So you can register them anonymously?No it doesn't; the owners aren't being registered. What they own is being registered.
Does your pamphlet mention "hybrid offences" which are indictable until the crown decides on the charge?
Best check how they've changed the acts involved with driving without insurance to deal with chronic offenders and where a death has occured.
It's about liability. If there were damages the motor vehicle act didn't have enough oomph to collect other than a surcharge on a driver's license "if" the person ever gets one. Now you can face both time and a fine resulting in property forfeiture.With chronic offenders, and where death has occured probably indicates that mens rea, or the criminal intent, is present. The simple act of driving without insurance, registration, license doesn't necessarily meet the requirement of mens rea for a conviction under the criminal code. In this case, you actually have to do something where harm is intended, or not do do something that a "reasonable" person would do that results in harm. In this case, the latter could mean leaving a loaded firearm unattended, but that is also open to interpretation. What we have now is the criminalizing folks for doing nothing, where no harm is intended, no harm is done, and there is no intent to cause harm. Gotta love the system.
No it doesn't; the owners aren't being registered. What they own is being registered.
It's about liability. If there were damages the motor vehicle act didn't have enough oomph to collect other than a surcharge on a driver's license "if" the person ever gets one. Now you can face both time and a fine resulting in property forfeiture.
Depending on the severity of damages you can be indicted under the hybrid clause. I wish i could find the cash that changed all this. The jackass that the changes stem from was in 8 crashes with 6 different vehicles. 2 of the crashes were while on bail for there being a death in one of the other crashes. I wasn't kidding when I said they made some really stiff changes and opened up a chance to nail liability to the offender.You can certainly face time, but a conviction under a provincial statute will get you a maximum of two years less a day and no criminal conviction. But you can also get a conviction under the CC that will get you even less custodial time, but you have a monkey on your back for life.