Pubdate: Sat, 21 Jul 2007 Source: Windsor Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Windsor Star Contact: http://www.canada.com/windsor/windsorstar/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/501 Author: Chris Thompson, Windsor Star Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) BORDER SEARCH RULING DISPUTED It's business as usual for border guards at Windsor-Detroit crossings despite a B.C. judge's decision indicating a search warrant is needed for customs officers to search vehicles. "My impression is that she (the judge) has no knowledge of the Customs Act," said Marie-Claire Coupal, a Windsor-based vice-president of the Customs Excise Union Douanes Accise. "We have won this in court before." B.C. provincial court Judge Ellen Gordon last week acquitted a man, Ajitpal Singh Sekhon, of importing 50 kilograms of cocaine into Canada. Gordon ruled that border officers violated three sections of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms when they dismantled the truck Sekhon was driving without a search warrant. As a result, the seized drugs were excluded from evidence during the trial. Coupal said that if every search required a warrant issued by a judge, the border inspection system would grind to a halt. "If we do call a judge every time we inspect a vehicle they'd have to have a lot of judges on standby," said Coupal. "We work 24-7. It's just ludicrous. There's no rhyme or reason for it." Pending an appeal of Gordon's ruling, border guards are going about their business as usual. SUPREME COURT DECISION "On the one hand they are giving us firearms to protect our country, but now they are saying we can't search," said Coupal. Local federal prosecutor Richard Pollock, who returned from holidays in Italy on Wednesday and stressed his only knowledge of the case came from The Star, said the Customs Act has a provision allowing for searches that supercedes the charter. "It (Gordon's decision) appears to be inconsistent with the line of Supreme Court of Canada decisions with regard to the search powers of officers," said Pollock. "The law as I know it is that a person who presents themselves at the Canadian border, their reasonable expectation of privacy is not the same as if they were driving a car or on the street or in their own home. Anyone entering the country has a reduced expectation of privacy." Section 98 of the Customs Act states that a customs officer may search any person entering or leaving the country and "if the officer suspects on reasonable grounds that the person has secreted on or about his person anything in respect of which this Act has been or might be contravened, anything that would afford evidence with respect to a contravention of this Act or any goods the importation or exportation of which is prohibited, controlled or regulated under this or any other Act of Parliament." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath