation was “confusing,” but dismissed its 
significance, advising incorrectly that there had never been any arrests under the 
Public Works Protection Act.
36
  
201 The mantra that Regulation 233/10 did not provide police with any new 
powers or broad authority and that it was passed in the same manner as all 
other Ontario regulations was frequently repeated by Ministry staff, and 
quoted by the Premier’s office in responding to various inquiries and 
complaints.  
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
36
 The Ministry later determined that there had been two arrests under the Act.77
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 36: June 27 - Protester arrested at Queen St. and Spadina Ave. 
(Photo by Rob Kittredge)
202 The Ministry also rejected any suggestion that it should reconsider the use 
of the Public Works Protection Act.  An internal Ministry communication 
on June 29 stressed:
If pressed about calls for a legislative review… we have no plans at this 
time to open up the Act…. a regulation is NOT a legislative amendment or 
a public process.  
203 As outrage over the events relating to the G20 summit continued, serving as fodder 
for media stories and protests, the Integrated Security Unit partners also considered 
how they should respond.  While it appears there was some discussion amongst the 78
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
members of the ISU steering committee about holding a joint press conference to 
address issues arising from the summit, the communication breakdown around 
Regulation 233/10 was one of a number of issues that prevented the ISU partners 
from presenting a united public front.  A July 1 OPP internal email recounted a 
discussion between OPP and RCMP officials concerning the proposed press 
conference, in which it was agreed that it would not be a good idea to participate.  
The author of the email offered a number of reasons:
TPS has made many public mistakes over the last 72 hours…
They have been caught misrepresenting the weapons they displayed at the 
press conference.  Not G20-related.  
They have misrepresented who initiated the PWPA.  Blaming the ISU 
when it was clearly a TPS request. 
The TPS member of the steering committee was not present during critical 
periods. 
If a joint press conference were to be held, the questions would be very 
direct and we would either be forced to contradict TPS in front of the 
media or by silence tacitly endorse what they say.
The public has largely supported police security operations for G20.  What 
is not supported is the actions by TPS and the inconsistencies of answers 
they continue to provide…
204 While initially the Ministry maintained its self-protective stance, new 
insight was achieved in the face of continuing public pressure.  On July 2, 
the Premier expressed regret for the confusion that the regulation had 
created and acknowledged that the government should have done a better 
job in clarifying it after it was mischaracterized.
37
  
