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Operation While Impaired Causing Harm

operation impaired bodily harm

Operation While Impaired Causing Harm

Operation while impaired causing bodily harm (alcohol) is a serious Canadian criminal offence that targets drivers whose alcohol impairment leads to injuries. Under the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) system, this offence is coded as UCR Code 9220. It is prosecuted under Criminal Code section 320.14(2) and is classified as a hybrid offence, meaning the Crown can choose to proceed either summarily or by indictment. The focus of this offence is public safety: when a person operates a vehicle while their ability is impaired by alcohol and another person suffers bodily harm, they may be charged with operation impaired bodily harm.

The Legal Definition

320.14(2) Everyone commits an offence who commits an offence under subsection (1) and who, while operating the conveyance, causes bodily harm to another person.

In plain English, section 320.14(2) creates an aggravated form of impaired driving. First, the Crown must prove that you committed one of the basic impaired operation offences under section 320.14(1) – for example, operating while your ability was impaired by alcohol, or having a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 80 mg or more of alcohol in 100 mL of blood within two hours of driving. Second, they must prove that, while you were operating the vehicle (the Criminal Code uses the broader term “conveyance”), you caused bodily harm to another person.

“Bodily harm” is defined in section 2 of the Criminal Code as any hurt or injury that interferes with a person’s health or comfort and is more than merely transient or trifling. That covers a wide range of injuries – from broken bones and concussions to more serious trauma – as long as the harm is more than a minor, short‑lived discomfort. Under the 2018 reforms reflected in Part VIII.1 of the Criminal Code, the Crown no longer needs to show that the impairment itself contributed to the injuries; they must prove only that the driver was impaired (or over the legal BAC) and that their driving caused the bodily harm.

Penalties & Sentencing Framework

Because operation while impaired causing bodily harm is a hybrid offence, the Crown chooses whether to proceed summarily (for less serious cases) or by indictment (for more serious circumstances). This election affects the available maximum penalties, procedural rights (such as potential jury trial on indictment), and the overall complexity and length of the proceedings. However, the statutory mandatory minimums apply regardless of election: even on a summary proceeding, a second conviction must carry at least 30 days in jail, and a third or subsequent conviction must carry at least 120 days.

The mandatory minimum fine of $1,000 for a first conviction is the floor, not the norm. Courts routinely go higher depending on factors such as the seriousness of the bodily harm, prior driving record, level of alcohol, and aggravating circumstances (e.g., excessive speed, multiple victims, presence of children). If the underlying offence is based on an “over 80” BAC reading under section 320.14(1)(b), and the BAC was 120 mg% or higher, the enhanced minimum fines of $1,500 or $2,000 apply, even where bodily harm is involved.

On the upper end, an indictable conviction for operation impaired bodily harm can result in lengthy penitentiary sentences, measured in multiple years, especially where there is serious or permanent injury, a very high BAC, or prior impaired driving convictions. For less serious injuries and first-time offenders, sentencing might focus more on shorter custodial terms or community-based penalties (where legally available), along with probation conditions, driving prohibitions, and sometimes court‑ordered participation in provincial ignition interlock programs. The 2018 reforms encourage early access to such programs to reduce repeat offending, though provincial rules vary. Sentencing remains highly individualized within the mandatory minimum and maximum framework.

Common Defenses

Real-World Example

Imagine a driver leaving a party after consuming several alcoholic drinks. They feel “buzzed” but believe they can still drive the short distance home. On the way, they run a red light and collide with another vehicle. The other driver suffers a broken arm and a concussion. Police arrive, observe signs of impairment (slurred speech, smell of alcohol, unsteady gait), and demand a roadside breath sample followed by breathalyzer testing at the station. The breathalyzer shows a BAC of 120 mg per 100 mL of blood within an hour of driving.

In this scenario, the Crown can charge the accused with operation while impaired causing bodily harm under section 320.14(2). The basic 320.14(1) element can be proven in two ways: by showing that the driver’s ability to operate the vehicle was impaired to “any degree” by alcohol, and/or that their BAC was at least 80 mg% within two hours of driving. The bodily harm element is satisfied by the injured driver’s broken arm and concussion, which clearly interfere with health and comfort and are more than transient or trifling. Causation is established because the accused’s operation of the vehicle (running the red light) caused the collision and resulting injuries; the Crown does not have to prove that the impairment itself was the reason they ran the red light. Given the 120 mg% reading, the enhanced $1,500 minimum fine for a first offence over 120 mg would apply, and the presence of bodily harm would push the case toward a more serious sentence, potentially including a period of jail, a lengthy driving prohibition, and conditions such as counseling or participation in an ignition interlock program.

Record Suspensions (Pardons)

Operation while impaired causing bodily harm results in a permanent entry on a criminal record unless a record suspension (formerly called a pardon) is granted by the Parole Board of Canada. Because this is a hybrid offence, the waiting period for a record suspension depends on how the Crown proceeded:

During this waiting period, you must remain crime‑free and demonstrate good conduct. A record suspension, if granted, does not erase the conviction but sets it apart from other records in the federal database, significantly reducing its visibility in most routine criminal record checks. However, serious driving prohibitions, provincial licensing consequences, and the fact that this is a serious impaired driving offence can still have ongoing implications for insurance, employment in safety‑sensitive roles, and international travel.

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