Site icon crime canada

Understanding Extortion in Canada | Crime Canada

extortion criminal code canada

Understanding Extortion in Canada | Crime Canada

Extortion criminal code Canada offences are among the most serious crimes involving threats and coercion. Under Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Code 1620, extortion is classified as an indictable offence, meaning it must proceed by indictment and can result in very long prison terms, including life imprisonment. Extortion occurs when someone uses threats, accusations, menaces, or violence to force another person to do something against their will, usually to obtain money, property, services, or some other advantage. Section 346 of the Criminal Code of Canada creates this offence and is designed to protect both personal security and property rights from coercive and abusive tactics.

The Legal Definition

Every one commits extortion who, without reasonable justification or excuse and with intent to obtain anything, by threats, accusations, menaces or violence induces or attempts to induce any person, whether or not he is the person threatened, accused or menaced or to whom violence is shown, to do anything or cause anything to be done.

This definition in section 346 of the Criminal Code sets out four core elements the Crown must prove: (1) the accused had no reasonable justification or excuse, (2) they intended to obtain “anything,” (3) they used threats, accusations, menaces, or violence, and (4) they induced or tried to induce a person to do something or cause something to be done. The law does not require the extortion attempt to succeed; an attempt alone can complete the offence.

“Obtain anything” is interpreted broadly: it can mean cash, property, services, a job, a contract, influence over a decision, or even a promise not to sue or report a crime. “Threats” and “menaces” cover both explicit and implied threats of harm, while “accusations” can include threatening to expose damaging information. Importantly, the person being pressured does not have to be the same person who is threatened—threatening a family member to force someone else to pay still fits the definition. Section 346(2) also clarifies that a threat to start civil court proceedings (for example, threatening to sue over a debt) is not, by itself, extortion; Parliament wanted to separate legitimate legal pressure from criminal coercion.

Penalties & Sentencing Framework

Because extortion under section 346 is purely indictable, it must be dealt with in the Superior Court system and carries the full range of serious procedural consequences, including the right to a jury trial (given the maximum punishment of life imprisonment). There is no lower “summary” version, unlike many property and threat-based offences. This reflects Parliament’s view that the combination of coercion and the risk (or reality) of violence makes extortion objectively more serious than fraud and many other financial crimes, even when the dollar amounts may be lower.

The sentencing framework is heavily influenced by whether a firearm is involved and whether the offence is connected to a criminal organization. If a restricted or prohibited firearm is used, or if any firearm is used for the benefit of, at the direction of, or in association with a criminal organization, the court must impose at least 5 years for a first offence and at least 7 years for a subsequent offence, with life imprisonment as the ceiling. The Criminal Code sets out a special rule for counting prior offences: what matters is the sequence of convictions, not the order in which the underlying crimes occurred. This prevents technical arguments about timing from undermining Parliament’s intent to escalate penalties for repeat serious offenders.

In cases without those aggravating firearm/organized crime features, there is still a maximum of life imprisonment but no mandatory minimum. Judges must then craft a proportionate sentence based on the nature of the threats, the vulnerability of the victim, any actual harm, the involvement of gangs or organized crime, and the offender’s background and risk of reoffending. Sentences can range widely—from relatively moderate custodial terms where the conduct is at the lower end of the spectrum, to double‑digit years of imprisonment for sustained, sophisticated schemes. Courts also compare extortion to related offences like fraud: while major fraud over $5,000 tops out at 14 years, Parliament has made clear that extortion—because it uses threats or violence—merits a higher maximum of life imprisonment.

Common Defenses

Real-World Example

Imagine a local business owner receives a letter demanding payment under threat of exposing a confidential secret. The letter states that unless $50,000 is paid within seven days, the sender will publicly reveal sensitive information about the owner’s past to the media and on social media platforms. The letter does not allege any legal claim, and the sender has no legitimate right to the money. In this scenario, the sender is attempting to obtain something (money) by means of accusations or threats intended to induce the owner to act (paying the money) against their will. Under section 346, this is classic extortion: the use of menacing disclosure to coerce payment, even if the information to be revealed is true. Police would treat the letter, any follow‑up messages, financial instructions (such as bank account numbers or cryptocurrency wallet details), and witness testimony as evidence of the extortion attempt. The crime is complete even if the owner refuses to pay; an “attempt to induce” is sufficient under the statute.

Record Suspensions (Pardons)

Because extortion is an indictable offence with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment, it is treated as a serious offence for record suspension purposes. Under the federal record suspension regime administered by the Parole Board of Canada, a person convicted of extortion will normally be eligible to apply for a record suspension 10 years after the completion of their entire sentence (including any term of imprisonment, probation, and payment of fines or surcharges). The waiting period does not start until all components of the sentence are fully satisfied. A record suspension is not automatic; the applicant must show a law‑abiding lifestyle and satisfy public safety and good conduct criteria. Given the gravity of extortion, the Board will often scrutinize such applications closely, taking into account the nature of the threats, any use of weapons, organized crime involvement, and the impact on victims.

Related Violations

Exit mobile version