In the USA, you are entitled to all kinds of protection yet the
jails and prisons are full of innocent people and the rate is
probably higher in America than here.
I don't know what the rates would be nor how comparable they are. But the protections in the US are no where near what they are in Canada, don't believe what you see on TV. I don't know all the in's and out's of American law and justice, or very much for that matter, only the results. I know some, maybe all, District Attorneys are elected; I know some, if not all Judges are elected, except for the Supreme Court. With the judiciary and prosecution being accountable to the public comes the problem of being swayed by public pressure, instead of law. In our system all Crown Prosecutors and Judges are appointed, now comes the problem of them not being accountable to anyone; they may, and often do interpret law based on their own morals and prejudices.
In Canada there may be many charges laid, but by the time it goes to court only the ones that the Crown think have a chance of conviction stick. So a person may only be facing one to three charges. In the US they use a shotgun approach, the goal is a conviction on one of many charges. A person may be fighting 15 charges and will surely be convicted of one. Conviction at any cost, so long as it pleases the public's bloodlust. I'm not saying ours is a good system, but it is far and away better than the US.
The over all problem I see is that the courts have now
defined what rights you do and do not have. That is a bit
troubling because when nations start doing that they tend
to be on a path of taking some rights away within the over
all definition. I think we could be heading that way here, not
for the purpose of combating crime, but to bring them in line
with terrorism laws. We are leaning ever closer to combining
the two. They used to call that the War Measures Act if you
get what I mean.
The Charter defines what rights and freedoms we have, and I have always thought that common law freedoms were protected and codifying them would leave them open for the judiciary to define. You and I see this, (the Charter is a flimsy document anyway), but on the other hand, we were granted the Common Law right to own arms for defense in the 8th century, predating firearms. We no longer have this right, nor do they in the UK, the very place where it had been re-affirmed by various kings over the centuries. The US is fighting the same fight even though their founding fathers had the good sense to codify it in their Constitution. Know this, governments do not give you freedoms, they only take them away outright or turn them into privileges. The rights granted to some are merely obligations placed on others. Some things do have to be written down, but again are subject to interpretation, there's the rub, much interpretation is subjective and reflective of the current zietgeist.