Pubdate: Sat, 17 Mar 2007
Source: Kingston Whig-Standard (CN ON)
Copyright: 2007 The Kingston Whig-Standard
Contact:  http://www.kingstonwhigstandard.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/224
Author: Frank Armstrong

WHEN CRIME DOES PAY

Cash seized at drug busts often goes to the accused person's lawyer. 
Is it ethical?

After watching a house and its occupants for weeks, Kingston Police 
drug investigators and a SWAT team break down the door and storm 
inside. They find cocaine, marijuana, scales, small baggies and 
several thousand dollars in cash.

A man is arrested and pleads guilty to trafficking and drug 
possession. He is sent to prison.

The money police find at drug busts is typically given to the federal 
government, which shares it with the province to distribute to a 
myriad of justice-related causes, such as drug prosecution services 
and victim assistance.

However, between 2001 and 2006, Kingston Police handed over about 
$163,000 of the approximately $285,000 they seized in drug 
investigations to defence lawyers, according to police records 
obtained through the Freedom of Information Act.

"It's morally upsetting because we know that what is basically blood 
money is going to funding their defence," said Kingston Police Staff 
Sgt. Chris Scott, former head of the force's crime prevention unit.

Money seized during a drug investigation is held by a police force 
before it's passed on to the federal Seized Property Management 
Directorate, which manages the funds under Canada's proceeds of crime 
legislation.

The directorate reported that it managed $75 million of seized assets 
and cash in the fiscal year 2005-06. Of that amount, $456,479 was 
returned to defendants' lawyers for legal fees.

The province can receive 10, 50 or 90 per cent of the seized money 
upon conviction, depending on the contribution to the investigation 
and prosecution by law-enforcement agencies under its jurisdiction.

Ontario's Ministry of the Attorney General spends its share on 
programs to help victims, for prosecutions of profit-motivated crime, 
to train prosecutors, to purchase technology that supports these 
prosecutions, such as computers, and to pay for the high costs 
associated with forensic accounting services.

The Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services spends its 
share on equipment and programs for front-line policing organizations.

Meanwhile, by taking advantage of a section 462.34 of the Canadian 
Criminal Code, lawyers defending drug dealers can apply to obtain 
money seized to pay for their client's living or business expenses, 
or for their legal fees.

Defence lawyers in this city have succeeded in retrieving money from 
74 of 227 seizures made by Kingston Police over the last six years 
and have received anywhere from $48 to $13,000 in payments per case.

Forty-three of those 74 applications, or 58 per cent, were made over 
the last two years.

The Criminal Code provision that alllows lawyers to get this money 
exasperates drug and organized crime investigators who argue 
convicted criminals shouldn't get back money earned from crime.

Gordon Schumacher, chairman of the Canadian Association of Chiefs of 
Police organized crime committee, said the forfeiture issue has 
troubled Canada's police chiefs for a long time.

"We're seeing more and more case law coming out where judges are 
almost routinely doing this and clearly it is painful to watch," said 
Schumacher, who's also superintendent in charge of organized crime at 
the Winnipeg Police Service.

The police chiefs believe the money should be used to undo some of 
the damage it has done, instead of helping convicted criminals get out of jail.

Allowing drug dealers to use this money for their own defence creates 
a two-tier justice system, in which drug dealers with no legal assets 
can pay top dollar for a top-notch defence while other people must 
resort to legal aid or liquidating the assets they earned legally to 
pay for their defence, Scott said.

"Basically, these individuals are out nothing," he said.

Alan Gold, a Toronto lawyer and author who specializes in criminal 
litigation, has fought and won a number of applications to retrieve 
funds seized from his clients.

As recently as June, he succeeded in accessing $109,000 for legal 
fees that police had taken from one of his clients.

Gold said the public's interest is served when an accused is able to 
defend his case to the best of his ability.

"Money spent on a defence lawyer has a constitutional and public 
interest dimension that makes it different than money spent on a car 
or a hairdresser," said Gold, former president of the Canadian 
Criminal Lawyers' Association.

"If the accused is found not guilty the police have no right to 
complain about how the accused spent his money. And, if the accused 
is convicted, money spent on a lawyer is an insurance policy that the 
verdict is a true one and the public will not, five or 10 years 
later, be paying millions of dollars to a wrongfully convicted person."

There are two ways an accused person and their lawyer can access 
funds seized by police.

Any time after the money is seized, the defendant can apply to use 
the money to pay for living costs, business costs and legal fees.

If the Crown objects, an application is made before a Superior Court 
judge. If the judge feels the person doesn't have any other assets 
and that the money belongs to the defendant, an agreement may be reached.

If the Crown prosecutor doesn't object to the application, the matter 
can be determined before the same trial judge who is hearing the 
criminal matter and after the guilty plea.

The decision of how much money is needed to top up legal fees is done 
behind closed doors after a verdict is reached.

The judge considers how much the lawyer would receive from legal aid, 
an Ontario agency that provides lawyers for those without enough 
money to hire their own. However, the judge can decide to award more 
money than they would get from this public agency.

Here's a typical example of how one person's lawyer has retrieved 
seized money in the past:

In May 2005, a 46-year-old Kingston man was charged with trafficking 
methamphetamines and possession of less than 30 grams of marijuana.

He pleaded guilty to both the following October and was sentenced to 
a day in jail and had to forfeit everything seized. As part of the 
deal, the judge granted an application that gave $6,000 seized to his 
Kingston lawyer.

Gold said, in his experience, it's uncommon for defence lawyers to go 
this route.

"Usually, even if they [the Crown] consent, it is on a superior court 
application," he said.

Kingston criminal lawyer Clyde Smith admits that applying for the 
money at the end of the judicial process could be construed as a bit 
of a gamble because it's possible a Crown could object and a judge 
could refuse the application.

However, Smith said he can't recall it ever happening in his 20 or so 
years as a criminal lawyer.

Nonetheless, it's this second, less formal process that most bothers 
the police - the decision comes after the pleas so there's little 
doubt the money seized was earned by selling drugs.

It would be hard to come to any other conclusion about a large wad of 
money seized beside piles of narcotics during a drug bust from a 
person who has no job and claims to have no other assets, said 
Kingston Police Insp. Brian Cookman.

"What would a logical thinking person conclude - particularly in the 
case of a drug trafficker who, at the time of that arrest, had 
several baggies of cocaine and a debt list in his pocket?" Cookman said.

Smith said police can't know that all money is dirty.

"I've got lots of clients who say, 'They took $600 or $700 and that 
was my rent money,'" Smith said. "Nobody's going to believe that 
because they're charged with possession for the purpose of drugs. But 
sometimes it's true."

Smith does a portion of his criminal defence work through legal aid, 
but there are some lawyers, such as Ottawa criminal defence lawyer 
Gary Chayko, who won't take on legal aid cases because they don't pay enough.

According to Legal Aid Ontario, 4,000 Ontario lawyers accept legal 
aid certificates. About 35 of them service the Kingston area.

In Ontario, the top legal aid rate for a lawyer with more than 10 
years of experience is about $93 an hour.

It may sound like a lot of money to some people, but Smith said it 
doesn't go far when the costs of running an office and paying a 
secretary are factored.

A brand new criminal lawyer, not working for Legal Aid, makes 
somewhere between $125 an hour and $150 while a seasoned one might 
earn up to $300.

Smith also points out that it's next to impossible to serve a client 
within the 13 to 15 hours provided under the average legal aid certificate.

If the amount seized is more than the amount legal aid is likely to 
provide, Smith said he pursues the larger amount.

"These are business decisions," he said. "If there are monies that 
are seized and if the Canadian Criminal Code provides for us to get 
those legal fees and if the monies are going to be equal to or more 
than what legal aid would pay, then obviously, we're going to go that route."

At the same time, said Smith: "There are also a lot of things that 
get done in this community for people who don't qualify for legal aid 
and don't have the resources to pay them."

Margaret Beare, a criminology professor at York University's Osgoode 
Hall Law School, said it's a "bizarre" process that allows the 
proceeds of crime to go toward legal fees.

"If the argument is that legal aid isn't able to give adequate 
defence in those situations, then I would argue that it's legal aid 
that needs to be changed," said Beare.

She argues that money obviously earned illegally should go toward 
balancing the harm done by the offence, such as helping victims of 
crime and prosecuting criminals.

Giving it to the convicted criminal is "self-defeating" and 
perpetuates the existence of a two-tier justice system where 
criminals with wads of cash can buy a better lawyer than those with less money.

"They're arguing that everyone's entitled to a lawyer and I'm not 
refuting that at all. It's just that there's nothing written in stone 
that says everyone is entitled to Eddie Greenspan at Eddie's amount 
of money," Beare said.

Beare said she's bothered by a system in which such decisions are 
decided informally and where there are no strict guidelines for how 
much a lawyer can get paid out of a pool of seized money.

"It sort of speaks of the invisible, informal chumminess of the whole 
thing," she said.

Beare also questions the claim that allowing defence lawyers to 
access seized money saves taxpayer money.

"Excuse me, that depends on how much a legal aid charge would be 
versus how much the lawyers are able to take off the top of this 
forfeited money," she said.

Simon William, a prosecutor and spokesman for the federal Justice 
Department, said lawyers are supposed to apply to legal aid before 
applying for seized money.

"If you look at section 462.34 [of the criminal code], it does say 
the judge has to be satisfied there are no other assets or means, and 
other means include legal aid," William said. "So you should go to 
legal aid first."

Smith points out, however, that an accused criminal has the right to 
do whatever they want. They don't have to apply for legal aid and a 
lawyer doesn't have to take a legal aid certificate.

Taking the seized money is best for everyone, especially since most 
drug trafficking cases in Kingston deal with small amounts of cash 
seized from small, street-level dealers, he said.

"Surely it makes more sense for that money, whether it's ill-gotten 
gains or not, to be applied to legal fees rather than having the 
taxpayer shoulder the burden because that's what legal aid is, it's 
tax dollars," he said.

It also saves taxpayers money because they don't have to pay for the 
costs of a separate hearing in Superior Court, he said.

Janet Leiper, Legal Aid Ontario's chairwoman, released a frank 
bulletin last year stating that legal aid work is becoming 
increasingly unaffordable for lawyers. It pays hourly rates that are 
well below market rates, having been increased only twice in 20 years 
at what amounts to about 0.5 per cent per year.

"Reduced numbers of legal aid service providers translate into higher 
numbers of legal aid clients who are unable to find a lawyer to take 
their case," she wrote. "Many legal aid certificates are going 
unacknowledged, meaning a legal aid certificate was issued to a 
client, but no lawyer ever took the case."

Although legal aid does not ask lawyers to apply for seized money, it 
doesn't discourage them either.

"If the money is seized as proceeds of crime we will ask that the 
client sign an agreement which means, if the funds are returned to 
them, we get to claim the cost of their legal fees before anything is 
returned to them," said Legal Aid Ontario spokesman Kristian Justensen.

"We normally don't do that unless the funds seized are in excess of 
$500," Justensen said.

At the same time, Justensen said, money seized has no bearing on a 
person's legal aid application.

Smith said it's not uncommon for him to receive a legal aid 
certificate that specifically authorizes him to apply to have the 
seized funds returned.

"It's legal aid effectively doing the same thing that we would do 
privately," he said. "A legal aid certificate ... will sometimes have 
some instructions on it that will tell you what it's good for and it 
might have some conditions. One of them might be that, if money is 
seized or if money is deposited for bail reasons, they will sometimes 
ask for it to be secured for legal aid to offset the cost of their 
certificate."

Bruce MacNaughton, one of Kingston's two part-time federal Crowns who 
prosecute drug offences, said he almost always fights applications.

"If they seize drugs and money and it seems manifest that the cash is 
proceeds of crime, all the more reason to stick with the formal 
procedure," said MacNaughton. "But that's tempered by a little bit of 
reasonableness. If it's $1,200, there's not really much point on 
insisting on the formal procedure."

The Public Prosecution Service has no written guidelines on the 
issue, but MacNaughton has received verbal guidance from his bosses 
that he need not fight applications for cash under $1,200, if the 
money is not obviously proceeds of crime.

"But, if if's $4,000, I'm not going to do it by consent because 
that's clearly proceeds of crime and should be forfeited to Her 
Majesty," he said.

According to court documents found through a Freedom of Information 
request to Kingston Police, MacNaughton has agreed to applications 
for sums between $580 and $880.

There are times when those convicted of crimes get to keep the money 
found when an arrest is made.

For example, in 2003 police seized about $13,400 from a woman when 
they charged her with possession of hydromorphone and possession of 
property over $5,000.

The second charge was dropped and she pleaded guilty to a lesser 
charge of narcotics possession and was sentenced to three months 
probation and a $250 fine.

The money couldn't be definitively linked to the drugs and the woman 
convinced the court that she had won a large amount of money at the 
casino, so the money was returned to her and her lawyer. His portion 
was used to pay legal aid.

Dave Crowe, the city's other part-time Crown, has agreed to 
applications as low as $48 and as high as $6,500, the court documents show.

Crowe said he follows the same guidelines as MacNaughton, but said 
there are times when he won't fight an application for larger amounts.

"You may not be able to prove that all the monies seized were 
proceeds of crime," he said. "There may be information provided to me 
which shows other sources directly, that they would not be proceeds 
[of crime]."

However, with more than half of the money seized over the last six 
years being diverted back to criminals and their lawyers, that answer 
may not be enough for law enforcement officials - at least not for 
Kingston Police.

"It does concern an investigator when they know in their heart that 
the money they seized was acquired by an illegal activity and, 
instead of being forfeited to the Crown and assigned to victims of 
crime, it's being used in that form," said Insp. Cookman.

Money Turned Over to Kingston Defence Lawyers Since 2001

2001 - four successful applications totalling $5,820

2002 - two successful applications totalling $4,698.57

2003 - 18 successful applications totalling $42,207

2004 - seven successful applications totalling $11,005

2005 - 22 successful applications totalling $60,853

2006 - 21 successful applications totalling $38,545
- ---
MAP posted-by: Elaine