So underlining it make it constitutional? I have great issue with Canada making laws assuming jurisdiction where we do not have it. Perhaps if the Afghani govt decided to start charging Canadians for things they did here against Afghani law? You see the problem yet? It is a horrible nasty slippery slope we start descending with extraterretorial laws. I don't like them, I don't think they are constitutional, and I don't think we want a precedent whereby other govts can charge people for acts in Canada.
Pg 9 - though the previous pages provides other judicial reasoning.
http://beyondborders.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/child-sex-tourism-paper-melissa-ferens.pdf
The Current Canadian Approach to Criminal Law Jurisdiction - The “Real and Substantial
Connection” Test
La Forest J., writing for the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Libman affirmed the
territorial principle as the “primary basis” of criminal jurisdiction, and established the “real and
substantial connection” test for determining whether a criminal offence should be subject to the
jurisdiction of a Canadian court. After extensively reviewing Canadian and English cases, La
Forest recognized that the law has evolved to permit states to assert jurisdiction over acts
committed in another state when those acts are connected to the furtherance of a criminal offence
in Canada:
As I see it, all that is necessary to make an offence subject to the jurisdiction of
our courts is that a significant portion of the activities constituting that offence
took place in Canada. As it is put by modern academics, it is sufficient that there
be a “real and substantial link” between an offence and this country, a test well
known in public and private international law.
30
Subsequent to Libman, the “real and substantial connection” test has been reaffirmed and applied
in numerous cases, in both the civil and criminal context.
31
Factors to take into acc