Criminal harassment can include many different behaviours intended to control and frighten the victim. It can cause fear, depression, alienation, isolation, loss of confidence, confusion, powerlessness and hopelessness. The victim may feel detached and believe their personal safety has been diminished. Stalking is predatory in nature and can turn violent.
According to the Criminal Code, criminal harassment can include:
- repeatedly following the victim of anyone known to them from place to place;
- repeatedly communicating with, either directly or indirectly, the victim or anyone known to them;
- watching the place where the victim, or anyone known to them, resides, works, carries on business or happens to be; or
- engaging in threatening conduct directed at the victim or any member of their family.
Conduct covered under the Code could include stealing mail, repeated calls, letters or emails, sending unwanted gifts, harassing people known to the victim, harming their pets or showing up uninvited to their home or workplace.
According to the Government of Canada (Criminal Harassment: Stalking) “the main motivation for stalking another person is the desire to control, particularly in cases where the subject is a former partner.”
The government states:
- More than one in 10 women (15 years of age and over) were victims of stalking in Canada.
- Obscene phone calls are the most frequently reported form of stalking for female victims.
- Most stalking victims know their stalker.
- More than one-third of stalking victims reported stalking to police.
- One in 10 stalking victims sought out a protective order against the stalker, of which almost one-half were violated.
- Female victims stalked by a former intimate partner experienced more physical violence relative to victims pursued by a stranger or acquaintance.
Female victims were most frequently stalked by a current or former partner, according to Statistics Canada: 39 percent by an ex-husband, two per cent by a current husband and 17 per cent by a current / former boyfriend while one in four female victims were stalked by a casual acquaintance, most of whom were male.