Pubdate: Sat, 23 Sep 2006 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/456 Author: Tracey Tyler, Legal Affairs Reporter REGGAE MUSICIAN'S CHARTER RIGHTS BREACHED Police Had No Lawful Basis For Stopping Car Court Of Appeal Restores Trial Ruling Fitzroy Hanson remembers being confronted with an unusual question after an undercover police officer in an unmarked car stopped him unexpectedly in Scarborough. According to Hanson, the first thing the officer asked him was how he could afford to drive such an expensive vehicle. The Toronto reggae musician had been at a recording studio that night and left for home around 10:30 p.m. He was driving his mother's new 2003 SUV. The officer later testified he suspected Hanson was impaired because he had been driving slowly and weaving within his own lane. But Hanson, who had not been drinking, argued he had been the subject of racial profiling, a legal battle that took him all the way to the Ontario Court of Appeal. In a 3-0 ruling yesterday, an appeal court panel restored a trial judge's decision to dismiss the case against Hanson after finding police had no lawful basis for pulling him over on Jan. 27, 2003. "There was competing evidence as to whether (the officer) knew he was black before he pulled him over," said Leslie Maunder, a Toronto lawyer who represented Hanson at his appeal. The officer, Const. Brett Spriggs of 42 Division's community response unit, vehemently denied it. Hanson testified that as he drove along Morningside Ave. near Kingston Rd., the unmarked car pulled out from a gas station and began following him. At one point, the driver pulled up beside the SUV and stared at him, he said. After he was stopped, Hanson, then 33, was charged with violating bail conditions that included a 10 p.m. curfew. Later, at 42 Division, Hanson was also charged with drug possession after police found a three-gram cube of hashish inside his jacket pocket. The evidence was excluded after the trial judge, Justice John Kerr, found police breached Hanson's Charter rights by arbitrarily detaining him. Kerr said he didn't want to characterize the case as one of "blatant racial profiling," but went on to call some of the evidence "troubling," particularly the officer's assertion that Hanson had been weaving his vehicle -- something difficult for a "cold sober" person to do, the judge said. The court was told that Hanson hadn't consumed any drugs. Kerr said he ascribed no malice to Spriggs, who, along with his partner, was on "the look out for people who might be up to no good." Describing him as "a fine officer," the judge said Spriggs might well be praised by members of the public for being diligent. But Kerr also concluded, "somewhat reluctantly" that Spriggs, "perhaps subconsciously" became "a little overzealous" and stopped Hanson not because he suspected an impaired driver, but because he suspected he might have been up to some other form of criminal activity. The Crown appealed Hanson's acquittal, arguing that Kerr offered an inadequate explanation for concluding Hanson's Charter rights had been breached. A Superior Court judge agreed, quashing the acquittals and ordering a new trial. Hanson appealed that decision, and his position found favour with Justices Marc Rosenberg, James MacPherson and Eilleen Gillese, who said that while Kerr used "somewhat circumspect" language in acquitting Hanson, his explanation for doing so was quite acceptable. The judge found there was no lawful basis for stopping Hanson and that alone was reason enough for finding that his Charter rights had been breached, the panel said. - --- MAP posted-by: Elaine