Pubdate: Sun, 07 Nov 2004 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2004 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Alan Young Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) POLICE SEEK HOTHOUSE ATMOSPHERE The Supreme Court of Canada gave government early Christmas presents last week. First, the court let Newfoundland and Labrador renege on a $24 million pay equity commitment simply because the province declared it was in a fiscal crisis. I can't speak to the province's financial affairs, but I do know that courts do not usually release offenders from their obligations to pay fines on a mere assertion of financial hard times. The impecunious often end up in jail. The next day, the court relieved law enforcement officials of all legal obligations to secure a warrant from a judge to use F-orward Looking Infra-Red (FLIR) cameras to record images of thermal energy or heat radiating from a private home. FLIR technology is the new toy for fighting the supposed scourge of marijuana grow-ops. Admittedly, being watched by FLIR does not reveal intimate details of activities in the house, but it does detect patterns of heat distribution. Finding an unusually high and consistent pattern of heat radiating from a home may raise a suspicion that marijuana is being grown within because grow-rooms typically use high-intensity halide lamps, which generate a substantial amount of heat On April 29, 1999, the police used an RCMP airplane equipped with a FLIR camera to fly over Walter Tessling's Ontario home. The police had received a tip implicating Tessling in the local marijuana trade and, in an effort to corroborate the threadbare tip, they went looking for heat. They found heat. On this basis, they then secured a warrant to search the house and found some marijuana and several guns. They did not, however, uncover a large grow-op. Maybe Tessling had a sauna. The Ontario Court of Appeal held that the police violated the accused's right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure by failing to obtain a warrant for the FLIR overfly. The formula for constitutional protection can be simply stated: If any police action invades a reasonable expectation of privacy then the action will be classified as a search, and the Constitution demands that all searches be pre-authorized by judicial warrants (unless the police are facing an emergency). The Court of Appeal believed that FLIR imaging intruded upon an expectation of privacy and stated that "the nature of the intrusiveness is subtle but almost Orwellian in its theoretical capacity." The Supreme Court of Canada saw nothing Orwellian in the technology. This court believed that privacy was not jeopardized because the imaging revealed little, or no, intimate details of the homeowner's activities. The conclusion that police action does not violate privacy actually means that the police can use the technique or technology whenever and however they please. No legal or constitutional restrictions are placed upon an activity deemed not to constitute a search. At least in Tessling's case, the police had some suspicions about marijuana growing, but the ruling does not restrict the police to using FLIR upon reasonable suspicion. Right now, the police can be flying over your property to FLIR you. The Supreme Court has had a fairly consistent track record of vigorously protecting the privacy rights of criminal suspects. So it is puzzling the court has given the constitutional seal of approval for police to use FLIR without any regulation even though the ultra-conservative U.S. Supreme Court has condemned thermal imaging without a warrant. Has a few years of bold, judicial activism left our court weary of defending rights? I guess it would be tiring to try to define the meaning of privacy. Different people and different cultures have different definitions. In some places, guests showing up unannounced for dinner is a joy; in most Western cultures this would be an invasion of privacy. In some places, 12 people may call one room home while we usually crave homes with more room than we need. Even the quintessential private act, sex, is not so private for swingers and orgy participants. In fact, cross-cultural, anthropological studies show that the only universal private act is defecation. Constitutionally, this would translate into police needing only to obtain a warrant to search a lavatory. The court was asking the wrong question in trying to determine if the patterns of heat distribution within our homes would disclose information of a private and intimate nature. Some people may not care if the police collect information about the timing of their daily showers while others would find this senseless and arbitrary collection of information by the state to be "Orwellian in its theoretical capacity." It is far simpler to ask whether there has been a violation of the right to be left alone, free from arbitrary state intrusion. That is the core meaning of the constitutionally enshrined right to be free from unreasonable search. Clearly, my right to be left alone is violated when the police fly over my property to map the heat patterns. I would hope the police would be legally required to seek approval from a judge before going to the trouble and expense of filming psychedelic, thermal images of my home from navigable airspace. If they can convince a judge that they have reasonable grounds to suspect I am conducting criminal activity from my home, then let the flyovers begin. Otherwise, leave me alone and move on to some serious police business. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek