Brandon Chung

315 posts

Brandon Chung

Brandon Chung

@bashchung

criminal lawyer @HeneinHutchison • former law clerk @SCC_eng + bcca • @Cambridge_Uni + @queensu alum • he/him • law and

Toronto, Ontario Se unió Mayıs 2018
710 Siguiendo442 Seguidores
Brandon Chung retuiteado
Laura Metcalfe
Laura Metcalfe@LauraMetcalfe23·
Seeking any criminal defence lawyers (past or current) who identify as female or BIPOC to email msputka@fentonlaw.ca your interest in participating in a confidential interview. The CLAs Diversity and Women’s Committee successfully received one of the @LawSocietyLSO Equity Grants.
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Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
Great win by all counsel, especially @bashchung and Danielle Robitaille. Ashley, my sister/law partner, was co-counsel for their client at trial. She was devastated when her client was convicted. She's happy to see him vindicated with an acquittal.
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SewrattanLaw This gets cast as being about a “relationship” not being protected and its impact is maybe lessened by the police sting. But honestly, how different is that statement from what Doherty J.A. seems to say: “drunk drivers can’t expect evidence of their drinking to be private”.
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Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
R. v. Singh, 2024 ONCA 66: No reasonable expectation of privacy when the police learn in and smell the breath of a D during an interview where the D is falling in and out of conciousness in an emergency room coadecisions.ontariocourts.ca/coa/coa/en/ite…
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SewrattanLaw This feels like a short version of what Brown J was trying to say about REP in the context of child luring investigations in Mills
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Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
I genuinely applaud the Court's intellectual honesty. Normally this is saying the quiet part out loud. Still, I'm not sure that investigative importance informs the reasonableness of one's privacy expectation, as opposed to the reasonableness of a law invading that expectation
Chris Sewrattan tweet media
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Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
@bashchung It's an asymmetry that pre-trial custody can reduce the sentence to allow for probation but not a conditional sentence. Tough to wrap my head around.
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Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
R. v. Johnston, 2023 ONCA 808: Court says the judge was wrong to issue a conditional sentence because she found a 3 year sentence to be just, and then deducted 12.5ish months for Summers/Duncan. I'm confused. coadecisions.ontariocourts.ca/coa/coa/en/ite…
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SewrattanLaw That time also arguably works rehabilitation. At least for those two reasons, time spent in custody should change the calculus of whether a conditional sentence is appropriate. Fice was wrong to interpret “appropriate sentence” in 742 as restrictively as it did. Sigh
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SewrattanLaw Fice fails to recognize that time spent incarcerated acts to pay down a moral debt (I don’t love thinking of it this way, but I think at least doctrinally this is implied by the idea that moral blameworthiness is both a justification for and a constraint on punishment).
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Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
R. v. S.B., 2023 ONCA 784: In a sexual assault trial, the trial judge must relate the defendant's testimony, even if it's only circumstantial evidence, to the issue of whether the complainant had the capacity to consent coadecisions.ontariocourts.ca/coa/coa/en/ite…
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@HearsayDaily is an amazing resource that anyone interested in law-related news in Canada should follow. It’s a quick daily read that pulls together everything from case summaries to legislative developments to local stories. Not sure how @DylanJGibbs does it but I’m glad he does
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Brandon Chung retuiteado
Tonya Kent
Tonya Kent@tonya_ck·
I too am running for a CLA Toronto position and would ask you to vote for me of course, but there are 8 spots and I hope you also consider Chris for one of those spots. He's dedicated to the practice of criminal law and would be an amazing addition to the board.
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Brandon Chung retuiteado
Chris Sewrattan
Chris Sewrattan@SewrattanLaw·
Please consider voting for me for an Executive position on the @ClaOntario. Voting starts today. My platform is on the ballot.
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SunKerry Maybe it’s about the terms here, since “commentary” is broad. I just thought this discussion obscured what was clear in Le: that JN can be taken of facts established in academic work, as long as it meets the relevant test. But if “commentary” is just legal opinion then I agree
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Kerry Sun
Kerry Sun@SunKerry·
@bashchung I think it goes to the same point. One reason why we should distinguish commentary and fact is that the latter is subject to those procedural constraints. Hence, academic commentary should be recognised as such, as opposed to classified as 'fact' and eligible for judicial notice.
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
But hard to see how the statement that “academic commentary or scholarship … is not properly the subject of judicial notice” squares with Le at paras. 82-89, which recognizes that “authoritative studies, research and articles” can establish social context via judicial notice
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SunKerry Maybe I can put it this way: it’s not like the application of those safeguards could ever lead to a circumstance where legal opinion goes in to help resolve a factual question. Opinion just doesn’t do that.
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Brandon Chung
Brandon Chung@bashchung·
@SunKerry If that’s all then ok. But the issue then isn’t that the risk commentary may “result in evidence being imported into judicial proceedings indirectly, bypassing the relevant evidentiary safeguards”. It’s that a legal opinion doesn’t help resolve factual q’s because…how could it?
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