Marginal note:Special warrant — digital assets
462.321 (1) If, on an application of the Attorney General, a judge is satisfied by information on oath in Form 1, varied to suit the case, that there are reasonable grounds to believe that any digital assets, including virtual currency, are proceeds of crime, the judge may issue a warrant authorizing a person named in the warrant or a peace officer to
(a) search for the digital assets by using a computer program, as defined in subsection 342.1(2); and
(b) seize — including by taking control of the right to access — the digital assets, as well as any other digital assets found during that search that the person or peace officer believes, on reasonable grounds, are proceeds of crime.
Marginal note:Conditions
(2) A warrant issued under subsection (1) may be subject to any reasonable conditions that the judge thinks fit.
Marginal note:Procedure
(3) An application for a warrant under subsection (1) may be made ex parte, shall be made in writing and shall include a statement as to whether any previous applications have been made under subsection (1) with respect to the property that is the subject of the application.
Marginal note:Execution in Canada
(3.1) A warrant issued under subsection (1) may be executed at any place in Canada. Any peace officer who executes the warrant must have authority to act as a peace officer in the place where it is executed.
Marginal note:Detention and record of property seized
(4) Every person who executes a warrant issued by a judge under this section shall
(a) detain or cause to be detained any seized property, taking reasonable care to ensure that it is preserved so that it may be dealt with in accordance with the law;
(b) as soon as practicable after the execution of the warrant, cause the following to be sent to the usual place of residence of any person from whom the property is seized if that usual place of residence is in Canada and is known to the person executing the warrant:
(i) a copy of the warrant, and
(ii) a notice in Form 5.1, varied to suit the case, setting out the address of the court from which a copy of a report on the seized property may be obtained;
(c) as soon as practicable after the execution of the warrant but within a period of not more than seven days, prepare a report in Form 5.3, varied to suit the case, identifying the seized property and the manner in which it is being detained, and cause the report to be filed with the clerk of the court; and
(d) cause a copy of the report to be provided, on request, to the person from whom the property was seized and to any other person who, in the opinion of the judge, appears to have a valid interest in the seized property.
Marginal note:Return
(5) Subject to this or any other Act of Parliament, a peace officer or a person acting on their behalf may, with the written consent of the Attorney General, on being issued a receipt for it, cause the seized property to be returned to the person lawfully entitled to its possession, if
(a) the peace officer is satisfied that there is no dispute as to who is lawfully entitled to possession of the seized property;
(b) the peace officer is satisfied that the continued detention of the seized property is not required for the purpose of forfeiture; and
(c) the seized property is returned before a report is filed with the clerk of the court under paragraph (4)(c).
Marginal note:Notice
(6) Before issuing a warrant under this section in relation to any property, a judge may require notice to be given to and may hear any person who, in the opinion of the judge, appears to have a valid interest in the property unless the judge is of the opinion that giving such notice before the issuance of the warrant would result in the disappearance, dissipation or reduction in value of the property or otherwise affect the property so that all or a part of it could not be seized under the warrant.
(7) [Repealed, 2024, c. 15, s. 310]
- 2023, c. 26, s. 212
- 2024, c. 15, s. 310
- Date modified: