Pubdate: Mon, 22 Sep 2003 Source: Whitehorse Star (CN YK) Copyright: 2003 Whitehorse Star Contact: http://www.whitehorsestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1493 Author: Stephanie Waddell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) TERRITORY CAN'T TRY DRUG POSSESSION CASE - JUDGE Judge Gail Maltby has ruled that the Yukon has no jurisdiction to try a youth accused of possession of drugs for the purposes of trafficking. The case was scheduled to go to trial in Whitehorse this morning, but defence counsel Malcolm Campbell argued the Yukon does not have the jurisdiction for the case. "The offence was not committed here," Campbell told the court. The alleged offence stems from an incident at a Kelowna, B.C. bus station. Kelowna RCMP arrested the youth after being informed by Whitehorse RCMP that he was believed to be bringing cocaine into the territory for the purposes of trafficking. The youth and the older man he was with were arrested at the bus station after a kilogram of cocaine was found in a backpack. Crown counsel Narissa Somji submitted the agreed statement of fact, a number of court and police documents and the backpack that was seized as evidence in the case. While no charges were laid in Kelowna, Whitehorse RCMP re-arrested the youth after he returned to the territory. He was charged with possession for the purposes of trafficking. Another charge was stayed. Somji pointed to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act. It states that the trial can take place where the offence was committed or where the process arose or the accused was apprehended or are located. She noted that the process arose in the Yukon in the form of the RCMP investigation. While no one contests that the young man was found in Kelowna, she submitted that because his residency is in the Yukon, the trial should be here. She also contended that the youth had the intention of trafficking the cocaine in the Yukon. There is a general rule that an accused should be tried in the place where the crime was committed, but there is also a provision which enables the case to be tried elsewhere. There is no indication that a trial in Whitehorse is problematic for the youth or shows any prejudice to the youth, Campbell said. He argued that cases where a trial takes place in another jurisdiction from where the arrest happened generally occurs because the offence was in more than one jurisdiction. "You have to look at the purpose," he told the court of the section which allows for a person to be tried in an area other than where the arrest took place. There are also situations where a person would have be tried in a number of jurisdictions, so it is left to be dealt with in one area. "That's not the case we have here," Campbell said. He disputed the Crown's claim that location can mean a place of residency. In other parliamentary acts, the term "residency" is used specifically rather than location. The Controlled Drugs and Substances Act would have have used that term or something similar if that were the interpretation. He argued that because the offence was not committed in the territory and because it is not a complicated case involving interprovincial boundaries, the Yukon court cannot go ahead with the matter. "This is not the place where (the youth) happened to be located for the purposes of section 47.2," Campbell said. Maltby noted that she "reluctantly" agreed with defence on the matter. The youth is a resident of the Yukon, but that can't be stretched to mean that is where he was located for arrest. In other acts, she said, the term "residency" is set out. Maltby also took issue with the information provided by the Crown which stated the youth possessed drugs for the purposes of trafficking in "the Yukon". In other jurisdictions, Maltby pointed out where the drug is going is neither here nor there. Under the circumstances, the Yukon does not have the jurisdiction to hear the matter, she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh