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JUDGE ANDRÉE RUFFO
CBC fifth estate first interviewed Andée Ruffo in 1990.
AndéeAndree Ruffo graduated at the top of her law school class and
established one of the first practices to specialize in representing children.
She seemed the ideal choice to be named to the Quebec youth court.
When she was appointed, in 1986, Judge Andée Ruffo was one of the
youngest, and one of very few female, judges at the time.
But Ruffo spoke often, and very publicly, about the flaws she saw in the youth
protection services system.
In her court, she refused to issue judgments that fit the resources rather than
the child.
Throughout her career, Ruffo has criticised flaws in the youth protection
services system in Quebec.
Her determination to act on her conscience, and to speak her mind during her
twenty years as a judge, set her on a collision course with the judiciary and
with the social service bureaucracy.
Social workers and even her boss, the Chief Justice of Quebec, complained about
her to the judges' disciplinary group, the Quebec Judicial Council.
In total, hundreds of complaints were filed against the outspoken judge
though none of those came from children, their families, or the lawyers
representing them.
Numerous complaints against Judge Ruffo led the Judicial Council to determine,
in 2004, that she was unfit to sit as a judge.
Throughout those years, the Quebec Human Rights Commission, was investigating
agencies of the Youth Protection Service.
In one case, they found an agency to be so seriously dysfunctional that the
Commission advised the province to step in.
In another they found children locked in empty cells, sometimes for days.
Both agencies were in Ruffo's jurisdiction and had made complaints against
Judge Ruffo.
Like Ruffo, the Commission concluded the entire youth protection system was in
need of an urgent major overhaul.
The province has now started committee hearings on reform.
But being right hasn't helped Judge Ruffo.
In 2004, the Judicial Council determined that her behaviour and her refusal to
change, rendered her unfit to sit on the bench as a judge.
The Court of Appeal of Quebec dismissed Ruffo's appeal of that decision,
effectively saying that a good cause does not justify improper judicial
behaviour.
Now Ruffo has asked the Supreme Court of Canada to consider her case.
If the highest justices in the land agree to hear her case, she may play a role
in changing the law on judges' freedom of speech.
If they decline, Andree Ruffo will be a judge no longer.
While she waits for their decision, Andree Ruffo keeps busy working for
children.
She is a founding member of the group 'Magiciens Sans Frontieres' which travels
to orphanages and refugee camps performing free for children
.Ref: CBC-TV MAIN | CBC DOCUMENTARIES
www.cbc.ca/fifth/judgeruffo.html
www.cbc.ca/story/canada/national/2004/11/19/judge-quebec-ruffo-041119.html
www.cbc.ca/montreal/story/qc-ruffo20060518.html
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