Template:Recent News: Difference between revisions

From Criminal Law Notebook
No edit summary
Tag: wikieditor
No edit summary
Tag: wikieditor
Line 1: Line 1:
<div style="font-size:120%; font-weight:bold;">April 1, 2023</div>
The name of the inferior court of Alberta changes from Provincial Court of Alberta to Alberta Court of Justice. [https://www.albertacourts.ca/docs/default-source/pc/(practice-directive)-name-and-title-change--transition-period-with-respect-to-filed-materials-(april-1-2023).pdf?sfvrsn=43fe4f82_5]
<div style="font-size:120%; font-weight:bold;">January 14, 2023</div>
<div style="font-size:120%; font-weight:bold;">January 14, 2023</div>
Bill S-4 [[List_of_Criminal_Code_Amendments_(2020_to_present)#2022,_c._17|amending various provisions relating to COVID]], including the use of remote proceedings, came into force.
Bill S-4 [[List_of_Criminal_Code_Amendments_(2020_to_present)#2022,_c._17|amending various provisions relating to COVID]], including the use of remote proceedings, came into force.

Revision as of 15:09, 3 April 2023

April 1, 2023

The name of the inferior court of Alberta changes from Provincial Court of Alberta to Alberta Court of Justice. [1]

January 14, 2023

Bill S-4 amending various provisions relating to COVID, including the use of remote proceedings, came into force.

January 1, 2023

The Criminal Law Notebook is among several winners of the 2022 Clawbies!

December 15, 2022

Two new offences relating to trafficking in human organs came into force.

November 17, 2022

Amendments come into force that removes minimum jail sentences for various firearms, weapons and drug trafficking-related offences and expands conditional sentence eligibility to include most previously ineligible offences. It also introduced Part I.1 to the CDSA, which directs police and Crown to consider non-criminal options for all drug possession offences.

October 28, 2022

Supreme Court of Canada in R v Ndhlovu, 2022 SCC 38 (CanLII), per Karakatsanis and Martin JJ strikes down the provisions requiring offenders convicted of multiple sexual offences to be put on the sexual offender registry for life. The law violated s. 7 of the Charter for being "overbroad".

June 30, 2022

Supreme Court of Canada in R v JJ, 2022 SCC 28 (CanLII), per Wagner CJ and Moldaver J upholds the constitutionality of the statutory protections to complainants' personal information found in s. 278.92 to 278.94 of the Code.

June 23, 2022

Amendments coming into force rewriting s. 33.1 of the Code concerning the extreme intoxication defence for certain violent offences.