Her Majesty the Queen v. Marc-André Boulanger
Her Majesty the Queen
Law Firm / Organization
Prévost Fortin D'Aoust
Law Firm / Organization
Not Specified
Lawyer(s)

Romi Bertrand

Boulanger, Marc-André
Law Firm / Organization
Not Specified
Lawyer(s)

Danièle Roy

Law Firm / Organization
The Nouraie Group
The respondent, Marc-André Boulanger, faced four charges laid under, among other things, the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. The Court of Québec granted the respondent’s motion for a stay of proceedings for unreasonable delay under s. 11(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and entered a stay of proceedings on the four charges. The trial judge found a net delay of 32 months and 10 days, which was therefore above the presumptive ceiling of 30 months. The majority of the Quebec Court of Appeal dismissed the prosecution’s appeal from the Court of Québec’s decision. Although the majority’s analysis differed from that of the trial judge with regard to the delay related to the unavailability of the respondent’s lawyer, the majority was of the view that the trial judge had correctly stayed the proceedings and agreed with the judge’s overall assessment of the main cause of the delay in the progress of this case: the absence of a carefully crafted prosecution plan. Chamberland J.A., dissenting, would have allowed the appeal, set aside the Court of Québec’s decision, dismissed the respondent’s motion for a stay of proceedings, and referred the case back to the same judge for a decision on the outcome of the trial. In his view, 84 days had to be added to the defence delay, resulting in a net delay below the applicable 30 month ceiling.
Supreme Court of Canada
39710
Criminal law
09 February 2022
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