Pubdate: Sat, 14 Oct 2006 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2006, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Kirk Makin, Justice Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) JUDGES' RIGHTS LIMITED, SUPREME COURT DECLARES Probation Order In B.C. Sexual-Assault Case Overstepped Charter Tenets, Ruling Says A British Columbia judge went too far when he ordered a man convicted of sexual assault to submit blood and urine for testing on demand as a condition of his probation, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled yesterday. "The seizure of bodily samples is highly intrusive and -- as this court has often reaffirmed -- it is subject to stringent standards and safeguards to meet constitutional requirements," the judges said in a 7-0 ruling. "Such a scheme cannot be judicially enacted on the ground that a court may find it desirable in an individual case . . . The establishment of these standards and safeguards cannot be left to the discretion of the sentencing judge in individual cases." The ruling raised issues that have often sparked public controversy in the past: the privacy rights of the criminally accused versus the need to detect and discourage crime. "There is no question that a probationer has a lowered expectation of privacy," Madam Justice Louise Charron wrote. "However, it is up to Parliament, not the courts, to balance the probationers' Charter rights as against society's interest in effectively monitoring their conduct." The case involved a Vancouver man, Harjit Singh Shoker, who broke into a woman's home on Sept. 7, 2003, and slipped into her bed naked. When she ran to the kitchen to call police, Mr. Shoker followed her, and did not attempt to flee. Mr. Shoker was convicted of breaking and entering with intent to commit sexual assault. His trial judge heard evidence that the defendant was on speed at the time and that he had a history of substance abuse. Mr. Shoker was given 20 months in jail and two years on probation. The probation order specified that he could not consume drugs or alcohol. It also included a compliance condition stating that Mr. Shoker must provide samples of breath, urine or blood on demand to his probation officer. If any of the samples indicated that Mr. Shoker had been drinking or taking drugs, the judge said, it would constitute a breach of his probation order. The order was rooted in a broad right for judges to impose "other reasonable conditions," which may protect society and facilitate the offender's reintegration into the community. In its ruling, the Supreme Court said that while sentencing judges may prohibit a broad range of behaviour under a probation order, breaches have to be investigated and dealt with by probation officers and police in the usual manner. In separate reasons for the judgment, Mr. Justice Louis LeBel and Mr. Justice Michel Bastarache deviated from their colleagues by saying that sentencing judges do have a statutory right to impose this type of condition. However, they said the particular order in the Shoker case amounted to a breach of the Charter's search-and-seizure section. "Although it may very well be a more efficient way to monitor compliance, random drug testing at the probation officer's discretion could become highly arbitrary," they said. The two judges said it is wrong to assume that individual judges cannot create compliance orders without running afoul of the law. If the courts prohibit judges from fashioning such orders, they warned, it may become impossible to impose probation measures such as electronic monitoring. Judge LeBel and Judge Bastarache joined the other judges in urging Parliament to consider whether a legislative remedy is needed. The other judges participating in the ruling were Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, Mr. Justice Ian Binnie, Mr. Justice Morris Fish and Madam Justice Rosalie Abella. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek