Episode 121: THOUGHT POLICE in Ontario? Plus, Supreme Court finds broad mobility right.
In Episode 121, we explain our concerns over Durham Region’s new “non-criminal hate incident” reporting program, we discuss the Supreme Court’s decision in Taylor, which finds a broad right to free movement in Canada, and we give you our Bad Legal Takes of the Week.
Stories and cases discussed in this week’s episode:
- Community-Based Hate Reporting Program
- Met Police says it will no longer investigate non-crime hate incidents
- Harry Miller v. The College of Policing
- Harry Miller: Legal victory after alleged transphobic tweets
- CCF Writes to Durham Region Questioning New Offensive Speech Reporting Tool
- Supreme Court Sides With CCF: Charter Protects Broad Right to Mobility
- CCF Demands Winnipeg Scrap Bylaw That Would Silence Protesters
- Taylor v. Newfoundland and Labrador
Not Reserving Judgment is a podcast about Canadian constitutional law hosted by Josh Dehaas, Joanna Baron, and Christine Van Geyn.
The show is brought to you by the Canadian Constitution Foundation, a non-partisan legal charity dedicated to defending rights and freedoms. To support our work, visit theccf.ca/donate.