Summary#
This bill amends the Criminal Code to address cases where a person commits a violent act while in a state of self‑induced extreme intoxication. It creates criminal liability when the person’s own negligence in consuming substances made that state reasonably foreseeable and led to harm (Bill s. 33.1(1)–(2)). It applies to offences that involve assault or other interference, or threats of interference, with another person’s bodily integrity (Bill s. 33.1(3)).
- Defines “extreme intoxication” as being unaware of, or unable to consciously control, one’s behavior (Bill s. 33.1(4)).
- Allows conviction even if the person lacked intent or voluntariness at the time, if the Crown proves a marked departure from a reasonable standard of care before intoxication (Bill s. 33.1(1)(b)).
- Requires courts to assess objective foreseeability that consumption could cause extreme intoxication and lead to harm, and to weigh steps taken to avoid the risk (Bill s. 33.1(2)).
- Limits the rule to offences involving bodily integrity, not all crimes (Bill s. 33.1(3)).
- Keeps the Crown’s duty to prove all other elements of the offence (Bill s. 33.1(1)(a)).
What it means for you#
- Households
- In rare cases where an accused claims extreme intoxication, courts can still convict for violent offences if negligence in substance use is proven (Bill s. 33.1(1)–(3)). Effective upon enactment.
- People who consume intoxicants (alcohol, drugs)
- If you consume in a way that a reasonable person would see as risky, and it was objectively foreseeable this could cause extreme intoxication and lead to harm, you can be found guilty of a violent offence even if you lacked intent at the time (Bill s. 33.1(1)–(2)).
- The court will consider what you did to avoid risk, such as precautions taken. All relevant circumstances matter (Bill s. 33.1(2)).
- Victims and survivors of violent offences
- An accused cannot avoid conviction solely by claiming extreme intoxication if the Crown proves negligent self‑intoxication that made the risk of violence foreseeable (Bill s. 33.1(1)–(3)).
- Accused persons
- The defence of extreme intoxication remains available if the state was not self‑induced or if there was no marked departure from reasonable care (Bill s. 33.1(1)(b), s. 33.1(4)).
- The Crown must still prove every other element of the charged offence beyond a reasonable doubt (Bill s. 33.1(1)(a)).
- Police and prosecutors
- You must gather and present evidence on foreseeability and negligence before intoxication, including circumstances of consumption and steps taken to avoid risk (Bill s. 33.1(2)).
- Applies only to offences involving assault or interference, or threats thereof, with bodily integrity (Bill s. 33.1(3)).
- Judges
- You must apply an objective standard (reasonable person) to foreseeability of extreme intoxication and resulting harm, and weigh all relevant circumstances, including risk‑avoidance steps (Bill s. 33.1(2)).
Expenses#
Estimated net cost: Data unavailable.
- No direct appropriations or funding are included in the bill text. Data unavailable.
- No official fiscal note identified. Data unavailable.
- Potential impacts on court time, training, or justice system administration: Data unavailable.
Proponents' View#
- Restores a path to accountability in rare extreme intoxication cases by requiring proof of negligence (marked departure) before intoxication, rather than imposing automatic liability (Bill s. 33.1(1)–(2)).
- Narrowly targets offences involving bodily integrity, focusing on violent conduct and related threats (Bill s. 33.1(3)).
- Sets a high threshold by limiting “extreme intoxication” to states of unawareness or loss of conscious control, which are uncommon (Bill s. 33.1(4)).
- Preserves constitutional safeguards by keeping the Crown’s burden to prove all other offence elements and by requiring an objective foreseeability assessment that includes risk‑avoidance steps (Bill s. 33.1(1)(a), s. 33.1(2)).
- Encourages responsible substance use by recognizing precautions taken to avoid risk, which courts must consider (Bill s. 33.1(2)).
Opponents' View#
- May still convict people who lacked intent or voluntariness at the time of the act, based on a negligence standard, raising fairness concerns (Bill s. 33.1(1)–(2)).
- “Marked departure” and “objective foreseeability” may be hard to apply consistently, leading to uncertainty and more appeals (Bill s. 33.1(2)).
- Risk that individuals with substance use disorders could be judged more harshly if their consumption is viewed as negligent; distributional impacts unknown. Data unavailable.
- Could increase the length and complexity of trials due to evidence on foreseeability and risk‑avoidance, adding costs and delays. Data unavailable.
- Limiting the rule to offences involving bodily integrity may create boundary disputes about which offences qualify, leading to litigation over scope (Bill s. 33.1(3)).