Pubdate: Wed, 26 Dec 2007 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Author: Daryl Slade, Staff Writer NEW TRIAL ALLOWED IN DRUG CASE The Alberta Court of Appeal has ordered a new trial for a man who had three of four drug charges dismissed, because the trial judge erred in excluding evidence obtained in the search of the accused's house as a result of charter breaches. The Crown had argued in its appeal that city police were acting properly when they sent heavily armed, masked members of the tactical unit to use a battering ram to break down the door of Shaker Al-Fartossy's home on April 30, 2004, and thus the fruits of their search should have been accepted as evidence. The officers found marijuana, cocaine, crack cocaine, some cash, rifles and ammunition after their takedown. In a 2-1 decision released on Friday, the province's top court said the judge was wrong to conclude that the officers should not have been masked, because it was not an issue by either Crown or defence at trial and police were not given an opportunity to explain. "It appears there may well have been a compelling reason for the police to shield their identity," wrote Justice Peter Martin, also speaking for Justice Bonnie Rawlins. "Before the search warrant was obtained, the (accused) and his partner, Salah Rashid, had sold cocaine and crack cocaine to undercover officers on five different occasions. During one such transaction, the undercover officer was threatened that he would be killed if he was found to be a police officer." Provincial court Judge Sandra Hamilton had also ruled police were wrong to not carry a copy of the search warrant with them and did not immediately show it to the homeowner when he requested it. Court heard the officer who had the warrant was a short distance away from the home and produced it some 15 minutes later. "The trial judge's finding that the masking of the police was unreasonable, together with the failure of police to carry the warrant with them on entry, resulted in the exclusion of the drug evidence," Martin wrote. "The equation leading to that result would be quite different without the masking issue as a factor. I am therefore of the view that the Crown has established that the verdict would not necessarily have been the same but for this error." In dissent, Justice Carol Conrad concluded there were no errors by the trial judge and the acquittals should stand. "The trial judge is not required to tell the parties, as she is deliberating, which facts she finds significant, nor is she required to ask for argument on every fact upon which she may ultimately choose to reply," wrote Conrad. "She is simply required to consider all the facts in evidence and come to a decision." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin