When Wiretaps Cross The Line
A live wiretap, a lawyer on the line, and a rule that said “stop listening”—which police ignored. We dive into a rare Supreme Court of Canada decision where constitutional safeguards, solicitor-client privilege, and the search for truth collide. The stakes are real: can a lawyer use privileged communications to defend themselves when facing criminal allegations, and what happens when the state breaches explicit limits on surveillance?
We walk through why solicitor-client privilege is foundational, who actually owns it, and how the Court carved a tight “innocence at stake” exception without gutting client confidence. You’ll hear how a two-step threshold protects privilege in most cases while safeguarding against wrongful convictions. Then we examine the Charter lens under section 24(2): why the entire recording was tossed, how the seriousness of the breach mattered, and why the absence of reprimand or corrective steps by authorities weighed heavily against admission.
From there, we turn to a different kind of wall: Crown immunity. A survivor’s civil claim alleging sexual assault by jail guards in 1972 confronted the hard edge of history. Before the 1974 Crown Proceedings Act, the province couldn’t be sued, and the courts have held that the change is not retrospective. We unpack why a late-stage defence amendment was allowed, why a novel “duty of care” theory against opposing counsel failed, and how statutory limits can leave profound harms without civil recourse. It’s a sobering picture of how legal architecture protects rights, constrains power, and sometimes forecloses remedies.
If you value smart, practical analysis of criminal law, Charter rights, and civil liability against the state, you’ll find clarity and context here. Follow the show, share this episode with a friend who loves legal deep dives, and leave a review telling us where you think privilege should bend—or hold firm.
Legally Speaking with Michael Mulligan is live on CFAX 1070 every Thursday at 12:30 p.m. It’s also available on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.