Pubdate: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 Source: Abbotsford News (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Hacker Press Ltd. Contact: http://www.abbynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1155 Author: Cheryl Wierda Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) 'SAMPLES' BREACH HIS RIGHTS The B.C. Court of Appeal, in a split decision, has found a probation condition requiring a man to provide a breath, urine or blood sample to determine if he is free from drugs or alcohol breaches his Charter rights. The judgment was made Thursday in the appeal brought forward by Harjit Shoker, who was convicted of break and enter with intent to commit sexual assault after entering an Abbotsford home in September 2003 and climbing into a woman's bed, naked. "I am aware that striking down this commonly used condition may create difficulty in the enforcement of abstention conditions in probation orders," concluded Justice Risa Levine. "I consider that there is a gap in the legislation that is the role of Parliament, not the courts, to fill. Parliament may wish to enact appropriate standards and safeguards for demanding bodily samples from offenders on probation to help authorities determine whether such offenders are in compliance with conditions to abstain from the consumption of alcohol and drugs. "In the absence of such provisions, however, probation officers and police officers must rely on other methods of enforcing conditions of abstention, including testimony as to the reasonable grounds for believing that a person has breached the condition," she said. In their written decision, Levine and Chief Justice Lance Finch noted the sentencing judge had jurisdiction to impose a requirement that Shoker submit to tests of his bodily substances. "That, however, does not end the matter. Probation condition 9 authorizes a seizure from (Shoker) which, to be constitutionally valid, must conform to section 8 of the Charter," Levine wrote. "I have concluded that because there are no legislative or regulatory standards or safeguards for the protection of the appellants' privacy in the enforcement of the condition, the condition is unreasonable and violates section 8 of the Charter." Section 8 provides that every person has the right to be secure from unreasonable search and seizure. "One of the missing safeguards in the probation condition is the requirement that the probation or peace officer have reasonable and probable grounds for suspecting or or believing that the offender has breached the abstention condition," she said. "That change alone, however, would not bring the condition into conformity with section 8," she said. Justice John Hall disagreed with Finch and Levine. He said he did not think breath or urine tests were "constitutionally defective" where reasonable and probable grounds exist. "However, I do consider that the portion of the term concerning a blood test was not appropriate and should be found to be constitutionally impermissible," he said, pointing to the invasiveness of a blood test. Shoker also argued his 12 month jail sentence was "unfit" because he felt it took into account an offence for which he had been acquitted. The justices disagreed. They did, however, also overturn a condition requiring he attend treatment as directed by his probation officer because Shoker did not agree to it. A section of the Criminal Code of Canada indicates an offender must agree to treatment. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin