Canadian Criminal Law/Offences/Child Pornography/Definition of Child Pornography

General Principles
Under s. 163.1, "Child Pornography" is defined as:

The section sets out five types of child pornography:
 * visual representations that "shows a person who is or is depicted as being under the age of eighteen years and is engaged in or is depicted as engaged in explicit sexual activity" (s. 163.1(1)(a)(i))
 * visual representations where "the dominant characteristic of which is the depiction, for a sexual purpose, of a sexual organ or the anal region of a person under the age of eighteen years" (s. 163.1(1)(a)(ii))
 * written material "that advocates or counsels sexual activity with a person under the age of eighteen years that would be" a criminal offence (s. 163.1(1)(b))
 * written material where the "dominant characteristic is the description, for a sexual purpose, of sexual activity with a person under the age of eighteen years that would be" a criminal offence (s. 163.1(1)(c))
 * audio recording with a "dominant characteristic the description, presentation or representation, for a sexual purpose, of sexual activity with a person under the age of eighteen years that would be" a criminal offence (s. 163.1(1)(d))

Proof that a file is child pornography cannot be done simply through establishing that the accused's computer had a file with a corresponding hash value to a known child pornographic file from a police database such as the Wyoming database.This is because the hash value is hearsay and there is no direct evidence on the management of these databases which are largely maintained outside of Canada under different laws. It is however, sufficient to establish reasonable grounds for a search warrant.

The definition under s. 163.1(1)(a)(ii) has four elements:
 * 1) Person Under the Age of Eighteen Years
 * 2) Depiction of a Sexual Organ or Anal Region
 * 3) Dominant Characteristic
 * 4) For a Sexual Purpose

Person under the age of 18
"Person" includes imaginary human beings.

Judges should not speculate or guess on the age or apparent age. The judge cannot distinguish between an age just below 18 and an age above 18. Courts have taken judicial notice that "assessing the age of an adolescent person or young adult is not always an obvious task."

However, a judge may assess "apparent age" without extrinsic proof of age or expert evidence, and determination will turn on the facts of the case.

The file name does not add to the determination of whether the file depicts someone under the age of 18. It is accepted that the file names are often mislabeled.

While it is generally understood that physical characteristics of body under-development are consistent with girls under the age of 18, "some adult women are thin, lack, musculature, and have minimal breast development. Further, the amount of natural body hair, pubic or otherwise, that adults have varies from individual to individual."

Other factors to determine age include:
 * 1) absence of pubic hair;
 * 2) a buoyancy to the subject's skin which is indicative of a young age;
 * 3) no marks or blemishes on the subject's skin which one would expect on adult skin (moles, scars, calluses, wrinkles, etc.);
 * 4) absence of facial hair,
 * 5) child-like facial structure;
 * 6) clothing suggestive of children (child themed pajamas)

"Explicit sexual activity"
"Explicit sex" does not include simple nudity. "Explicit sexual activity" refers to “acts which viewed objectively fall at the extreme end of the spectrum of sexual activity – acts involving nudity or intimate sexual activity, represented in a graphic and unambiguous fashion, with persons under or depicted as under 18 years of age.” This does not include “casual sexual contact, like touching, kissing, or hugging, since these are not depictions of nudity or intimate sexual activity.”

"Dominant characteristic" and "sexual purpose"
Images of clothed children can be considered child pornography where there is a "a dominant prurient purpose". The dominant characteristic of an image can be influenced by the context of the image. For example, where a photo of a bathing child in a family photo album will be treated differently than in the context of a album of sexual materials. Context will include factors such as whether the pictures were taken surreptitiously. It is not determinative where there is nudity only and no overt sexual activities.

A court should take an "objective approach" to considering "dominant characteristic" and "sexual purpose". This means that the subjective belief of the possessor will not be a factor.

Factors to consider include the posing of the subject, such that the pose has sexual connotations to it, as well as captions that may create a sexual meaning to the image.

Surrepticious recordings of girls in the bathroom can be child pornography.

"Sexual organ" can include bare breasts. And "anal region" may include bottocks.

Test to satisfy s. 163.1(a)(ii) is to ask whether a reasonable viewer, looking at the pictures objectively and in context, would see their dominant characteristic as the depiction for a sexual purpose of a sexual organ or the anal region of a person under the age of eighteen”.

“Sexual purpose” is determined similarly where it was reasonably perceived as intended to cause sexual stimulation to some viewers.

It is not necessary for there to be an "extreme" sexual purpose.

Written Materials
Written materials must provide some "active inducements" or "encouragement" of sexual activity with persons under 18 years. This may be be implicit from the narrative of the stories themselves.