Pubdate: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 Source: Ottawa Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.ottawasun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/329 Author: Laura Czekaj Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) PAWN SHOP SUES COPS OVER SEARCH A pawn shop owner claims she has videotape of two uniform police officers illegally entering her locked Hintonburg business and is seeking $650,000 in damages in civil court. Chantal Laframboise has named both the Ottawa Police Services Board and constables Mate Renic and Lee Sabourin as defendants in her statement of claim filed in court following the Nov. 13, 2006, incident. The owner and operator of Chachi's pawn shop at 1098A Somerset St. W. - -- which has since closed -- claims the officers were caught on surveillance video forcing their way into the locked store. The camera was trained on the store's entrance. Her lawyer, Mark Mossey, said he will hold off on making the contents of the tape public on the chance that the matter can be settled out of court. However, he did say the quality of the images captured on the video is good. Mossey has told his client not to comment on the case, but said she is "hopeful that justice will be done." In a statement of defence, Ottawa police dispute the allegations on the basis that the door to the shop was unlocked. After inspecting the shop's books and papers, officers claim to have discovered a scale with crack cocaine residue on it, as well as a quantity of crack cocaine. Jeremy Wright, lawyer for the defendants, has yet to see the video. He was reluctant to discuss the case further, saying it's still in its preliminary stages. "We've set out our position in the statement of defence," he said. "I can't really speculate on how it will go forward." Laframboise claims she had stepped out of her shop at about 1 p.m. to take her mother to a doctor's appointment and returned about 15 minutes later to find the uniformed officers inside her store. She was allegedly told to remove her coat, which was searched by an officer, and then she was searched, whereupon the officers found $880 in her possession. CLAIMS RIGHTS VIOLATED The money was for her rent and the $400 float she had taken with her from the store when she left, she alleges. Laframboise was handcuffed and claims she was at no point told why the officers were in the store or why she was being detained. She was also not shown a search warrant. Laframboise states that the officers' conduct violated her rights and that they did not have lawful authority to enter the locked business. In response, the Ottawa police state that "at all material times it acted on reasonable and probable grounds and was justified in doing what it was required or authorized to do, pursuant to provisions of the Criminal Code." The Ottawa police wouldn't comment on whether an internal investigation had been launched. None of the allegations in the suit have been proven in court. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom