Pubdate: Sat, 20 Jan 2007 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2007, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Alex Dobrota POLICE NAMED TO JUSTICE PANELS Police Will Help Pick Canada's Judges OTTAWA -- The Conservative government has named the first police officials in Canada who will have a say in the appointment of judges. The officials range from a Vancouver detective who worked on the Pickton case to a Toronto police-union boss who called for a tougher law-enforcement approach to gun violence. They will sit on the judicial advisory committees that assess judgeship applicants, a fact that is raising concerns that the balance of power on the committees has shifted in favour of the Minister of Justice. Critics also worry that the Tories are jeopardizing the independence of the judiciary in order to implement their tough-on-crime agenda. "It gives the perception that the deck is being stacked," said J. Parker MacCarthy, the president of the Canadian Bar Association. Those concerns were dismissed by a Justice Ministry spokesperson. . The committees reach a decision by consensus in most cases. Voting is very rare, the spokesperson said, and in the end the minister has the ultimate say over who becomes a judge. The police officials who will advise the minister include Dave Wilson, the head of the Toronto Police Association. Mr. Wilson has often called for a tougher law-enforcement approach to solve that city's gun-violence problem. In September of 2005, Mr. Wilson was particularly critical of an initiative to identify police officers to the public through the use of name tags. "Instead of focusing on the serious issues of gun violence and the shortage of police officers to protect the public, they have chosen to focus their time and money on the issue of police officers wearing name tags," he said then. Mr. Wilson will sit on one of Ontario's three judicial advisory committees. Karl Walsh, the president of the Ontario Provincial Police Association, will be sitting on another committee in that province. Earlier last year, Mr. Walsh criticized the OPP for not letting its officers wear full riot gear during the Caledonia native standoff. Other nominees include Vancouver Police Sergeant Sheila Sullivan, who worked on the unit trying to find the remains of slain prostitutes in the Pickton case. Mr. MacCarthy said he was pleased with the level of experience of each of these officials, but worried that their careers as police officers would hinder their partiality. "You now are seeking significant input from the particular group which themselves are going to be supervised by the courts," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek