• The custom officer later searched his residential apartment situated in Vancouver and found a collection of various images of nude teenage males in which some of them were engage in sexual activities with other males.
• John Robin Sharpe was immediately arrested for the offence of illegal possession in violation of section 163.1(4) of the Canadian Criminal Code
• Additionally, John Robin Sharpe was also charged with violating section 163.1(3) of the Canadian Criminal Code which prohibits illegal possession with the object to distribute or sale the same.
• In the Court proceedings, John Robin Sharpe stated that the said criminal provisions are infringing his constitutional right of freedom of expression guaranteed to every citizen in Canada according to section 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Rights, 1985).
• In justification John Robin Sharpe stated that as he is interested in teenager guys, he should be given the right to possession of pornographic material of his personal sexual interest and denying him the said right is in violation of his right to freedom of expression.
• In the said case, the children’s right to be free from sexual abuse was in conflict with the right of an adult to freedom of expression
• John Robin Sharpe also argued that in certain situations, possessing child pornography could act as a strong medium in preventing child abuse.
• The said judgment attracted a lot of public attention as people believed that upholding the arguments of John Robin Sharpe; the Canadian Court would put all the children in Canada subject to serious harm and violate the international law made by United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child on children interest to be priority.
• The trial court and the Crown Court however, upheld the arguments of John Robin Sharpe and stated that the said Criminal Code is unconstitutional being in violation of the freedom of expression which is unacceptable in a sovereign and populist society.
• The judgment of the Crown Court was then appealed at the Supreme Court of Canada (R v Sharpe, 2001).
Legal Issues Involved
The legal issues in the said case are as follows:-
• Whether the present restriction against owning child pornography under section 163.1(4) of the Canadian Criminal Code is in violation of Freedom of Expression guaranteed under 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to every citizen of Canada?
• Whether the present restriction against owning child pornography in order to sale or distribute the same as stated in section 163.1(3) of the Canadian Criminal Code is in violation of Freedom of Expression guaranteed under 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to every citizen of Canada?
• Whether upholding the arguments advanced by John Robin Sharpe, the Court in Canada will violate the international law mentioned in Article 3 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child?
• Thus, in the present case, the adult’s constitutional right to freedom of expression guaranteed under 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is in conflict with the children’s right to be free from sexual abuse which is stated under section one of the Government’s objectives in Canada (R v Sharpe, 2001).
The judgment in the R v Sharpe case was passed by the Supreme Court of Canada where it overruled the judgment given by the lower court of British Columbia Supreme Court when the same was appealed. The decision of the British Columbia Supreme Court which is lower territorial court stated that sub-section (4) of section 163.1.1 of the Criminal Code in Canada is declared void as it infringes the right of freedom of speech guaranteed to citizens of Canada under 2(b) of the Canadian Charter, however, the Court stated that the same was not justified under section 1 of the government’s objective to ensure that children in Canada are free from sexual abuse. The Supreme Court reserved the said judgment by agreeing that violation of freedom of speech does exist in the said case, however, it provided two exceptions where possessing child pornography was considered legitimate. Thus, the development of the case is summarized in a manner which includes its inception in the year 1994 in the Supreme Court of British Columbia which passed the above mentioned judgment on January 13, 1999. As John Robin Sharpe was not satisfied with the decision of the said Court, he filed for an appeal in the Supreme Court of Canada.
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