Pubdate: Tue, 09 Sep 2003 Source: Edmonton Journal (CN AB) Copyright: 2003 The Edmonton Journal Contact: http://www.canada.com/edmonton/edmontonjournal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/134 Author: Gordon Kent, The Edmonton Journal MASSIVE DRUG CASE FOLDS Is This High-Security Courtroom a $2m White Elephant? EDMONTON - A massive drug-conspiracy case considered one of Canada's biggest prosecutions fell apart Monday when a judge threw out charges against 11 people accused of conspiring to sell cocaine. The four-year proceeding has cost Ottawa about $20 million in fees for defence lawyers alone, but legal arguments bogged it down for so long that it wasn't likely to go in front of a jury until at least 2004. Although the case was split into two trials in 2001 in hopes of speeding things up, Court of Queen's Bench Justice Doreen Sulyma ruled matters in front of her had still dragged on far too long. "The right to a fair trial encompasses the right to a reasonably speedy trial. In this case, that right has been compromised, largely by Crown action." She strongly criticized the time it took to give the defence 180,000 pages of evidence amassed by police, particularly 38 boxes of material that in 2001 the RCMP found they'd been keeping in storage. Most of the evidence involved thousands of wiretapped telephone conversations. Sulyma assumed police didn't know how much detail they were legally required to turn over and that they, together with prosecutors, hadn't set up proper procedures to ensure all the evidence was disclosed. "The discovery of a huge amount of material in K-Division (Alberta RCMP headquarters) and elsewhere almost one year after this trial began is nothing short of shocking," she wrote in a 122-page judgment. This situation was made worse by the Crown's attempts to exclude some of the information from the hearing, she said. Sulyma calculated government action held up the proceedings by almost a year. However, she also blamed "significant" delay on the defence, saying "unfocused and unnecessary ... challenges of dubious merit" during motions for access to evidence added another 171/2 weeks to the hearings. But in the end, the judge accepted a defence application to stay, or essentially drop, all the charges, concluding Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees of trial within a reasonable time had been violated. With the 10 men and one woman spending from six months to one year in the Edmonton Remand Centre following their arrest on Sept. 24, 1999, "the delay which has occurred in these proceedings cannot be tolerated," the judge said. The defendants, all now out on bail, hugged each other and cheered after the decision. "I feel much better, my heart is beating so hard," said one man, charged as a young offender and transferred to adult court. "I've been on this case since I was 17. I'm 22 now." Another accused, who refused to give his name, is still upset his bail conditions stopped him from leaving the country to visit a dying relative. "I feel great. Life's back, freedom ... We put our lives on hold for four years." Three dozen people were arrested during co-ordinated raids by 341 Edmonton police and RCMP in what they code-named Project Kachou. With guilty pleas and charges being withdrawn or stayed, only 19 accused were left. Eight men -- nicknamed the Group of Eight -- still face hearings in front of Court of Queen's Bench Justice Mel Binder, but they asked last week to have their charges dismissed due to similar delays. Defence lawyers involved in the case predict the enormous time and complexity of Project Kachou makes it unlikely trials involving dozens of accused will be attempted again. "There will always be a problem with how many people you can try at the same time," Bill Tatarchuk said. "I expect the feds will have to think about ... whether they're going to try to prosecute more than (eight to 10) people." Any future big investigations must decide in advance how to organize evidence and how to get it in an understandable form to the defence, Tatarchuk said. He and his colleagues doubt the prosecution will appeal. "I think they're just glad it's all over ... there were estimates it could go on another two or three years." A federal Justice spokeswoman declined comment while officials in the department study the decision. But defence lawyer Murray Stone called Sulyma's judgment "blistering," saying people should be upset at the multimillion-dollar price tag for a failed prosecution. "That's one of the reasons the minister of justice ought to inquire into this. When you think of the types of alternative uses that money could be put to, it's a public outrage." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake