What Happens If a Person Tries to Plead Guilty While Denying Being Guilty?

A Court Should Refuse to Accept a Guilty Plea If the Court Is Aware That the Person Pleading Guilty Holds a Belief of Innocence.


Understanding the Court Requirements For Acceptance of a Guilty Plea Requires the Accused Person to Believe In Guilt

Pleading of Guilty as Charged Requires That the Accused Person Actually Believes In Guilt A person charged with an offence may believe that the charge is unwarranted, meaning that the allegations are untrue; and yet, for various personal reasons the accused person may be willing to plead guilty to the charge, despite the belief in a lack of guilt. In such circumstances, the court, whose duty is to ensure that justice is properly done, is legally required to reject an attempt to plead guilty.

The Law
Jurisprudence

If a person attempts to plead guilty, despite the person holding a belief of innocence, if the court knows that the person holds a belief of innocence, then the law requires that the court decline to accept an attempt to plead guilty. The court, whose duty is to ensure truth and serve justice, must instead commit the case to a Trial.  The requirement that courts serve the interests of justice and decline to accept an ingenuine guilty plea was explained within the case of R. v. McIlvride-Lister, 2019 ONSC 1869, wherein it was stated:


[72]  A belief in factual innocence cannot co-exist with a plea of guilt.  Where a person, who believes herself to be innocent, pleads guilty for reasons unrelated to culpability, the result is a miscarriage of justice.  The system can only convict and sentence persons who have genuinely admitted guilt, or have been proven guilty by the prosecution.  A person who adheres to a belief that they are innocent is entitled to have a trial.

[73]  This proposition finds support in authority.  In K. (S.), Carthy J.A. ruled that a trial judge ought to have inquired into a plea when it came to light that the accused had emphatically declared his innocence to the authors of pre-sentence reports.  In striking the plea on appeal, the court observed that the accused’s “state of mind was induced by his trial counsel and perpetuated by the trial judge who failed to intervene and make inquiry as to the validity of the guilty pleas when he read the pre-sentence reports”.  Carthy J.A. sounded a note of caution about the process of plea bargaining, saying:

The system was tilted askew by the simple fact that a person protesting innocence became engaged in plea bargaining.

. . . .

Plea bargaining is an accepted and integral part of our criminal justice system but must be conducted with sensitivity to its vulnerabilities.  A court that is misled, or allows itself to be misled, cannot serve the interests of justice.

Per R. v. Scotney, 2005 CanLII 17917, which relied upon the Court of Appeal case of R. v. S.K., 1995 CanLII 8926, it was also explained that the administration of justice, meaning courts, must refuse a plea of guilty where the accused person lacks a belief of guilt.  Specifically, it was said:


[8]  I have reviewed R. v. S.K. 1995 CanLII 8926 (ON CA), [1995] 99 C.C.C. 3rd 376, wherein the Ontario Court of Appeal cited with approval the report of the Attorney General’s Advisory Committee on Charge Screening, Disclosure and Resolution Discussions (1993) chaired by the Honourable G. Arthur Martin.

If the plea comprehension inquiry is desirable in the American context where ascertaining that an accused denies guilt is not fatal to the plea of guilty proceeding, it follows, in the Committee’s view that such an inquiry is even more desirable in Ontario, where a plea of guilty cannot proceed if the accused denies guilt.  The greater scope in Ontario for the courts to decline to accept a plea of guilty heightens the importance of the courts ensuring through inquiry that a plea of guilty is sufficient in law.

[9]  Carthy J.A. went on to indicate that,

Statements made in the course of the inquiry following a guilty plea may, although not admitted by the Crown, justify the Court in rejecting the guilty plea and proceeding to trial.

And further,

The Court should not be in the position of convicting and sentencing individuals, who fall short of admitting the facts to support the conviction unless that guilt is proved beyond a reasonable doubt.  Nor should sentencing proceed on the false assumption of contrition.  That did not happen here, but worse, the sentence became impossible to perform.  Plea bargaining is an accepted and integral part of our criminal justice system but must be conducted with sensitivity to its vulnerabilities.

Accordingly, where a court is aware that a person denies guilt, the court should be unwilling to accept a plea of guilty and instead, in the public interest of seeing that justice is properly done, set the matter for Trial.

Statutory

Furthermore, in addition to the common law case decisions such as those provided above, both the Criminal Code of Canada, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 at section 606(1.1) as well as the Provincial Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33 at section 45(3) prescribe conditions required before the court may accept a guilty plea.  Specifically, the statutes state:


606 (1.1) A court may accept a plea of guilty only if it is satisfied that

(a) the accused is making the plea voluntarily;

(b) the accused understands

(i) that the plea is an admission of the essential elements of the offence,

(ii) the nature and consequences of the plea, and

(iii) that the court is not bound by any agreement made between the accused and the prosecutor; and

(c) the facts support the charge.


45 (3) A court may accept a plea of guilty only if it is satisfied that the defendant,

(a)  is making the plea voluntarily;

(b)  understands that the plea is an admission of the essential elements of the offence;

(c)  understands the nature and consequences of the plea; and

(d)  understands that the court is not bound by any agreement made between the defendant and the prosecutor.

Summary Comment

White it may be that a guilty plea would expediate the legal process and save tax dollars, the need to ensure public respect for the justice system requires that the courts only allow persons who genuinely believe in guilt to plead guilty to a charge.  Where a court is aware that a person is pleading guilty without a belief in guilt, the court is required to decline acceptance of the guilty plea.

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