First responders (including volunteers)
- The law defines “first responder” to include employees and formally engaged volunteers who are first on scene to provide medical help or firefighting, including EMTs, paramedics, and firefighters (s.2 definition).
- Assaulting you while you are doing your job is a specific offence, with higher penalties when a weapon is used or bodily harm is caused, or when it is aggravated (ss.270, 270.01, 270.02).
- Serious assaults against you are added to the list of offences for which police may seek a wiretap warrant (s.183).
- These assaults are listed as serious violent crimes for parole purposes (Corrections and Conditional Release Act, Schedule I).
Accused persons and defendants
- If convicted of assaulting a first responder under ss.270, 270.01, or 270.02, the court may order you to provide a DNA sample because the offences are “primary” or “secondary designated offences” (s.487.04).
- A conviction for these offences can be used by prosecutors to seek a dangerous offender or long-term offender application because they are “designated offences” (s.752).
- For aggravated assault where the victim is a person described in s.231(4), the maximum sentence increases to up to 20 years (s.268(2) as amended). The bill does not change the general maximum for other aggravated assaults in its text.
Businesses and non-profits
- People convicted of assaulting a first responder under ss.270, 270.01, or 270.02 face added barriers to serving as a director or officer under the Canada Business Corporations Act schedule (CBCA schedule amendment).