Supreme Court of Canada upholds impaired driving convictions based on breath tests
OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada on Friday upheld impaired driving convictions in two cases, saying criminal law amendments enacted in 2018 were intended to simplify prosecutions based on breath test results.
The related decisions issued Friday — each involving a case from New Brunswick — clarify the evidentiary scheme for proving blood alcohol concentration in impaired driving cases under the Criminal Code.
In the two cases, the Supreme Court weighed what the Crown must prove to satisfy a presumption that breath test results are accurate.
The law requires a breath machine calibration check, the result of which must fall within a particular range.