205 By July 7, the Minister too had acknowledged that the Ministry could have been 
more aggressive in getting the message out after the Chief misspoke about the 
“five-metre rule.”  He reflected in hindsight:
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
37 Maria Babbage, “Dalton McGuinty admits he could have done better but offers no apology for G20 
confusion” The Toronto Star (2 July 2010), online: The Toronto Star 
http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/torontog20summit/article/831570--dalton-mcguinty-admits-he-couldhave-done-better-but-offers-no-apology-for-g20-confusion .79
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
There’s absolutely no doubt that there was that lack of clarity, and had we 
put out a statement immediately, we probably would have been able to 
handle this a little bit better.
38
206 In his July 29 response to the Canadian Civil Liberties Association’s June 25 letter 
concerning Regulation 233/10, the Minister emphasized that the regulation was 
intended to provide greater legal certainty regarding the authority of the police to 
take certain measures to help with respect to the security zone.  However, he 
acknowledged that “in hindsight, it could have been better communicated.”
207 On September 2, the Toronto Police Chief also publicly recognized that he should 
have taken steps sooner to stop the mass arrests on June 26.
39
208 As civil rights groups continued to rail against the conduct of law enforcement 
officials during the summit, including the use of Regulation 233/10; as a surfeit of 
complaints were filed and lawsuits were commenced; and as lawyers and 
academics waded in to question the constitutionality of the Public Works 
Protection Act, the Ministry reconsidered the advisability of continuing to stand 
behind the ancient war measures legislation.  By September 22, the Ministry 
retreated from its uncompromising support for the Act.  On that day, the 
government announced that the Public Works Protection Act would be subject to a 
review, this time in consultation with lawyers, police, civil liberties groups and 
other stakeholders.  The newly minted Minister of Community Safety and 
Correctional Services remarked:
40
We need to make sure our laws reflect the security concerns and values of 
our society today.  
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
38
“No more G20 Summits in Toronto: McGuinty” Canadian Press (7 July 2010), online: CBC News 
http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/07/07/g20-mcguinty.html#ixzz0t61X0yvR .
39
Kate Allen “Police made mistakes in G20 tactics, Chief admits for first time” The Globe and Mail (3 
September 2010), online: The Globe and Mail 
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/toronto/police-made-mistakes-in-g20-tactics-chief-admitsfor-first-time/article1694815/.
40
 The former Minister was transferred to the post of Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing effective 
August 18, 2010.80
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Figure 37: July 10 -Demonstration at University Ave. and College St.  (Photo by Jackman Chiu)
209 While some Ministry officials have acknowledged in retrospect that they should 
have issued a statement of some kind when things “spun out of control,” it is 
disturbing that they also appear to have been somewhat baffled by the “fuss” that
Regulation 233/10 generated.  As the former Deputy Minister observed on June 28:
I think this has become an issue unexpectedly.  Who would have thought a 
70-[year]-old piece of legislation would create such a stir. 
210 A review of Ministry emails rehashing events in the days after the summit suggests 
that insiders were initially prepared to deflect responsibility for the Regulation 
233/10 fiasco.  Those emails focus much of the blame for criticism of the Ministry 
on the Chief’s public relations gaffe, and on “an inattentive media” which had 
failed to notice the regulation on e-Laws and continued to report inaccurately on 
the “five-metre rule” even after it was clarified by the Ministry.  Ministry officials 
did not appear to have been prepared to shoulder any blame for promoting the use 
of the Act during the summit or for the unwise consultation and communications 
strategy adopted in relation to Regulation 233/10.  
211 The Ministry’s more recent change of heart concerning review of the Act suggests 
that sober second thought may have led to the realization that assisting the Toronto 81
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December 2010
Police Service through resorting to martial law might not have been the wisest 
course of action. 
Questionable Power
212 It is not surprising that Ontario is the only province to have war measures 
legislation remaining on the books.  The powers conferred on peace officers by the 
Public Works Protection Act are stunning in their compass and are worth reviewing 
here.  Under the Act, when a building or place qualifies as a public work, police 
may require anyone attempting to enter to identify themselves and to explain why 
they need entry, “in writing or otherwise.”  They may also search such persons and 
their vehicles without warrant and refuse permission to enter, as well as use force to 
achieve this.  Most significantly, those who neglect or refuse to comply with a 
demand or direction made by a peace officer for information, or who neglect or 
refuse to submit to a demand that they be searched, commit an offence and are 
liable not only to a fine of $500 but to imprisonment of up to two months.  In this 
era of the Charter, these provisions appear sorely out of place.  Ontarians are 
ordinarily free to enter public spaces and buildings and to walk the streets.  
213 Not surprisingly, after the events of June 2010, many have raised serious and valid 
questions about the constitutionality of the Public Works Protection Act in 
connection with public works other than prominent buildings, and specifically in 
relation to the manner that it was employed at the G20 summit.  Indeed, the OPP in 
rejecting use of the Act during the G8 summit, opined that “it would not likely 
stand up to a constitutional challenge,” and at least one federal lawyer advising the 
Integrated Security Unit appeared eager to leave it to the Ministry to provide 
constitutional justifications for employing it during the G20 summit.
214 I cannot ignore these concerns.  There are serious questions that arise about the 
legality of the regulation that are central to the reasonableness of the decision to 
enact it.  I appreciate that I am not a judge and that it is uncommon for the Ontario
Ombudsman to be offering conclusions about what the law requires, but in addition 
to determining whether the conduct I investigate is “unreasonable, unjust or 
oppressive,” I am required by the Ombudsman Act to form an opinion as to whether 
that conduct appears to be “contrary to law” or whether it is “in accordance with 
the provision of any Act that is or may be unreasonable, unjust, oppressive, or 
improperly discriminatory.”  In discharging my mandate in this investigation, I am 
therefore required to offer my opinion to the Ministry and the government of 
Ontario not only about the reasonableness of the measures taken, but also about 
their apparent legality. 82
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
215 The place to begin is with the obvious constitutional questions.  I will then explore 
the more basic question of whether the statutory authority to enact this regulation 
even existed.
Don’t Fence Me In
216 The Public Works Protection Act was subject to an unsuccessful Charter challenge 
in the case of R. v. Campanella.
41
Ms. Campanella questioned the constitutional 
validity of the search and seizure powers contained in section 3(b), specifically in 
the context of a courthouse search that was conducted at the John Sopinka 
Courthouse in Hamilton.  Visitors to that courthouse are required to subject 
themselves to a weapons search.  They must pass through metal detectors and have 
their bags inspected.  When Ms. Campanella’s bag was searched, marijuana was 
found.  She argued at her drug possession trial that the search was unconstitutional 
and that the discovery of the marijuana should therefore be thrown out. 
217 Under Charter authority, a search is unconstitutional unless it is authorized by law.  
The search of Ms. Campanella met this requirement because the John Sopinka 
Courthouse is a provincial building that falls within the definition of a “public 
work” under the Public Works Protection Act.  As a result, “guards” and other 
peace officers are authorized by law, specifically by section 3(b) of the Act, to 
conduct warrantless searches of those who are attempting to enter.  This finding did 
not entirely resolve the issue, however.  Even a legal search will be unconstitutional 
if the law authorizing that search is unreasonable.  This is what Ms. Campanella 
focused on.  She argued that it is unreasonable for the statute to permit warrantless 
random searches at a courthouse door.  The Ontario Court of Appeal disagreed. 
The court cited the history of violence and threats experienced by justice system 
participants, including in courthouses, and held that it was reasonable to counter 
such threats by permitting those attempting to enter a courthouse to be searched 
randomly for weapons without warrant. 
218 As important as the decision in R. v Campanella is, the case does not determine the 
constitutional validity of all of the provisions of the Public Works Protection Act 
for all purposes.  Campanella had to do solely with whether section 3(b) of the 
statute contravened the constitutional right to be free from unreasonable search and 
seizure.  The court’s decision emphasized that the constitutional reasonableness of 
searches varies with context, and the case dealt only with courthouse searches for 
weapons where there was evidence-based concern for public safety, the security 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
41
R. v. Campanella, supra note 18.83
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
screening process was readily apparent, those choosing to leave rather than undergo 
screening were free to do so and all those without prior security clearance were 
equally required to submit to a search.  More importantly, the case has nothing to 
do with other kinds of constitutional challenges, such as freedom of expression 
challenges.
219 What is directly at issue here is the constitutional validity of Regulation 233/10.  
Regardless of the constitutional validity of the statute under which it was passed, if 
the purpose or effect of Regulation 233/10 was to contravene one of the rights or 
freedoms guaranteed by the Charter, it would be unconstitutional unless it can be 
defended by the government of Ontario as a justifiable limitation on the relevant 
Charter right or freedom. 
Figure 38: June 26 - Police at the fence near King St. West and University Ave. 
(Photo by George Tulcsik)
220 It is section 2(b) of the Charter, the “freedom of expression,” that was implicated 
by the passage of Regulation 233/10.  The concept of “freedom of expression” is 
widely conceived under the Charter.  Any attempt to communicate information 
other than by violence is protected.
42
This aggressive constitutional freedom was 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
42
Irwin Toy Ltd. v Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927 at para. 42.84
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
entrenched in the Charter to promote democracy and good governance by opening 
channels of communication on matters of government policy, including through 
protest.  The right to protest is so important that the Supreme Court of Canada has 
recognized that not only is expressive activity protected, “so too is the right to such 
activity in certain public locations,”
43
 including the streets of our communities.
44
Regulation 233/10 was passed to regulate protest and therefore implicated the 
freedom of expression guaranteed in section 2(b) of the Charter.  Did it infringe or 
deny that freedom, either in its purpose or in its effect? 
221 There is no fair basis for suggesting that the Ministry’s purpose in recommending 
the passage of Regulation 233/10 was to infringe or deny freedom of expression.  
The Ministry’s stated purpose in promoting the regulation was to assist the Toronto 
Police Service in having clear and consistent authority for maintaining the security 
perimeter.  More fundamentally, the regulation had the laudable purpose of 
protecting participants from harm either from terrorist enemies or from protesters.
As indicated, violence or the threat of violence by anyone, terrorist or protester, is 
not a protected form of free speech.
45
222 Still, Regulation 233/10 did have the effect of limiting enjoyment of the 
constitutional right of freedom of expression, even though the Toronto Police 
Service has asserted that in requesting that the Ministry assist it in obtaining 
Regulation 233/10, it had no intention of limiting peaceful protest near the security 
perimeter.
223 The whole point in protecting freedom of expression is to permit messages to be 
communicated.  By creating a security perimeter that separated protesters from 
participants, the ability of protesters to communicate directly with those they 
wished to influence was infringed, if not denied.  The constitutional freedom of 
expression also protects the right to communicate in public places where one would 
expect the constitutional protection of free speech, such as public streets. 
Regulation 233/10 denied protesters access to public streets where democratic 
discourse would ordinarily be expected and permitted.  On the test provided for by 
the Supreme Court of Canada, Regulation 233/10 therefore infringed upon freedom 
of expression and would have been constitutionally invalid unless the government 
of Ontario was able to demonstrate that it was a justifiable limitation on that 
freedom. 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
43
Greater Vancouver Transportation Authority v Canadian Federation of Students – British Columbia 
Component, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 295 at para. 27.
44
Montreal (City) v 2952-1366 Quebec Inc., [2005] S.C.J. No. 63 (QL).
45
 Supra note 42 at para. 42.85
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
224 In order to be justifiable, Regulation 233/10 would have to have satisfied the multifaceted test established by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v Oakes.
46
  That is, it 
must have been (1) prescribed by law, (2) enacted for a pressing and substantial 
concern, and (3) it must pass a three-part proportionality test. 
225 Standard (1), the prescribed by law test, is obviously satisfied.  A regulation is, by 
definition, a “law.”  The limits imposed by Regulation 233/10 on freedom of 
expression were therefore “prescribed by law.” 
226 It is equally certain that standard (2) was met.  The interests pursued by Regulation 
233/10, including the security of participants at the G20 summit, were pressing and 
substantial.  There has been an established history of violence and threats of 
violence at similar summits internationally and in Canada, making it imperative 
that participants be protected.
227 The key issue is whether the security perimeter that was established and the police 
powers triggered by Regulation 233/10 could pass the three-part test of 
proportionality. The first part of this test is obviously satisfied.  In order to meet 
this requirement, the decision to erect a security perimeter for controlling access 
must be a rational way of protecting the security of the participants.  As 
demonstrated by the R. v. Knowlton
47
decision, which used common law police 
powers to permit a security perimeter to be established – and as supported by 
common sense – controlling physical access to at-risk individuals is an important 
means of ensuring protection.  Giving police officers extensive powers of search, 
detention and arrest may be controversial but it is not pointless.  There is a rational 
connection between the goal and the strategy.
228 The second distinct proportionality standard requires that the law in question must 
be “minimally impairing.”  The idea is that where it is necessary to limit a 
constitutional right, the right should be limited only as far as necessary to achieve
the relevant goal, which must be pressing and substantial. The pertinent questions,
as I see them, are whether the nature of the barrier was more intrusive than it 
needed to be, and whether it was necessary to give police the extensive powers 
conferred by the Public Works Protection Act in order to ensure the security of 
participants. 
229 On the first question, the barrier was transparent, permitting protesters and 
participants who were in physical proximity to it to see each other.  It would be 
difficult to focus on the design of the fence in arguing disproportion.  It is also 
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46
R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103.
47
Supra note 23.86
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December 2010
possible that a court would defer to the judgment of security officials on the issue 
of whether the security zone was larger than required.  It is likely that the actual 
perimeter supported by Regulation 233/10 would be found to be minimally 
impairing.
Figure 39: June 8 - The fence along Lower Simcoe St. near Bremner Blvd. 
(Photo by Tomasz Bugajski)
230 The second question is the problematic one.  Was it really necessary to confer the 
police powers created by the Public Works Protection Act, exercisable in the 
protest context, in order to protect G20 participants?  I have serious reservations 
about this.  Security could have been provided by enabling peace officers to deny 
entry to individuals for security reasons and to search those who were entering for 
weapons.  Yet section 3(c) empowered peace officers to “refuse permission to any 
person to enter a public work” and imposed no express limits on why access could
be refused.  This is unlike the Federal Foreign Missions and International 
Organizations Act, which empowers the RCMP to deny entry “for the purpose of 
carrying out its responsibilities under subsection (1)” which is described as “to 
ensure the security for the proper functioning of any intergovernmental 
conference.”  The powers to deny entry conferred by the Public Works Protection 
Act therefore seem to go farther than required because there are no criteria limiting 
the discretionary power of the peace officers.  Unless a court is prepared to hold 
that it is implicit in the statute that the power to exclude must be exercised solely 
for security purposes, the authority contained in clause 3(c) would likely be 87
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December 2010
constitutionally overbroad and incapable of supporting a justifiable limit on 
freedom of expression.
231 The most significant challenge in attempting to justify Regulation 233/10 in the 
face of a freedom of expression challenge, however, arises from the combined 
effect of sections 3 and 5 of the Public Works Protection Act, which Regulation 
233/10 triggers.  Those provisions empower peace officers to arrest protesters who 
refuse or neglect to answer questions when trying to enter either a “public work” or 
its “approaches.”  Surely it would be enough in protecting participants to empower 
peace officers to prevent the entry of such persons without arresting them.  It 
strikes me to be a disproportionate interference with the protesters’ freedoms to 
permit their arrest for failing to give good reason for entering, when simply 
denying them entry would be sufficient.  This would leave them free to protest 
outside of the fenced area instead of languishing in a lockup.  I therefore have 
serious doubts about whether this essential part of the Oakes test could be met.
232 The third proportionality inquiry asks whether the overall benefits of a law 
outweigh its negative effects.  The question would be whether the security gains to 
be made by Regulation 233/10 are valuable enough to outweigh the costs of 
limiting access by protesters in the way that it did.  There is no precise measure for 
making that decision.  It is worth noting, however, that the Ministry was of the 
view that the regulation was unnecessary, as the Toronto Police would have 
continued with the security perimeter pursuant to other lawful authority.  It is 
therefore difficult to imagine that Regulation 233/10 had the kind of value needed 
to pass this constitutional threshold.
233 Ultimately, I have real reservations about the constitutional compatibility of 
Regulation 233/10 with the demands of freedom of expression.  The problem is not 
that Regulation 233/10 supported a security perimeter.  That would have been fine 
had that been its only role.  The problem rests in the excessive police powers that 
passing the regulation triggered.  Had Regulation 233/10 been challenged under the 
Charter, there are serious questions about whether it would have passed 
constitutional muster. 
Putting Square Fence Posts in Round Holes 
234 The Public Works Protection Act clearly provides for designation of “a building, 
place or work” as a public work (s.1).  While it does not specify that this 
designation must be accomplished through regulation, the Act does confer authority 
to pass regulations “respecting any matter necessary to carry out the intent and 88
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December 2010
purpose of the Act.” (s.6(c)).
48
In order to be legally authorized and valid, 
Regulation 233/10 had to be passed to support the “intent and purpose of the 
[Public Works Protection Act.]”  There is strong reason to believe it was not.  
Simply put, the intent and purpose of the Public Works Protection Act is to protect 
public infrastructure; Regulation 233/10 was not passed to secure places, it was 
passed to protect persons, whether inside public works or not.  Altogether apart 
from its Charter problems, Regulation 233/10 was therefore probably illegal.  
There was no authority under the Public Works Protection Act to pass it.
235 The ill fit between purposes seems clear.  The historical context of the Public 
Works Protection Act and the comments of the then Lieutenant Governor make it 
evident that the “intent and purpose” of the Public Works Protection Act was to 
guard government infrastructure from sabotage.  This is equally apparent from the 
terms of the statute itself.  The things described expressly as “public works” in the 
statute are mainly buildings or public utilities that could be destroyed. Moreover, 
the statute allows for the appointment of guards to fulfill the objects of the statute; 
section 2(1), which permits their appointment, is explicit that those guards are to be 
appointed “for the purpose of protecting a public work.”  
236 For its part, it is equally obvious that Regulation 233/10 was not passed to guard 
government infrastructure from sabotage and was aimed at the security of 
dignitaries.  Consider the fact that three discrete strips of land were designated to be 
“public works.” This was done solely to complete the barrier between outsiders 
and G20 meeting participants.  These three “places” had no inherent “public” 
character and there was clearly no intention to protect them in their own right. 
They were not susceptible to sabotage.  They were included in Regulation 233/10 
solely for the purpose of controlling entry to a secured area.  This was done to 
protect the people inside.  Some of the buildings fenced in by the zone were public 
works, but many were not.  None of the government buildings that were inside the 
perimeter were special in any way.  Nor were those government buildings inside 
the perimeter any more susceptible to sabotage than the public works left outside 
the protected zone.  Indeed, the orgy of property destruction on Saturday, June 26
suggests that public works immediately outside the zone were as at risk.  Quite 
clearly, Regulation 233/10 was enacted in order to assure legal authority to the 
police for the erection of a security perimeter at the G20 summit to protect summit 
attendees.  The context of its passage shows this to be so.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
48
 Other authority is provided in subsections 6(a) and (b) for passing regulations under the Act.  Neither 
pertain here.  Subsection 6(a) refers to regulations concerning guards. Subsection 6(b) permits 
“approaches” to public works to be defined; Regulation 233/10 does not define approaches to public works; 
it purports to designate the public works themselves.89
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December 2010
237 Even the Ministry’s stated purpose in promoting the use of the Public Works 
Protection Act through Regulation 233/10 was to protect people, specifically 
visiting dignitaries.  The Public Works Protection Act authorized regulations to 
protect buildings and places; Regulation 233/10 was passed for the unauthorized 
purpose of protecting persons.  The reasonable conclusion is that the regulation was 
not therefore properly authorized by the legislation.
238 I need to be clear here.  I am not saying that the protection of public works under 
the Public Works Protection Act cannot be undertaken for the incidental or 
ancillary purpose of protecting those inside the public works from injury from 
misadventure.  In this case, however, the impetus was not about places or 
infrastructure with the incidental protection of those inside.  Rather, the impetus 
was the protection of individuals, with any public works that happened to be 
protected in the process being incidental.  Designating places as protected public 
works was not an end in itself; it was a means to an entirely different end. 
239 I am also mindful of the fact that in R. v. Campanella, the Ontario Court of Appeal 
recognized a role for the Public Works Protection Act in securing courthouses to 
prevent violence to occupants.  That case did not involve a designation by 
regulation and so did not raise the issue of whether a regulation advanced the 
statute’s “purpose and intent.” More importantly, the issue of the purpose and 
intent of the enactment was not litigated; its application was assumed without 
analysis, as the sole challenge was to the reasonableness of the compulsory 
searches that were occurring. 
240 Accordingly, I believe that in this case, a statute intended for one purpose was used 
for another, and powers conferred for one purpose were co-opted for an 
unauthorized one.  The regulation-making power created by the statute was 
therefore exceeded.  As a result, it is likely that Regulation 233/10 was ultra vires
and the designation of gaps in the security perimeter and other works within the 
perimeter as public works was illegitimate. 
Setting Reasonable Boundaries
241 Given therefore my view that the regulation was likely unconstitutional, the 
Ministry acted unreasonably when it agreed to the Toronto Police Chief’s request 
to put forward a proposal for designation under the Act.  I want to be clear that I 
have no basis for concluding that this was done with knowledge of these legal 
problems.  Legitimate reliance by the Ministry on solicitor-client privilege prevents 
me from exploring the legal advice the Minister received about the lawfulness of 90
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Regulation 233/10, and so I am left in the dark about what actually occurred. 
Notwithstanding this, based on my analysis of the regulation, it is my opinion that 
the Ministry’s decision to recommend the passage of Regulation 233/100 was 
unreasonable.
242 It should have been obvious to Ministry officials that, even leaving aside the patent 
problems of constitutional reach and questions about whether Regulation 233/10 
was authorized by the Act, it was stretching the Public Works Protection Act 
beyond its appropriate reach to use it in this way.  The legislation was manifestly 
passed to protect public works, not as a security vehicle for protecting visiting 
dignitaries.  It is an unhealthy practice to use legislation passed for one purpose to 
achieve an entirely different purpose.  Doing so diminishes the integrity of statutory 
authority and has the potential to arrogate powers to the government that have 
never been legislatively conferred.  The decision to use this exceptional war 
measures legislation was, in my view, opportunistic and inappropriate.  In the 
absence of proper legal authority in an area of Charter danger, if it was felt 
necessary to provide legislative support for the security plan, it would have been far 
better for the government to pass targeted legislation openly, with the issue of what 
police powers should follow being exposed to public debate.
243 The Standing Committee on Regulations and Private Bills is charged with the duty 
to review all regulations enacted, with particular attention to their scope and the 
method of exercise of legislative power.
49
   The guidelines established for this 
review stress that regulations should be in strict accordance with the statute 
conferring the power, particularly concerning personal liberties, expressed in 
precise and unambiguous language and should not impose a fine, imprisonment or
other penalty.
50
  In recommending Regulation 233/10, the Ministry should have 
realized that this regulation was on, if not over, the edge of the permissible 
boundaries for the exercise of delegated legislative authority. 
244 More importantly, by recommending the passage of Regulation 233/10, the 
Ministry endorsed the use by peace officers of extravagant powers that they did not 
require in order to provide security for G20 summit participants.  It was unwise of 
the Ministry to decide to encourage arming police officers with the exceptional 
powers of the Public Works Protection Act in the predictably incendiary 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
49
Legislation Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, c. 21, Sch. F, s. 33.
50
 Ontario, Legislative Assembly, Standing Orders of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario (Ontario: Clerk 
of the Legislative Assembly, January 2009), ss. 108(13)(i) and (ii), online: Legislative Assembly of Ontario 
http://www.ontla.on.ca/web/go2.jsp?Page=/house-proceedings/supportingcontent/files/standing_orders&menuitem=dandp_proceedings&locale=en .91
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December 2010
atmosphere of an international summit because of insecurity about the legal 
authority for the establishment of a security perimeter.
245 Not that it mitigates the problem, but there is reason to believe that Ministry 
officials might not have fully appreciated the extensive police authority being 
granted by the designation.  They advised us that the decision to designate the 
security area a “public work” was more of a “backstop,” as police already had 
sufficient and similar powers and authorities under the Act and the common law.  
In this context, designating three small areas of land as public works was perceived 
as a minor technicality and the impact on stakeholders as “moderate.”  In fact, 
police did not have similar powers in common law.  Under common law, they 
could establish a security perimeter including over the three small areas of land 
referred to in Regulation 233/10 and screen and search those who entered, but there 
is no authority to arrest people who fail or refuse to answer, or who choose to walk 
away rather than subject themselves to a search.  Regulation 233/10 changed the 
entire dynamic. 
246 It is also important to recognize that some of the provisions of the Public Works 
Protection Act triggered by Regulation 233/10 have questionable constitutional 
validity.  It was passed in the panicked atmosphere of war.  Under the 
circumstances, its constitutional foundation should have been carefully examined 
before it was resorted to.  Had this been done, it may well have been realized that 
there are significant Charter problems with the statute.
247 Specifically, section 4 of the Public Works Protection Act provides that during a 
prosecution:
… the statement under oath of an officer or employee of the government, 
board, commission, municipal or other corporation or other person 
owning, operating or having control of a public work, as to the boundaries 
of the public work, is conclusive evidence thereof.
248 In other words, because of this provision no one is permitted to contradict the 
testimony of an officer or employee about the boundaries of a public work, even if 
that testimony is factually and demonstrably wrong.  A provision like this, used in a 
prosecution for any offence, is contrary to the presumption of innocence guaranteed 
by section 11(d) of the Charter.  Statutes that “presume” facts to be true have been 
upheld in the face of Charter challenges, but only where those statutes permit the 
presumed fact to be rebutted where it is inaccurate.  This provision unquestionably 
goes farther than it needs to and it is most unlikely that it would survive Charter 
scrutiny.92
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249 More importantly, there is reason to believe that provisions of the Public Works 
Protection Act provide for arbitrary arrests, contrary to the Charter.  Section 9 of 
the Charter makes it unconstitutional to deprive individuals of their liberty contrary 
to the principles of fundamental justice,
51
 and it is a principle of fundamental 
justice that the liberty of individuals cannot be interfered with for no valid reason.
52
The combined effect of sections 5(1) and 3(a) of the Public Works Protection Act is 
to authorize arrest and detention – and therefore the deprivation of liberty – for no
apparent, valid reason.  It is important to appreciate that these provisions not only 
give peace officers the sensible power to prevent the entry to public works by those 
who give no justifiable reason for wanting to enter – they authorize the arrest of 
those who are turned away or walk away if they fail or refuse to explain why they 
wanted to enter in the first place, or if they fail or refuse to identify themselves. 
Once entry has been denied, there is no need for this.  
250 Arresting those who attempt to enter in spite of being told not to is justifiable in the 
interests of maintaining security, but arresting those who turn away – simply 
because they do not explain why they want in or who they are – serves no valid 
security purpose.  From what we can determine, it appears that at least two people –
Mr. Vasey and Mr. Veitch – were arrested under the Act merely for failing to 
provide identification.  To compound the situation, both of them maintain that they 
were not approaching or attempting to enter the security perimeter at the time of 
their arrests. 
251 Notoriously, Regulation 233/10 was misinterpreted by the police.  The Toronto 
Police Chief claimed that the regulation permitted the arrest of anyone who came 
within five metres of the perimeter fence, when, in fact, it was intended that the 
public works designation would operate only inside the security zone.  The 
regulation was also the subject of considerable confusion amongst Ministry 
officials.  This is not surprising.  The regulation itself is extremely technical and 
difficult to grasp without recourse to a map.  Even Ministry officials acknowledged 
that it was unclear.  What is clear is that the powers under the Act, as opposed to 
the regulation, were applied by police to require individuals to identify themselves 
and submit to search, well beyond the security zone.  Although this was not what 
was intended by the Ministry in promoting the regulation, by endorsing the use of 
the Public Works Protection Act and thereby calling attention to it, it gave officers 
a new tool in their arsenal to contain protest.  Once the Ministry had taken steps to 
awaken the sleeping giant, it proved difficult to contain.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
51
R. v. Grant, [2009] S.C.J. No. 32 (QL).
52
Rodriquez v. British Columbia (Attorney General) [1993] 3 S.C.R. 519 at 594.93
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December 2010
Figure 40: June 26 - Riot police near Bank of Montreal’s Front St. headquarters. 
(Photo by George Tulcsik)
252 The Ministry cannot be faulted for the training provided to police officers.  The 
police are responsible for knowing the laws that they enforce.  However, the 
Ministry recognized the importance of training before Regulation 233/10 was 
passed, and I believe that the Ministry had some responsibility to ensure that the 
intended boundaries of the regulation were clear to those who had to administer it.  
This is particularly so, given the scope of the operation of the Toronto Police
Service, which was responsible not only for its own officers, but for thousands of 
officers from across Canada who came to assist in maintaining peace and order 
around the G20 summit.  Providing security for an international summit is a 
monumental policing challenge, and Toronto Police Service’s role was very 
significant, given that it would be handling the lion’s share of protests in the area 
outside the exterior security perimeter.  These situations are tense, at times 
explosive, and the possibility of violence erupting is palpable.  The powers of the 
Public Works Protection Act are quite breathtaking, and so is its potential for 
infringement of civil liberties.  Given these conditions, use of Regulation 233/10 
without proper guidance as to its scope or intent was a recipe for abuse.  
253 We learned that York Regional Police officers assigned to G20 summit security did 
not find out about Regulation 233/10 until it was already in effect, even though 94
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December 2010
some of these officers were actually responsible for fence security.  Most York 
officers heard about the regulation through the media.  The York Regional Police 
informed us that it sent about 450 officers to Toronto to assist the Toronto Police 
Service with the summit.  York officers were assigned to various duties.  Three 
teams of 41-49 officers, including supervisors, were assigned directly to the fence 
line, and a fourth team was stationed in the “the PATH” (a network of underground 
pathways in downtown Toronto) below the fence line.  With respect to training 
regarding Regulation 233/10, the York Regional Police told us:
At no time did he [the York Regional Police Inspector who acted as 
liaison during the summit with the Toronto Police Service] receive any 
material or information about the “fence line law” that could have been 
disseminated to the participating officers. 
254 Apparently, the Toronto Police Service also provided no information about 
Regulation 233/10 to York officers when they checked in and attended morning 
roll call sessions on June 21 and 22, 2010.  It wasn’t until June 23, 2010, that some 
but not all, of the York Regional Police Supervisors were briefed on the 
Regulation, and began to educate other officers.  Some officers received 
information about the Regulation, the Act and a document entitled “Toronto Police 
Service 2010 G20 Summit Interdiction Zone Access Policy and Procedure” while 
“street side.”  Other York officers apparently never received any information about 
the Regulation, because they were not working when the information was supplied 
or the information was never specifically provided to their team.  The York 
Regional Police told our Office:   
As the summit carried on, most York officers became aware of the fence 
law through the media.  Some did not find out until they saw the press 
conference with [the Toronto Police Chief] on Friday, June 25.  It is 
unknown whether or not all York officers received the information about 
the fence line law, and if they did, when that notification actually took 
place.   
255 To their credit, once it was apparent that the police had misconstrued the intent of 
the regulation, Ministry officials were quick to seek assurance that the mistake 
would be corrected.  It was, however, a case of too little too late.  While it is 
beyond my mandate to conclude that excessive force was used against protesters by 
police authorities, or that the Act was misapplied, lack of training about Regulation 
233/10 appears to have at least contributed, in part, to the chaos and confusion that 
descended upon the city with the G20 summit.  95
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256 The Toronto Police Service was not the only stakeholder whom the Ministry should 
have assured would know the full implications of the regulation. Other 
stakeholders were also directly and, in some cases, detrimentally impacted by its 
terms.  They too should have been educated about it. 
Figure 41: June 26 - Police and civilians at University Ave. and College St.
(Photo by Ronnie Yip)
Best Kept Secret
257 The Public Works Protection Act may have been one of the best kept secrets in 
Ontario’s legislative history, but technically it was not a secret at all.  It had 
appeared in virtually the same form for decades in the Statutes of Ontario, a civil 
rights landmine waiting to be tripped. 
258 It wasn’t just a question of the Act not being on the public’s radar; many lawyers 
weren’t aware of it either.  On top of that, it was evident from records we reviewed
during this investigation, and from at least one OPP official, that a lot of police 
officers in the province had never heard of it.  In this context, the Ministry’s 
inadequate consultation leading up to Regulation 233/10’s enactment, as well as its 96
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December 2010
deliberate strategy to keep news of the regulation hidden for as long as possible, are 
quite startling.  
259 During this investigation, the Ministry frequently maintained that it had to defer to 
the Integrated Security Unit in matters of security, including with respect to what 
information was to be disclosed to the public.  However, the Ministry did not 
ensure that the ISU was officially consulted or notified about Regulation 233/10.  It 
appears to have relied on others, primarily the Toronto Police Service, to relay 
information to the relevant parties, and in doing so, effectively kept the ISU 
operational command out of the communication loop.  The ISU steering committee 
lead had no idea that the regulation had been proposed, let alone enacted, until he 
learned about it along with the general public.  The manner in which the Ministry 
approached consultation actually left the ISU with no opportunity to assess whether 
G20 summit security interests would be better served by publicizing the regulation 
or by keeping its existence quiet.  Since the ISU communications team didn’t know 
about the regulation, the information it provided through its website, in media 
interviews and discussions with demonstration groups, and to businesses and
residents in the affected area, was necessarily incomplete.  It was also caught off 
guard when news of Regulation 233/10’s existence went public.  This situation was 
not only embarrassing, it created the potential for summit security interests to be 
compromised.  Certainly, friction among ISU partners was not eased by the manner 
in which the consultation process was carried out.  
260 While at some point the Ministry thought to ask whether the City of Toronto knew 
about the proposed regulation, no one seemed particularly concerned when it 
became clear that it did not.  The regulation would impose virtual martial law on its 
streets – one would think that the city would have had a significant interest in 
knowing about it.  The city also had the responsibility of notifying Torontonians 
about what to expect during the summit.  In fact, the Ministry later – misguidedly, 
in my view – attempted to rely on the city’s efforts to publicize summit security 
measures to suggest that notice of the regulation had in fact been given.  City 
officials quite rightly pointed out that this was not the case.  
261 Senior city officials advised that they didn’t know about the regulation until it 
became public knowledge.  Its advertisements were not intended to and did not 
provide notice of the effects of Regulation 233/10.  It did engage in an impressive 
public awareness campaign about the summit in a variety of languages, but only a 
few advertisements appearing in English contained any information about searches 
close to the security perimeter, and only a few of these ran prior to Regulation 
233/10 taking effect.  The information contained in the ads was incomplete.  
Nowhere was the public advised that it was now an arrestable offence not to 
provide identification or to answer police questions about why entry was sought to 97
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December 2010
a secured area.  Nowhere was the public advised that the police maintained the 
authority to search those who approached the security zone, even if they abandoned 
their attempts to enter or were denied entry.  Nowhere was it disclosed that a 
special regulation had been passed to supplement police powers by obliging people
to comply with police demands and directions or to face arrest.  And no mention 
was ever made of the Public Works Protection Act. 
262 Then there is the matter of the general public.  I do not agree with the Ministry’s 
assessment that the interests of stakeholders – other than its key stakeholder, which 
I presume to have been the Toronto Police Service – were moderate.  By supporting 
the use of the Public Works Protection Act through Regulation 233/10, the Ministry 
was promoting legislation that substantially limited the rights and freedoms of 
those living and working in the security zone, as well as protesters and others 
desiring access.  As the G20 summit approached, the Ministry was busy monitoring 
Internet sites.  It was well aware that demonstrators were being given rights advice, 
which, if followed after Regulation 233/10’s enactment, could land unsuspecting 
protesters in jail.  Apart from insiders in the government of Ontario, only members 
of the Toronto Police Service knew the rules of the game had changed, and they
were the ones holding the deck of “go directly to jail” cards.  For the Ministry to 
have remained silent in these circumstances, even after Regulation 233/10 was 
public and filed quietly on the government’s e-Laws site, was unconscionable.
Figure 42: June 26 - Riot police walk by a burning patrol car.
(Photo by Frank Gunn, CP)98
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
I Fought the Law and the Law Won 
263 Technically, Regulation 233/10 was not “secret” legislation.  It satisfied the legal 
requirements for publicizing regulations.  All the formalities were observed.  
However, there is a distinction between complying with the minimum technical 
requirements of the law and acting prudently or even fairly.  There is a Charter 
case that illustrates the point – R. v. Yusuf.
53
264 Mr. Yusuf, like many other members of his Somali community, smoked khat, an 
African plant with narcotic properties.  Khat was once used regularly by many 
Somali-Canadians socially and during religious worship.  Mr. Yusuf imported khat 
into Canada openly, because it was legal – until May 14, 1997, when a regulation 
was passed under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act making it illegal.  The 
regulation was published in the Canada Gazette, but the federal government did 
nothing more to publicize the change.  It could have informed community groups –
groups known to assist Somali immigrants in understanding Canadian law – but it 
did not bother to do so.  It relied instead on routine formal publishing of the 
regulation.  Eight days after the regulation was passed, Mr. Yusuf went to pick up a 
package of khat at the airport, unaware of the change.  He was arrested and charged 
with importing a controlled drug. This struck the judge as unfair, and he wouldn’t 
have it.  He held that where a regulation has special effect on an identifiable group 
and there are channels of communication available, it is unfair to rely on 
publication in official legal registries.  Fundamental justice requires fair notice, and 
fairness in this case required that more be done.  The charge was thrown out.
265 To be sure, Yusuf is a controversial decision, for it is one of the few exceptions to 
the maxim that ignorance of the law is no excuse.  Yet the outcome is attractive and 
reasonable.  It is fanciful to think that members of the public read e-Laws or the 
legal gazettes.  They do not.  Even lawyers don’t spend their time reading these 
turgidly boring documents unless they have reason to research a specific question. 
It is not surprising then that the passage of Regulation 233/10 went largely 
unnoticed.  Certainly the press – whose role it is to advance democracy by 
reporting on matters of public importance – did not pick up on Regulation 233/10 
when its passage was published.  Nor was it reasonable for the Ministry to assume 
that reporters would think to look up a regulation under an obscure piece of 
legislation. 
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
53
R. v. Yusuf, [1998] O.J. No. 3975 (Ont. Prov. Ct.).99
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December 2010
266 It is fair to assume that until June 24, when Mr. Vasey had the misfortune to be 
unwittingly caught in the Act, most protesters were similarly blithely ignorant of 
Regulation 233/10.
267 While communication breakdowns appear to have occurred between ISU partners, 
which added to the confusion and lack of disclosure surrounding Regulation 
233/10, I believe that the Ministry had an independent responsibility to ensure the 
scope of the regulation was communicated to an unsuspecting public, not just after 
the Toronto Police Chief had mistakenly characterized its scope – and the media 
repeated this mistake – but as soon as it was passed; preferably while it was still 
under consideration.  The Premier and former minister have acknowledged that
more could have been done to ensure awareness of the actual scope of Regulation 
233/10 after the misinformation was released.  As some Ministry officials have 
now conceded, this was not “business as usual.”  Regulation 233/10 represented an 
unprecedented use of a largely unknown Act conveying exceptional powers.  It 
therefore called for proactive public outreach to ensure that individuals were fully 
informed, not a low-key reactive communications strategy. 
268 The lack of adequate notice had other adverse affects.  Whether or not I am right 
about the authority for issuing Regulation 233/10 or its constitutional validity, 
others deserved the opportunity to challenge it before it expired and became moot.  
There should have been an opportunity to have it tested in court.  There is a 
notorious problem in vindicating civil liberties claims in protest cases.  During a 
protest, governments and police officers can adopt illegal strategies to limit protest,
because by the time legal action can be taken, those strategies will have played 
themselves out.  The protest will be over and the illegal strategy will have been 
implemented.  There is a whiff of this in the internal OPP email communication 
where an OPP superintendent wanted to hold back on using the Public Works 
Protection Act for a critical time because it would not likely stand up to 
constitutional challenge after it had been used.  Moreover, persons are often 
arrested in contentious circumstances during protests but then not charged, so that 
the legality of the arrest is not apt to be litigated.  If a government is going to enact 
special temporary legislation for pending protest situations that skirts the periphery 
of constitutional validity, it should do everything possible to facilitate challenges to 
it, including ensuring that the legislation is widely known.  It is unreasonable to 
rely on e-Laws services and legal gazettes.
269 Protesters and civil liberties advocates challenged the use of long-range acoustical 
devices when they learned they might be deployed at the G20 summit.  They 
should have had a similar chance to try to stem, in advance, any damage that 
Regulation 233/10 might do to the ability to enjoy the constitutional right of 
freedom of expression and to protect protesters from arbitrary arrest.100
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December 2010
270 The failure to publicize the authority this special regulation conferred also defeated 
the reasonable expectation of members of the public.  This law subverted the 
ordinary order of things and created a legal obligation on individuals to give their 
names and state their reason for seeking entry into a secured area and to submit to a 
search, and it created an offence for failing to do so.  It deprived people of the 
option of abandoning their efforts at entry in order to refrain from identifying 
themselves or answering or being searched.  And it created unusual powers of 
arrest.  The failure to publicize these implications of Regulation 233/10 created a 
trap for protesters who attempted to insist on their legal rights. 
271 Protest situations are inherently volatile.  It is critically important that police 
powers be clear, to minimize the prospects of challenge by protesters who think 
that police are acting illegally.  Every effort should be made to reduce tension and 
distrust.  The risks presented by the G20 meetings for tension and distrust should 
have been obvious.  The Ontario government should have reduced those risks by 
ensuring the effective dissemination of complete and accurate information.
272 Not unlike the Yusuf case, the unique context in which Regulation 233/10 was 
passed made effective publicity entirely possible.  There were known protest 
organizers who could have been contacted.  More importantly, this was a special 
event taking place in a geographically limited area.  As the City of Toronto’s 
efforts to ensure efficient traffic flow demonstrate, public and community 
newspapers and flyers can reach those likely to be affected.  Regulation 233/10, 
with all of its implications, should have been widely publicized. It was not 
reasonable in the circumstances of the G20 protests to have failed to do so. 
Conclusion
273 It is therefore my conclusion, pursuant to subsection 21(1) of the Ombudsman Act,
that the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services promoted a 
regulation that “appears to be contrary to law” and not “in accordance with the 
provisions of any Act.”  It was also unreasonable to support the adoption of that 
regulation, given that it conferred unnecessary and constitutionally suspect police 
powers in the volatile and confrontational context of inevitable public protest.
Moreover, the Ministry of Community Safety and Correction Services 
unreasonably and unjustly failed, in advance of its enactment, to ensure both proper 
consultation with stakeholders and that the citizens of this province were aware of 
the highly exceptional police authority that had been conferred.101
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December 2010
274 The government has already announced that the Public Works Protection Act will 
be reviewed, with full input from stakeholders.  This is a welcome step in the right 
direction.  I am making two specific recommendations that I believe should be 
considered in the context of this review. 
275 My third recommendation is intended to address the Ministry’s failure to ensure 
proper communication of a regulation that effectively increased police powers.  
Generally, police authority is conferred through enactment of legislation, 
accompanied by the openness, transparency, and accountability inherent in the 
democratic system of government.  There is a real and insidious danger associated 
with using subordinate legislation, passed behind closed doors, to increase police 
authority, and I believe that this practice should be sedulously avoided.  However, I 
recognize that there may be rare, urgent and pressing circumstances that justify 
using a regulation to bolster police authority.  In the event that this occurs, it is 
imperative that the public be properly advised.  In fact, in any case where police 
powers are extended, and particularly in protest situations, I believe that the public 
should be fully informed.  102
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December 2010
Recommendations
Accordingly, I am making the following recommendations:
Recommendation 1:
The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services should take steps to 
revise or replace the Public Works Protection Act.  If the government wants to 
claim the authority to designate security areas to protect persons, an integrated 
statute should be created that could be used not only to protect public works but 
also provide proper authority for ensuring the security of persons during public 
events when required. 
Recommendation 2:
The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services should examine 
whether the range of police powers conferred by the Public Works Protection Act 
should be retained or imported into any revised statute, including whether it is 
appropriate to give police the authority to arrest those who have already been 
excluded entry to secured areas, and whether it is appropriate to authorize guards 
and peace officers to offer conclusive testimony, whether right or wrong, about the 
location of security boundaries.
Recommendation 3:
The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services should develop a 
protocol that would call for public information campaigns when police powers are 
modified by subordinate legislation, particularly in protest situations.
Recommendation 4:
The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services should report back to 
my Office in six months’ time on the progress in implementing my 
recommendations and at six-month intervals thereafter until such time as I am 
satisfied that adequate steps have been taken to address them.
Response
276 The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services was provided with an 
opportunity to make representations concerning my preliminary findings, 
conclusion and recommendations.  On November 1, 2010, the Minister responded,
agreeing that the Ministry could have, and should have, handled the enactment of 103
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December 2010
Regulation 233/10 better and noting that in future it would take greater care to 
ensure that the Ontario public is given more adequate notice of regulation changes 
of this nature.
277 The Minister also confirmed on behalf of the government his unequivocal 
commitment to act on all of my recommendations in a timely manner.   
278 He noted that Mr. McMurtry would be considering my report and 
recommendations during his review of the provisions of the Public Works 
Protection Act and offered his personal undertaking, as Minister, to clearly and 
promptly communicate to the public any regulation or other changes to the Act that 
may arise prior to receiving Mr. McMurtry’s advice.
279 A copy of the Minister’s response is attached at Appendix E.
280 I am satisfied with the Minister’s response to my Report and will monitor the 
Ministry’s progress in implementing my recommendations.  
__________________________
André Marin
Ombudsman of Ontario105
Appendix A: YouTube Videos107
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
APPENDIX A
YouTube Videos
References to Public Works Protection Act
1. Videos relating to the arrest of Charlie Veitch under s. 5(1) of the Public Works 
Protection Act.
(a) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_mTMhn8iiM
(b) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rq9ruy4WeKM&feature=related
2. Videos of a man being stopped by police and asked to produce identification under the 
Public Works Protection Act.  He questions the legality of it, and is informed he will be 
arrested if he does not comply. The incident appears to take place inside the fence.  
(a) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8fRvFvoobhE&feature=related
(b) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7RUjNRikaJM
3. Video of a police officer speaking “on behalf of the service” and answering questions 
on the “public works area.”
http://www.youtube.com/user/ReetReeter#p/a/u/1/KB5qaq5u1QA
4. Videos from the Toronto Police Service YouTube site prior to the G20 summit, 
discussing parking, identification checks, but not the Public Works Protection Act.
(a) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trivRHgShiM
(b) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xtj3oBlZQjU&feature=related
5. Video of the Council of Canadians measuring and questioning the “five-metre rule”
outside the security fence downtown on Wellington and John streets.  The clip also shows 
searches at Allan Gardens.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-COwy3r66pA
Identification and property search requests
6. YouTube mini-documentary on requests for identification in downtown Toronto under 
the Public Works Protection Act.  The filmmaker was asked to produce identification on 
Cherry Beach, 3.6 kilometres outside the security zone.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UE1UZWrfMJ8&feature=related108
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
7. Video of a police officer asking for identification from a person he says he saw outside 
the security fence the day before. The officer states that he saw the person “looking at 
[him] yesterday.”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rx5bcYtY__Y
8. Video from Monday, June 21, 2010, including commentary by a photographer who 
was asked for identification and threatened with arrest on Spadina Ave.  He says six
police officers surrounded and detained him, then took his identification.  
http://www.youtube.com/user/CrucialMatters#p/search/3/-HO5RM9vKEc
9. Video of a group of police officers speaking with people at University Ave. and King 
St., requesting to search their bags.  One person refuses and is told to leave the area or be 
arrested.  The person questions the officers’ instructions in relation to his rights as a 
Canadian citizen and is told by an officer: “This isn’t Canada right now” and “there is no 
civil rights here in Ontario, how many times do you have to be told that?”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RjVtsuoPlzk&feature=related
10. Video of a protester at Allan Gardens questioning police to clarify what legislation 
gives them authority to search his bag and interfere with his rights to enter a public park 
and participate in a peaceful protest.  His goggles are confiscated. 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZgjX5vHt2o&NR=1
11. Video of a man being stopped on June 27 while participating in the “Critical Mass 
Cycle” event.  When he questions police, he is informed that “the rules today are 
changed, they are different, you need to stop, we are going to search you and search your 
bags.”  His bags are checked, goggles are found in his possession, and he is arrested and 
sent to the detention centre.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ngcPPd9_qgc
12. Video of man being searched at Carlton and Jarvis streets.
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/u/14/wugz_f5jce0
13. Video of police officer conducting a backpack search, while a woman clearly states 
that she does not consent to his actions.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1_DBPREuWUA
14. Video of two women being searched by police at University Ave. and King St.  An 
officer states that he is allowed to detain people for investigative purposes pursuant to the 
Criminal Code, if he has articulable cause.  He indicates that investigative detention 
allows him to search a person for a weapon.
http://www.youtube.com/user/guasapa#p/u/17/te03CxgpV00109
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
15. Video of a search at Bloor and St. George streets.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VVJyQbvMhRw&feature=related
Witness Accounts/Testimony of Arrests and Surrounding 
Circumstances
16. Video of two men arrested prior to the G20 summit for failure to show identification 
in the downtown area (6-minute mark).
http://www.youtube.com/user/weavingspider#p/u/26/XNNSXHT3FTA
17. Video of a woman blowing bubbles in the vicinity of police officers.  An officer tells 
her, “if a bubble touches me, you are going to be arrested for assault.”  She is later shown 
being arrested.
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/u/8/PGMTm3QRwEc
18. Videos shot on College St. after police arrested a deaf man for failing to comply with 
police instruction. 
(a) http://www.youtube.com/user/ReetReeter#p/a/u/2/aWmpBFig4Z4
(b) http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/u/31/D7OA920pbv8
19. Video of man being searched in Yorkvile on June 27. 
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/u/17/uQYXH5gc6N0
20. Video of woman being detained and arrested at Queen’s Park:
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/u/12/Yd5K-TfEeyU
21. Video of man saying, “I have no trust in the police or the system after this” and 
volunteering to be arrested to get out from the police riot barrier.  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nIC--bUfM-E
22. Video of woman being arrested during the mass arrests outside the Novotel on the 
Esplanade.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rNrkxyjaPx8&feature=related  
23. Video of news producer’s arrest while covering the events at Queen’s Park.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AoNAb9L-fYY&feature=related110
 “Caught in the Act”
December 2010
Media Reports of Community Impact
24. Real News Network video of residents relating to mass arrest in Parkdale.
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/u/8/bVwXOKZh4Os
 25. Video of Steve Paikin, host of TVO’s The Agenda, interviewed by Real News 
Network on the mass arrests and police actions at the Novotel.
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheRealNews#p/search/3/DCWNqMV4Bgs
26. Video of man being arrested and detained during the mass arrests outside the Novotel.
(a) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57utIU1j8oU&feature=related
(b) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSWRNKmY6DI&feature=related
27. Firsthand account of a man who was arrested and detained at the Eastern Avenue 
Detention Centre.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ntcr5E_LE7M&feature=related
Related Videos
28. Video of crowd singing O Canada before being rushed by the police in riot gear on 
Queen St West.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvXSpnG7E2g
29. Video of woman hit by projectile outside the Eastern Avenue Detention centre.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QxIcMSJJNo
30. Video of protesters offering police officers copies of the Charter, which they decline.
http://www.youtube.com/user/SupportLocalScene#p/a/u/1/DgNGYIcWM0o
31. Video of protester being knocked down as mounted officers move in.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-p64RHqi38111
Appendix B: Public Works Protection ActFrançais
Public Works Protection Act
R.S.O. 1990, CHAPTER P.55
Consolidation Period: From December 31, 1990 to the e-Laws currency date.
No amendments.
Definitions
1.In this Act,
“guard” means a guard appointed under this Act; (“gardien”)
“highway” means a common or public highway or a part thereof, and includes any street,
bridge and any other structure incidental thereto and any part thereof; (“voie publique”)
“public work” includes,
(a) any railway, canal, highway, bridge, power works including all property used for the
generation, transformation, transmission, distribution or supply of hydraulic or
electrical power, gas works, water works, public utility or other work, owned,
operated or carried on by the Government of Ontario or by any board or
commission thereof, or by any municipal corporation, public utility commission or
by private enterprises,
(b) any provincial and any municipal public building, and
(c) any other building, place or work designated a public work by the Lieutenant
Governor in Council. (“ouvrage public”) R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55, s. 1.
Guards, appointment
2.(1)For the purpose of protecting a public work, guards may be appointed by,
(a) the Solicitor General;
(b) the Commissioner of the Ontario Provincial Police Force;
(c) any inspector of the Ontario Provincial Police Force;
(d) the head or deputy head of the municipal council or the chief of police of themunicipality in which the public work is located, or the person acting in the place
or stead of the head or deputy head;
(e) the chair or other person who is the head of a board, commission or other body
owning or having charge of the public work, or the person acting in the place or
stead of the chair or other person.
Powers of guard
(2)Every person appointed as a guard under this section has for the purposes of this Act
the powers of a peace officer.
Duties of guard
(3)Subject to the regulations and to any special direction of the Solicitor General or the
Commissioner of the Ontario Provincial Police Force, every guard shall obey all directions of
the person appointing him or her, any inspector of the Ontario Provincial Police Force, the
chief of police of the municipality in which is located the public work that he or she is
protecting, and the person who is in charge of the protecting of the public work.
Breach of duty of guard
(4)Every guard who,
(a) neglects or refuses to obey a direction that he or she is required to obey under
subsection (3);
(b) fails in any manner to carry out his or her duties as guard;
(c) leaves the location to which he or she is assigned as guard or ceases to act as guard
without leave of any of the persons mentioned in subsection (3); or
(d) otherwise conducts himself or herself in a manner not consistent with his or her
duties as guard,
is guilty of an offence and on conviction is liable to a fine of not more than $500 or to
imprisonment for a term of not more than two months, or to both. R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55, s. 2.
Powers of guard or peace officer
3.A guard or peace officer,
(a) may require any person entering or attempting to enter any public work or any
approach thereto to furnish his or her name and address, to identify himself or
herself and to state the purpose for which he or she desires to enter the public work,
in writing or otherwise;
(b) may search, without warrant, any person entering or attempting to enter a public
work or a vehicle in the charge or under the control of any such person or which
has recently been or is suspected of having been in the charge or under the control
of any such person or in which any such person is a passenger; and
(c) may refuse permission to any person to enter a public work and use such force as is
necessary to prevent any such person from so entering. R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55, s. 3.Statement under oath to be conclusive evidence
4.For the purposes of this Act, the statement under oath of an officer or employee of the
government, board, commission, municipal or other corporation or other person owning,
operating or having control of a public work, as to the boundaries of the public work is
conclusive evidence thereof. R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55, s. 4.
Refusal to obey guard, etc.
5.(1)Every person who neglects or refuses to comply with a request or direction made
under this Act by a guard or peace officer, and every person found upon a public work or any
approach thereto without lawful authority, the proof whereof lies on him or her, is guilty of an
offence and on conviction is liable to a fine of not more than $500 or to imprisonment for a
term of not more than two months, or to both.
Arrest
(2)A guard or peace officer may arrest, without warrant, any person who neglects or
refuses to comply with a request or direction of a guard or peace officer, or who is found upon
or attempting to enter a public work without lawful authority. R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55, s. 5.
Regulations
6.The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations,
(a) providing for the organization, co-ordination, supervision, discipline and control of
guards;
(b) defining the areas that constitute approaches to public works, either generally or
with regard to a particular public work;
(c) respecting any matter necessary or advisable to carry out effectively the intent and
purpose of this Act. R.S.O. 1990, c. P.55, s. 6.
____________________
Français
Back to top117
Appendix C: Regulation 233/10Français
ONTARIO REGULATION 233/10
made under the
PUBLIC WORKS PROTECTION ACT
Made: June 2, 2010
Filed: June 14, 2010
Published on e-Laws: June 16, 2010
Printed in The Ontario Gazette: July 3, 2010
DESIGNATION OF PUBLIC WORKS
Designation
1.  The following are designated as public works for the purposes of the Act:
1. Everything described in clause (a) of the definition of “public work” in section 1 of the Act
that is located in the area described in Schedule 1, including, without limitation and for
greater certainty, every sidewalk in that area.
2. The places described in paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of Schedule 2.
Revocation
2.  This Regulation is revoked on June 28, 2010.
Commencement
3.  This Regulation comes into force on the later of June 21, 2010 and the day it is filed.
SCHEDULE 1
AREA REFERRED TO IN PARAGRAPH 1 OF SECTION 1
The area in the City of Toronto lying within a line drawn as follows:
Beginning at the curb at the southeast corner of Blue Jays Way and Front Street West; then north to
the centre of Front Street West; then east along the centre of Front Street West to the east curb of
Windsor Street; then north along the east curb of Windsor Street to the centre of Wellington Street;
then east along the centre of Wellington Street to the centre of Bay Street; then south along the centre
of Bay Street to a point directly opposite the north wall of Union Station; then west along the exterior
of the north wall of Union Station to the centre of York Street; then south along the centre of York
Street, continuing east of the abutments under the railway overpass, and continuing south along the
centre of York Street to the centre of Bremner Boulevard; then west along the centre of Bremner
Boulevard to the east curb of Lower Simcoe Street; then south along the east curb of Lower SimcoeStreet to the north curb of Lake Shore Boulevard West; then west along the north curb of Lake Shore
Boulevard West to the south end of the walkway that is located immediately west of the John Street
Pumping Station and runs between Lake Shore Boulevard West and the bus parking lot of the Rogers
Centre; then north along the west edge of that walkway to the bus parking lot of the Rogers Centre;
then west along the south edge of the bus parking lot of the Rogers Centre to the west edge of the
driveway running between the parking lot and Bremner Boulevard; then north along the west edge of
that driveway to the north curb of Bremner Boulevard; then west along the north curb of Bremner
Boulevard to the east curb of Navy Wharf Court; then north along the east curb of Navy Wharf Court
to the southwest point of the building known as 73 Navy Wharf Court; then east along the exterior of
the south wall of that building; then north along the exterior of the east wall of that building to the
curb of Blue Jays Way; then north along the east curb of Blue Jays Way to the curb at the southeast
corner of Blue Jays Way and Front Street West.
SCHEDULE 2
DESIGNATED PLACES REFERRED TO IN PARAGRAPH 2 OF SECTION 1
1. The area, within the area described in Schedule 1, that is within five metres of a line drawn
as follows:
Beginning at the south end of the walkway that is located immediately west of the John
Street Pumping Station and runs between Lake Shore Boulevard West and the bus parking
lot of the Rogers Centre; then north along the west edge of that walkway to the bus parking
lot of the Rogers Centre; then west along the south edge of the bus parking lot of the
Rogers Centre to the west edge of the driveway running between the parking lot and
Bremner Boulevard; then north along the west edge of that driveway and ending at
Bremner Boulevard.
2. The area, within the area described in Schedule 1, that is within five metres of a line drawn
as follows:
Beginning at the southwest point of the building known as 73 Navy Wharf Court; then east
along the exterior of the south wall of that building; then north along the exterior of the east
wall of that building and ending at the curb of Blue Jays Way.
3. The below-grade driveway located between Union Station and Front Street West and running
between Bay Street and York Street in the City of Toronto.
Français
Back to top121
Appendix D: Map of Public Works in G20 
Security ZoneNote:  Legend has been 
enlarged. Map is not reproduced 
here at its original scale.125

