Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jul 2007 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2007 Calgary Herald Contact: http://www.canada.com/calgary/calgaryherald/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/66 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) TYING HANDS AT THE BORDER Judge's Call for Search Warrants Would Limit Security at Customs The decision of a Vancouver judge that borders are not "a Charter-free zone," is one of those decisions that shakes one's confidence in the wisdom and probity of the Canadian judicial system. Only the certainty - -- surely, the absolute certainty? -- that Judge Ellen Gordon's decision will be overturned on appeal can restore Canadians' hope that not only will justice be done, but wisdom also. The case involved a Canadian citizen, Ajitpal Singh Sekhon, who crossed the Canadian border northbound at Aldergrove in January 2005. An alert border guard found his demeanour suspicious, and sent him for secondary inspection. Using a drug-sniffing dog, customs agents discovered 50 kg of cocaine in a concealed compartment in his truck. Sekhon sued, claiming his Charter rights had been violated in that he had been arbitrarily detained (Section 9), denied legal counsel (Section 10) and his vehicle unreasonably searched and seized (Section 8). Gordon agreed with Sekhon on all three counts, adding that the customs agent acted on a "lucky hunch," rather than reasonable suspicion. The consequences of her decision, if upheld, would be that the discovery of the cocaine in his truck would be excluded from Sekhon's trial, and more generally, that before a border agent could search a vehicle, he would have to obtain a warrant. Even that, however, apparently strains Gordon's sense of fair play. In an unrelated case last October, Gordon ruled the RCMP violated the Charter by faxing a justice of the peace to obtain search warrants, and must instead physically appear in front of a judge. One can readily imagine the difficulties such limitations would place upon border agents in the conduct of their duties. It is one thing to be vigilant for civil liberties, but the peculiar circumstances of crossing a border are very much the point here: For the protection of all Canadians, the state has a reasonable interest in examining people and vehicles as they enter the country. Even if such an inspection yields nothing illegal, no fundamental right has been breached. It is not the first time Gordon has issued controversial rulings. The Vancouver Sun, which routinely reports on her court, catalogues such mercies as "two years in jail to a woman who, with a blood-alcohol level twice the legal limit, drove the wrong way up an exit ramp onto a divided highway and slammed her Toyota head-on into a BMW driven by an innocent 23-year-old motorist, killing him instantly . . . Gordon delayed sentencing for five months so the alcoholic driver wouldn't have to spend Christmas in jail." (The sentence was doubled on appeal.) In another border case, she acquitted a drunk driver stopped at the Boundary Bay crossing in 2004, who not only refused to provide a breath sample, but was later "charged with causing a disturbance for trying to kick out the windows of a police cruiser. The guard said the man was unsteady on his feet, smelled of alcohol, was rude and belligerent, and threatened to sue the guards who detained him. Gordon ruled the border guard violated the drunk driver's rights when he asked him to step out of the car and open the trunk." Gordon is evidently guided by principles that to protect the innocent requires scrupulous observance of process by the state. In principle, it is hard to disagree. However, principles carried to their extreme may collide with others equally worthy. Such appears to be the case here, in which certain rights accorded an individual by the Charter clash with the more general right of all Canadian citizens to be protected from criminality or deliberate acts of terror. It was a U.S. border guard's lucky hunch that led to the arrest of would-be LAX bomber Ahmed Ressam. Canadians should hope their own border guards are as susceptible to such hunches, and that a higher court will not remove any advantage that they confer, by upholding Gordon's unwise, arguably perverse, decision. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake