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Persistent shortage of prosecutors leading to stayed criminal charges, group says

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Persistent shortage of prosecutors leading to stayed criminal charges, group says

New Brunswick prosecutors burning out as openings wait to be filled, Crown lawyer says

Shara Munn said charges are being stayed because of the inability to adhere to the "Jordan decision," a Supreme Court of Canada ruling that set out time targets to meet after charge are laid.

"We're really butting up against those timelines," she said.

"And those obviously are supposed to be sort of the outermost limits, they're not something we just should be trying to stay under in all of our cases.

"But unfortunately, that's where we're at."

There's a stack of files on a prosecutor's desk, and they're just not physically able to get through them all in the time we have allotted.
— Shara Munn, New Brunswick Crown Prosecutors Association president

The Jordan decision said a person who is charged shouldn't have to wait more than 18 or 30 months for a trial, depending on the the kind of trial. Otherwise, the delay could be seen as a violation of an accused person's rights, Munn said.

Under the Charter of Rights, the accused could argue the delay is unreasonable and seek to have their charges stayed, which halts further legal proceedings.

Munn said even murder charges could be stayed because of the Jordan rules, but these are cases that prosecutors try to make sure get to trial.

"For me, it's the other cases that impact the majority of New Brunswickers that I start to worry about and that our members are concerned about," Munn said. 

"It is the things where people are typically victim, you know, things like theft, things like assault and sexual assaults. These are the types of files that we are seeing stayed by the courts."

Munn said she doesn't have an exact number for how many cases have been stayed by the courts but there have been "quite a few."

"I think that the public would be very alarmed and very concerned if they realized that that's what's happening, you know, on a weekly or semi-weekly basis around the province," said Munn.

She said the association has requested numbers from the government for a fuller picture of how many cases have been stayed.

The association has also asked to participate in Public Safety Minister Kris Austin's provincewide public safety consultations that began in the summer.

WATCH | 'These are the types of files that we are seeing stayed': 

N.B Crown prosecutors say they can’t keep up with their caseloads

Duration 2:13
The Supreme Court of Canada says anyone charged with a crime must be tried within 18 months for provincial court trials and 30 months for superior court trials. If it takes longer, the charges are stayed.

CBC News asked the department for comment on the association's concerns and for an update on filling the 30 new positions promised in April on top of the 60 or so that already exist.

On Friday afternoon, a department spokesperson said in an email that of the 30 new positions, 18 new prosecutors were hired.

"We want every charge decided on its merits with none being stayed for pre-trial delay. Every case that ends that way represents a failure of the entire system," the statement read.

The spokesperson said the number of cases stayed by the courts is low, and said to date, "the unavailability of Prosecutors has not been the cause of any Jordan stays, rather they have been the result of systemic issues including the availability of witnesses and court time."

Munn said prosecutors are still burning out. Several months after the new positions were added, "we're no further ahead."

An unsmiling man with glasses, wearing a grey dress shirt and grey blazer. The N.B. Crown Prosecutors Association has written a letter to Public Safety Minister Kris Austin asking to be included in his cross-province public safety consultations. (Aniekan Etuhube/CBC)

"There's a stack of files on a prosecutor's desk, and they're just not physically able to get through them all in the time we have allotted, and that includes working, you know, a whole lot of what I would call unpaid overtime," Munn said. "We're not entitled to overtime.

"Working nights and weekends, reviewing search warrants for police on an on-call basis, none of those things are compensated. And so when you're doing them for an extended period of time, and it's burning you out, and you just feel like you're never going to get ahead of it — that's a really vicious cycle to be in."

But not only that, Munn said, the system has also lost some prosecutors since the creation of the new positions, making the net gain low. 

The statement from the Public Safety Department said the 18 new hires represent a net gain of seven prosecutors because the other 11 filled previously vacant positions or replaced prosecutors who retired, resigned or moved into management positions.

Munn said the system doesn't only need junior Crown prosecutors. It also needs to be able to keep senior Crowns who are handling bigger files, such as murder and sexual assault cases. 

Munn wants to see a big push on retention for Crown prosecutors. In terms of recruitment, New Brunswick just isn't competitive with jurisdictions across the country, especially for senior prosecutors.

"It is difficult to … attract new members to come work for us when you say 'OK, well, not only do we have the lowest salary, but also our working conditions are pretty awful right now just because of the understaffing," she said.

"We wish we had something more attractive in terms of a compensation package to offer people to get them in the door."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Hannah Rudderham is a reporter with CBC New Brunswick. She grew up in Cape Breton, N.S., and moved to Fredericton in 2018. You can send story tips to hannah.rudderham@cbc.ca.

With files from Rachel Cave

 

66 Comments
 
 
David Amos 
The Crown can cry me a river 
 
 
 
David Amos 
Methinks Shara Munn should review the emails I sent her on the Ides of March 2021 N'esy Pas? 
 
 
 
David Amos 
Kris Austin's Deputy Mike Comeau should recall our conversation and study the Hard Copy of all the documents I gave him and his buddy Kinsella in 2006 after I ran in the election of the 39th Parliament in Fredericton 



 
Ronald Miller
So now the usuals are trying to blame Higgs for court systems that run slowly and are overworked. Something that has been in place since they were born and is country wide, as the articles I supplied below clearly show.

Next they will blame Higgs for our healthcare system that has been deteriorating for decades, was made worse due to covid, and is in a shambles country wide.

Oh wait, they already do that. At least they are entertaining and make us all laugh.

 
Rosco holt 
Reply to Ronald Miller 

Who has control of the provincial public purse?

You would balme Trudeau but that would be wrong, Justin isn't the Premier of NB Higgs is.

And healthcare Higgs said and I quote "I won't invest in healthcare, it's mismanaged" . Who runs the province again?

 
Shawn Tabor 
Reply to Ronald Miller
Are you a Lawyer Ron,,,,? Do you remember when Duty Council Lawyers went on strike, i think it was for one day. They were championed by 2 Lawyers for more money. One was a Miller, SJ and the other was Lutz. Do i have a story for you. They might be reading this. Too funny
 
 
William Peters 
Reply to Ronald Miller
In a lone wolf arrangement of leadership you can only blame one man. He also claims responsibility for his decisions entirely. Being an apologist for him is giving him a pass on the ideologies he governs with. He was intent on imposing austerity onto NB when he wasn't even the premier. "NBers need to want less" was always his cry. That doesn't apply to rich industrialists. People are following along out of a admiration for the social mayhem he is creating if you ask me. The sour and angry types love it. It allows scapegoating of others. Instead of talking about education people get sucked into talking personal values in an education setting. Its constant division and tension blamed on someone other than the political machine which profits from it.  
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Shawn Tabor
They were on strike for months until the day I sat beside you in court in 2004 I explained it to you then Correct?   

 
 
 
 
Jos Allaire 
These prosecutors are overwhelmed and are dropping like flies under unbearable stress. 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Jos Allaire
Why is it that I am laughing?
 
 
 
 
Shawn Tabor
They have been trying to tell you this, for a long time now. Another Game is being played.
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Shawn Tabor
This is not a Game

SarahRose Werner
I've heard people call for police crackdowns. Crackdowns aren't going to mean a lot if the police arrest people and charge people, but then the charges get stayed because there aren't enough Crown prosecutors.


David Webb
Reply to SarahRose Werner
Just like homes are not going to get built if there is a shortage of trades workers, let alone affordable with inflation up 16% in the last 4 years. Government(s) failure to control debt and the lack of long term planning for the departure of the boomer generation leaving the workforce has left us with the current mess. The chickens have come home to roost.


Rosco holt
Reply to David Webb
Governments don't want to control the debt, it's the get out of funding card they use when negotiating contracts or not wanting certain types of programs.


Ronald Miller
Reply to Rosco holt
Governments don't want to control the debt? What!!!!!!!!!!!! Of course they do, they just are unable to or do not want to because spending without proper fiscal management is an easy to sell to many with weak minds.


Ronald Miller
Reply to Rosco holt
Our premier has controlled debt while negotiating several contracts including messes left behind by the previous gov't, a master at work.


Jos Allaire
Reply to Ronald Miller
All governments are the same, just that the one you support is the worst of them all❗


Ronald Miller
Reply to Jos Allaire
Facts say otherwise, keep us entertained.


Rosco holt
Reply to Ronald Miller
Higgs was in many of those previous governments. Some of the mess he is his involved, like the crownland fiasco. NB forestry was exempt from tariffs until ALward gave crownlands away. To this day the province is still wasting millions fighting US tariffs so some can ship cheap crown lumber to their mills in Maine.


David Amos
Reply to Jos Allaire
The political animals you support are no better






 


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