Households and victims/survivors:
- If a CAF member is accused of a listed sexual offence in Canada, the case would be handled by civilian police and Crown prosecutors, and tried in civilian court. This may change available victim services, which follow provincial systems (Bill, s.1).
- If your case was already before a military court when the law takes effect, it will stay in the military system until finished (Transitional Provision).
CAF members and others subject to the Code of Service Discipline:
- You would face civilian prosecution and sentencing for listed sexual offences committed in Canada. Military prosecution would no longer apply to those charges (Bill, s.1).
- Alleged listed sexual offences outside Canada could still be prosecuted by military courts because the bill only removes jurisdiction for offences “that take place in Canada” (Bill, s.1; NDA s.130(1)(a)).
Military justice system (military police, prosecutors, courts martial):
- Courts martial would no longer try listed sexual offences committed in Canada. Resources could shift to other military-specific offences. Investigation processes are not specified by the bill; only prosecution forum changes (Bill, s.1).
Civilian police, Crown prosecutors, and provincial/territorial courts:
- You would receive and handle these cases once the law is in force. Workload may increase where CAF members live or work, including near bases (Bill, s.1). Data unavailable on volumes.
Local and provincial governments:
- Administration of justice (policing, prosecution, courts, victim services) may see added demand in jurisdictions with CAF presence. The bill sets no funding or implementation mandates (Bill text).