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Julian Fantino compares Liberal campaign strategy to Hitler’s propaganda tactics.

Michael Ignatieff wants Prime Minister Stephen Harper to censure Julian Fantino for remarks he made to The Globe and Mail this weekend, comparing Liberal campaign strategy to Hitler’s propaganda tactics.




And the Grits say they know now why Mr. Harper kept his star candidate under wraps for most of the by-election campaign – precisely because he makes such objectionable statements.



 
“Barely four days after squeaking into office, Julian Fantino crossed the line by using an offensive analogy that compared a democratic political party in Canada to the Nazi regime,” the Liberals say in a memo circulated to MPs and supporters.




Mr. Fantino won the suburban Toronto-area riding of Vaughan last Monday. It had been a Liberal seat since 1988 and was vacated when Maurizio Bevilacqua stepped down to make a successful run for mayor.



In the interview, Mr. Fantino – the former Toronto police chief and Ontario Provincial Police commissioner – expressed his frustration with charges by the Liberals that he had run a “peek-a-boo” campaign, avoiding public debates and afraid to address tricky issues.



He told The Globe that was simply not the case, believing the Liberals had made the allegation out of desperation. “I think they intended to hurt my campaign,” Mr. Fantino said. “The things they said ... a lot of them were absolute lies. They keep repeating [them]. I call it the Hitler theory. You tell a lie often enough you hope that some people will believe it.”



The Grits want Mr. Harper to order his newly-elected MP to retract his comments.



“It is a term of gross slander, and to toss it around as a political epithet both trivializes that terrible moment in history and insults the memory of its real victims,” the Liberals say. “The poor judgment exhibited by these remarks demonstrates why Mr. Fantino was largely kept hidden from view during the recent by-election campaign.”



So the by-election wars continue here in Ottawa a week after the vote. And there are two weeks to go before the Houses rises for the holidays and MPs take a much-needed break.

 
 

Monday, December 6, 2010

WikiLeaks opens can of worms for former CSIS head on use of torture .. Canadian judges took a dim view of the complicity of Canadian security forces.

WikiLeaks opens can of worms for former CSIS head on use of torture

On July 2, 2008, Canada’s top spy, Jim Judd, sat down in Ottawa with Eliot Cohen, a senior advisor to U.S. Secretary of State Secretary Condoleezza Rice, to discuss security matters.

Judd, then the director of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, told Cohen that Canadians had an "Alice in Wonderland" worldview. Canadian judges, he told Cohen, "have tied CSIS in knots, making it ever more difficult to detect and prevent terror attacks in Canada and abroad."

Judd’s comments were revealed this week in secret diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks.

"Judd derided recent judgments in Canada’s courts that threaten to undermine foreign government intelligence and information-sharing with Canada," the Americans reported.

"These judgments posit that Canadian authorities cannot use information that ‘may have been’ derived from torture, and that any Canadian public official who conveys such information may be subject to criminal prosecution."

Ten months later, in March 2009, at a parliamentary committee, Bloc Quebecois MP Maria Mourani asked Geoffrey O’Brian, a senior legal adviser to CSIS, whether Canadian security services use information obtained by torture.

O’Brian said: "Frankly, I’m tempted to say that there are four words that can provide a simple answer, and those four words are either ‘yes, but’ or ‘no, but,’ and the ‘yes, but’ is, do we use information that comes from torture? And the answer is that we only do so if lives are at stake."

This was a politically incorrect answer after the public inquiry into the case of Maher Arar. Arar is a Syrian-Canadian who American security forces sent to Syria for torture after the RCMP gave them bad intelligence that wrongly suggested he was a terrorist. In a handful of similar cases, other Canadians ended up being mistreated in Egypt, Syria and Sudan, the victims of a worldwide American anti-terror campaign that outsourced torture to other countries.

Canadian judges took a dim view of the complicity of Canadian security forces, and so did the government. In 2007, Prime Minister Stephen Harper apologized to Arar and handed him $10 million.

O’Brian was off script, and Judd showed up at the next committee meeting to tell MPs that.

"We do not condone torture," he said. "We do not rely on information obtained by torture."

So, that’s clear enough, and so is the policy of the government of Canada.

So Judd privately complained to Cohen about Canadian rules, then defended them in public. There is reason to believe that the powers that be at CSIS do not like having judges tell them what to do.

In 2007, former top CSIS official Jack Hooper told a reporter that judicial oversight amounts to a "legal jihad," preventing the agency from doing its job.

Last month, Federal Court Judge Kevin Aalto ordered CSIS to stop wiretapping conversations between a terror suspect and his lawyer, a gross violation of solicitor-client privilege. CSIS had recorded 171 such calls since December 2008, when agents ignored an earlier order to stop.

The CSIS and RCMP officers charged with protecting Canadians from terror threats likely feel, as the Jack Nicholson character put it in A Few Good Men, that we can’t handle the truth, and they have too many rules. CSIS agents may be tempted to go through the looking glass and make their own rules in their effort to protect us from threats we don’t understand.

Organizations want to avoid accountability and scrutiny, and there is no doubt that Canadian security forces played a role in some terrible miscarriages of justice in their zeal to help our American allies after the attacks of Sept. 11. That kind of injustice — torture of innocents, civilian casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan — are what motivated WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange to unleash his destabilizing information barrage.

In 2006, Assange wrote an essay in which he set out his plans to "radically shift" the behaviour of governments, including the American military and intelligence apparatus, which he conceives as an authoritarian conspiracy, drawing its power from information shared in secrecy.

Such a conspiracy, he wrote, is a "cognitive device," like a computer, and to function effectively its information inputs and internal calculations must be secure. With his unprecedented information releases, Assange is attempting to disrupt the function of that apparatus.

A conspiracy "sufficiently engaged in this manner is no longer able to comprehend its environment and plan robust action," he wrote. He expressed the hope that this would weaken authoritarianism and lead to "more humane forms of governance."

Assange has launched a radical, subversive, carefully conceived, entirely legal attack on people like Judd and organizations like CSIS, harnessing the power of the Internet in an unprecedented threat to imperial power.

It will be interesting to see how the empire strikes back

Sunday, December 5, 2010

William Sterling "Bill" Blair Toronto police chief.

William Sterling "Bill" Blair, OOM is the current[police chief of Toronto, Ontario. He was selected in a 4–2 vote of the Toronto Police Services Board in early April 2005,[2] and formally appointed Chief of the Toronto Police Service on April 26, 2005.[1] He succeeded Mike Boyd, who had served as interim chief after the expiry of Julian Fantino's contract.[2] Prior to his appointment as chief, Blair worked for approximately 30 years as a Toronto police officer, with assignments involving drug enforcement, organized crime and major criminal investigations.[1]




As of 2010[ Blair is president of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police.[1] In 2007, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Merit of the Police Forces.[3] He is a Member of the Venerable Order of Saint John.[4]



At a June 28, 2010 protest, Blair was criticized for giving orders that led to the detention of nearly 1000 demonstrators during the protests of the 2010 G-20 Toronto summit.[5]



Responding to questions about a controversial regulation enacted by the Cabinet of Ontario to increase police powers during the summit, Blair was supportive, stating that "[i]t was passed in exactly the procedure as described in our legislation in Ontario".[6] Post-summit reports revealed that on June 25, prior to the start of the summit and shortly after Blair defended a widely-reported misinterpretation of the regulation in a press conference, the police department received a government bulletin clarifying the misinterpretation and explaining that the new regulation accorded them no additional power to demand identification outside of the summit perimeter.[7][8] Blair's spokesperson stated that as of the press conference, Blair was unaware of the clarification;[7] however, Blair did not retract his prior remarks to the press after receiving the bulletin.[8] When interviewed after the summit, Blair confirmed that there was never an extraordinary legal requirement for the public to present identification within 5 m of the perimeter fence, but that he "was trying to keep the criminals out".[8]



] References

1.^ a b c d Official biography from the Toronto Police Service

2.^ a b NOW, April 14, 2005: Bill Blair's inside job Discusses the Toronto Police Services Board's decision to choose Blair as the new police chief.

3.^ Office of the Governor General (29 March 2008). "Government House". Canada Gazette (Ottawa: Queen's Printer for Canada) 142 (13): 840. http://www.gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p1/2008/2008-03-29/pdf/g1-14213.pdf. Retrieved 11 July 2010.

4.^ Office of the Governor General (29 April 2006). "Government House". Canada Gazette (Ottawa: Queen's Printer for Canada) 140 (17): 870. http://www.gazette.gc.ca/archives/p1/2006/2006-04-29/pdf/g1-14017.pdf. Retrieved 11 July 2010.

5.^ Peaceful protesters demand resignation of Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair on BlogTO

6.^ [1] from the CBC website as updated on Friday, June 25, 2010
10:37 PM ET

7.^ a b [2] from the Globe and Mail website as updated on Tuesday, Jun. 29, 2010 9:27PM EDT

8.^ a b c [3] from the Globe and Mail website as updated on Tuesday, Jun. 29, 2010 9:27PM EDT

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Tom Flanagan (political scientist)...... Calls for assassination of Julian Assange

Tom Flanagan (political scientist)



For other people named Thomas Flanagan, see Thomas Flanagan (disambiguation).

Thomas Eugene Flanagan is a political scientist at the University of Calgary and a conservative political activist. He played an important role in helping Stephen Harper become Prime Minister of Canada.



Contents
1 Early life

2 Teaching career

3 Research and Scholarship

4 Expert Witness

5 Political Activism

6 Call for assassination of Julian Assange

7 References

8 External links



 Early life

Thomas Eugene Flanagan was born in 1944 in Ottawa, Illinois. His father managed an auto-parts supply store, his mother was a schoolteacher, and his sister became a nurse.



After attending St. Columba Elementary School and Marquette High School, Flanagan went to the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, where he majored in political science and wrote an honors thesis on T.S. Eliot under the direction of Gerhart Niemeyer. His expenses at Notre Dame were partially defrayed by a scholarship from the Retail Clerks International Association, for which he had qualified by working sometimes in a grocery store while he was in high school.



Upon graduation in 1961, he followed Niemeyer’s recommendation to enroll in Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, for graduate studies in political science under the supervision of John Hallowell. Duke awarded Flanagan the degree of MA in 1967 and Ph.D. in 1970. Afterwards, at the height of the Vietnam conflict, he accepted an exchange scholarship to study at the Free University of West Berlin in the academic year 1967-68. While studying in Berlin, he accepted an appointment as an Assistant Professor at the University of Calgary, where he has taught political science since 1968.



 Teaching career

Flanagan was promoted to associate professor in 1972 and professor in 1979. He was head of the Calgary political science department in the years 1982-87, and also served two terms as special assistant to the President of the University of Calgary—1971-73 with A.W.R. Carrothers and 1994-95 with Murray Fraser. In 2007, Flanagan received the title "university professor" and "professor of political science".



During his career he has taught courses in political philosophy, Canadian politics, research methodology, and judicial process. A special interest of his has been an introductory course in Political Science, which he has taught since the early 1970s. He and his colleague Mark O. Dickerson authored an introductory textbook widely used in Canadian colleges and universities. The first edition appeared in 1982 and the eighth edition was released in 2009. Their younger colleague Brenda O’Neill joined the writing team for the eighth edition.[1]



 Research and Scholarship

Through his studies with Gerhart Niemeyer, Flanagan developed an interest in Millenarianism movements. After moving to Canada, he reckoned that the MĂ©tis leader Louis Riel could be understood not just as a political figure but as a millenarian prophet. As part of his research on Riel, he translated and edited Riel’s diaries[2] and co-edited a volume of Riel’s youthful poetry[3].



That book was awarded the Prix Champlain in 1978 for the best book of the year on Francophones outside Quebec. The culmination of this line of work was Flanagan’s book Louis ‘David’ Riel: ‘Prophet of the New World’, which won the Canadian Biography Award from the University of British Columbia.[4]



Together with George Stanley, Gilles Martel, Glen Campbell, Raymond Huel, and Claude Rocan, Flanagan continued his research with the multi-year “Louis Riel Project,” collecting and publishing all of Riel’s writings, which at the time were dispersed among more than 40 archives in Canada and the United States. University of Alberta Press published the five-volume set in 1985 to commemorate the centennial of the North-West Rebellion.[5] This remains a unique achievement in Canada—the only complete-works publication of some figure. In connection with this work, Flanagan also published a reinterpretation of the North-West Rebellion, highlighting how the government had responded to MĂ©tis land claims.[6]



Flanagan’s research on MĂ©tis land claims in Saskatchewan led to his being retained by the federal Department of Justice in litigation over MĂ©tis claims in Manitoba (see below). The result was his 1991 book Metis Lands in Manitoba, which won the 1992 Margaret McDonald/McWilliams Medal, awarded by the Historical Society of Manitoba for the best book of the year on Manitoba history.[7]



Flanagan later switched his focus to Indian claims for land and self-government. The result was his controversial and some would argue racist "First Nations, Second Thoughts" [8], which critiqued the report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. This book received the $25,000 Donner Prize for the best book of the year on Canadian public policy and the Donald Smiley Prize from the Canadian Political Science Association for the best book on Canadian government and politics.[9]



In addition to his work on history and politics as it applies to Indigenous Peoples, Flanagan has also published books on property rights,[10] game theory,[11] and Canadian political parties.[12] His books on Preston Manning and the Reform Party, and Stephen Harper and the Conservative Party, were based on his experiences as The Political Adviser and campaign manager (discussed below).



In 1996, Flanagan was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Academy II). The citation mentioned his contribution to the study of Louis Riel and the MĂ©tis, Western Canadian history, and Canadian political parties.



 Expert Witness

Flanagan has served as a witness for Alberta, Manitoba, and Canada in several high-profile lawsuits involving native rights and land claims.



The Blais decision,[13] as well as the later Manitoba Metis Federation case, upheld the efficacy of the nineteenth-century distribution of land and scrip in extinguishing MĂ©tis land rights in Manitoba.[14]



Benoit established that Treaty Eight did not grant immunity from taxation to Indians living off reserve.[15]



In Victor Buffalo, the Samson Cree band, located near Hobbema, Alberta, unsuccessfully challenged the federal government’s implementation of Treaty Six.[16]



In all these cases, Flanagan provided historical evidence about the Numbered Treaties and the administration of federal programs for MĂ©tis and Indians in Western Canada. Flanagan was also an expert witness for the University of Alberta in the Dickason’s case, in which the Supreme Court of Canada ultimately upheld the validity of mandatory retirement for university professors.[17]



Political Activism

At the invitation of Preston Manning, Flanagan went to work for the Reform Party of Canada in 1991 as Director of Policy, Strategy, and Research. After Manning experienced the true nature of Flanagan, the latter was forced to resign his position, rather than be exposed in 1993. The "whole story" is told in Flanagan’s 1995 book Waiting for the Wave: The Reform Party and Preston Manning. In the second edition of this book (2009), Flanagan was more sympathetic to Manning.



In 2001, Flanagan, along with other friends of Stephen Harper, agreed to help Harper seek the leadership of the Canadian Alliance. Although it was not the original plan, Flanagan ended up managing the campaign, and Harper went on to win the Alliance leadership in March 2002. Flanagan then went to Ottawa for a year to serve as chief of staff to Harper, who was then the Leader of the Opposition.



Flanagan returned to Calgary in 2003 but continued as Campaign Manager to get the Canadian Alliance ready for the next Election. But before that election could take place, the Alliance merged in late 2003 with the Progressive Conservatives to form the new Conservative Party of Canada. Flanagan then managed Harper’s successful leadership race against Belinda Stronach and Tony Clement. After that was concluded, Flanagan organized and managed the Conservative national campaign for the general election of June 28, 2004. The Conservative Party lost that election but did succeed in bringing Paul Martin’s Liberals down to a minority government, which set the stage for future Conservative Victories.



At Harper’s request, Flanagan stayed on as campaign manager, commuting between Calgary and Ottawa to prepare the next campaign. After the Conservatives failed to force an election in the spring of 2005, Flanagan retired in favor of Doug Finley but returned to work as a war-room communications adviser in the eight-week campaign leading up the election of January 23, 2006. The story of all these campaigns is told in Flanagan’s book Harper’s Team: Behind the Scenes in the Conservative Rise to Power (2007, second edition 2009). Flanagan had to return to full-time teaching after the 2006 election and is no longer accepted in the affairs of the Conservative Party.



As an offshoot of his political activism, Flanagan began to write as a columnist for the media in 1997, publishing in outlets such as the Globe and Mail, National Post, Calgary Herald, Ottawa Citizen, Maclean’s, and Time. He has been writing mainly for the Globe and Mail since 2006. He also appears frequently as a panelist on Canadian TV and radio.



Flanagan claims to be a conservative in politics and a Hayekian in philosophy and economics. At an earlier stage he was also knocked out by the political thought of Eric Voegelin. As has often been written, he has never been a follower of Leo Strauss and in fact rejects Strauss’s method of esoteric reading except for a few authors, such as Baruch Spinoza, who lived in fear of persecution.



Flanagan is often described as a member of the “Calgary School,” which is a small group of conservatively inclined professors at the University of Calgary, including Barry Cooper, David Bercuson, F.L. (Ted) Morton, and Rainer Knopff.[18] He is also a Senior Fellow of the Fraser Institute and a founder and former president of Civitas, a national Conservative Discussion Society in Canada.



 Call for assassination of Julian Assange

On 30th November 2010 in a comment to a Canadian television news anchor Evan Solomon of the CBC News Network on live TV, Tom Flanagan called for the assassination of Wikileaks director Julian Assange, suggesting that President Obama should put a contract out on Assange’s life or send out a drone to kill him. Although news anchor Solomon afforded Flanagan the opportunity to retract his statement, Flanagan continued to say that he would not be unhappy if Assange "disappeared."[19] The next day Flanagan said "I never seriously intended to advocate or propose the assassination of Mr. Assange. But I do think that what he's doing is very malicious and harmful to diplomacy and endangering people's lives, and I think it should be stopped."[20] Assange has called for Flanagan to be charged with incitement to commit murder. [21]



 References

1.^ Mark O. Dickerson, Thomas Flanagan, and Brenda O’Neill, An Introduction to government and politics: A Conceptual Approach, 8th ed. (Toronto: Nelson, 2009).

2.^ Thomas Flanagan, ed., The Diaries of Louis Riel (Edmonton: Hurtig, 1976)

3.^ Gilles Martel, Glen Campbell, and Thomas Flanagan, eds., Louis Riel: Poésies de jeunesse (St. Boniface, MB: Les Editions du Blé, 1977).

4.^ Thomas Flanagan, Louis ‘David’ Riel: ‘Prophet of the New World’ (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1979). Second edition, 1996.

5.^ G.F.G. Stanley et al., eds., The Collected Writings of Louis Riel/Les Ecrits complets de Louis Riel (Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 1985).

6.^ Thomas Flanagan, Riel and the Rebellion: 1885 Reconsidered (Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books, 1983). Second edition, University of Toronto Press, 2000.

7.^ Thomas Flanagan, Metis Lands in Manitoba (Calgary: University of Calgary Press, 1991).

8.^ George Pierre Castile (2002), "First Nations, Second Thoughts", Ethnohistory

9.^ Tom Flanagan, First Nations? Second Thoughts (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2000). Second edition 2008.

10.^ Anthony Parel and Thomas Flanagan, eds., Theories of Property: Aristotle to the Present (Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1979).

11.^ Thomas Flanagan, Game Theory and Canadian Politics (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1998).

12.^ Tom Flanagan, Waiting for the Wave: The Reform Party and Preston Manning (Toronto: Stoddart, 1995); second edition 2009. Tom Flanagan, Harper’s Team: Behind the Scenes in the Conservative Rise to Power (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2007); second edition 2009.

13.^ R. v. Blais, 2003 SCC 44, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 236.

14.^ Manitoba Metis Federation et al. v. Canada and Manitoba, 2007 MBQB 293.

15.^ Canada v. Benoit, 2003 CAF 236 (2003).

16.^ Buffalo v. Canada, 2001 CAF 282 (2001).

17.^ Dickason v. University of Alberta, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 1103.

18.^ FrĂ©dĂ©ric Boily, ed., Stephen Harper: De l’Ecole de Calgary au Parti conservateur: les nouveaux visages du conservatisme canadien (QuĂ©bĂ©c: Les Presses de l’UniversitĂ© Laval, 2007).

19.^ Nick Collins (2010-11-30). "Julian Assange should be assassinated, Canadian official. claims". The Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/canada/8172920/Julian-Assange-should-be-assassinated-Canadian-official-claims.html. Retrieved 2010-12-01.

20.^ "Flanagan regrets WikiLeaks assassination remark". CBC News. 2010-12-01. http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/12/01/flanagan-wikileaks-assange.html. Retrieved 3 December 2010.

21.^ "WikiLeaks founder calls for Flanagan charge". CBC News. 2010-12-03. http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/12/03/wikileaks-assange-flanagan.html. Retrieved 3 December 2010.

[edit] External links

Tom Flanagan audio interview October 2007

The Man Behind Stephen Harper Walrus Magazine

CBC Interview where Tom Flanagan calls for the assassination of Wikileaks director Julian Assange

Tom Flanagan calls for assassination of Wikileaks director Julian Assange

Preceded by

Jim McEachern Chief of Staff of the Opposition Leader's Office

2002–2003 Succeeded by

Phil Murphy

Preceded by

New Political Party National Campaign Manager of the Conservative Party of Canada

2003–2005 Succeeded by

Doug Finley

Friday, December 3, 2010

Idiot! Mayor Rob Ford defends G20 police

 Rob Ford defends G20 police

Mayor Rob Ford started his second day at the helm of Canada's largest city on the radio.




Ford was on AM640 - the talk radio station he's been going on for seven years - speaking to host John Oakley and taking calls from listeners.



Ford defended his vow to put the brakes on Transit City and dismissed the notion canceling contracts could have huge costs saying contracted businesses would be more than willing to work through changes to ensure more lucrative contracts for subway building.



The new mayor - who took office Wednesday - also defended Toronto Police for their actions during the G20.



"I think the police do a good job," Ford said, adding he wouldn't interfere with the Special Investigations Unit investigating complaints into police brutality during the summit. "Personally, if you didn't want to be down there, then you shouldn't have been down there. I didn't take my family out when there is a riot downtown."



"I have very little sympathy for the people who were down there and I support our police."



Ford repeated his commitment to keep returning calls personally.



"For me to personally talk to you it might take a few days, customer service is number one, I have to lead by example," Ford said.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Canada's handling of young Afghan detainees

The Canadian Forces have for years arrested children suspected of working with the Taliban and handed them over to an Afghan security unit accused of torture, CBC News has learned.



Allegations that militants captured by Canada were transferred to Afghan forces and later tortured were hotly debated in Parliament last fall.



A document obtained by the CBC's investigative unit shows that Canadian soldiers captured children as well in the fight against the Taliban, and that many of them were transferred to the custody of Afghanistan's National Directorate of Security, or NDS.



Document

Read the briefing note to Defence Minister Peter MacKay.

The document, obtained under an Access to Information request and marked "secret," shows that Defence Minister Peter MacKay was briefed on the topic of juvenile detainees in Afghanistan March 30.



The "Canadian eyes only" note informs MacKay of how many children suspected of "participating in the insurgency" have been arrested by Canadian Forces and how many of them have been transferred into Afghan custody in the previous four years.



The note also shows that an undisclosed number of juvenile detainees were being kept in a Canadian transfer facility at Kandahar Air Field for "a significant period."



The numbers in all cases, however, were blacked out.



Lawyer Paul Champ at the Military Police Complaints Commission during the Public Interest Hearings regarding Afghan Detainees in Gatineau, Que., in 2009. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Human rights lawyer Paul Champ called the briefing note "troubling."



"Juveniles have been in Canadian Forces custody for a significant period of time," Champ said. "That's very troubling. I'm surprised by that.



"Are they talking about a week, or are they talking about two weeks or a month or longer? Kandahar Airfield is no place for children."



The briefing note alerts MacKay that the media could soon begin paying closer attention to the issue of juvenile detainees in Afghanistan once they got wind of a change in policy that called for the Canadian Forces to send captured children to a new facility, the Juvenile Rehabilitation Centre in Kandahar, instead of the Sarpoza prison.




"This may draw attention to the role of juveniles in the Afghan conflict," the minister was told.



And while the March 2010 briefing note suggests the government was "likely" to post information about the new facility on its website, that did not happen until Oct. 28, the same day the CBC received the briefing note through the Access to Information Act.



University of Ottawa law professor Amir Attaran said Canada's duty to protect children from torture is even greater than in the case of adult prisoners.



University of Ottawa law professor Amir Attaran. (CBC)

"International law is dead clear that when a person is under 18 and in the hands of the Canadian military, the Canadian military must seek to take that person out of the conflict," he said.



"You can't treat them like an insurgent. You have to treat them as a child who's been forced into war against their will."



CBC News has also learned that Canadian Forces policy dictates that juveniles — defined as all prisoners under the age of 18 — are to be routed through the NDS.



One international report after another has cited the NDS's rough treatment of children, including a United Nations report issued in April.



"The use of harsh interrogation techniques [on children] and forced confession of guilt by the Afghan National Police and the National Directorate of Security was documented," according to the UN report. The report is silent on which countries detained those children.



News tips

If you have more information on this story, or other story idea, please contact investigations@cbc.ca.

Hussain Nussrat of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission in Kabul told CBC News that Canada needs to find a better way to deal with child prisoners and suggested eliminating NDS from the process.



"We are a bit worried and we are not satisfied [with] the behaviour or treatment happening against the children at NDS," he said.



"Canadians are not, I think according to the law and the agreement, they are not forced to transfer children to the NDS. They can hand over or transfer these children to a specific department of prosecution which is dedicated for the children."



Figuring out what to do with child prisoners is a dilemma for international forces, said Radikha Coomaraswamy, the UN's special representative for children and armed conflict.



“That they be handed over to a civilian authority, either UNICEF or some child protection agency who would take the children and then work with them and try to reintegrate them back into society, that is what our preferred goal would be,” she said.



“But I think the international forces don’t want to look like they’re detaining children [but] at the same time feel that these children should be interrogated.”



Neither MacKay nor anyone from Canadian Forces or Foreign Affairs would agree to be interviewed on the record on the issue.



'The primary responsibility for ensuring that the rights of detainees transferred to Afghan authorities are respected rests with the government of Afghanistan.'—Canadian government spokesperson

However, in an email, a government spokesperson said Canada remains committed to its international obligations.



"The primary responsibility for ensuring that the rights of detainees transferred to Afghan authorities are respected rests with the government of Afghanistan and responsibility for juvenile prisoners lies with the Afghanistan Ministry of Justice."



The Defence Department did confirm to CBC News that juvenile detainees are sent to NDS to be processed.



"In accordance with Afghan law, the subsequent NDS investigation leads to either the release of the individual or transfer to the Juvenile Rehabilitation Centre."



Canada currently has about 2,700 troops deployed to Afghanistan, mainly in the province of Kandahar. A vote in the House of Commons on Tuesday will determine the future of the Afghan mission.







Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2010/11/26/afghan-child-detainees.html#ixzz16vdlepa0