Pubdate: Wed, 10 Dec 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008 The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Kirk Makin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?216 (CN Police) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?236 (Corruption - Outside U.S.) HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH POLICE MISCONDUCT? JUDGES STRUGGLE TO DECIDE OTTAWA -- A titanic struggle within the Supreme Court of Canada over how to redesign rules that govern throwing out tainted evidence reached a new level yesterday as the judges sought help in deciding how much is too much police misconduct. During an appeal involving the seizure of 35 kilos (77 pounds) of cocaine found during a flagrantly illegal search, one judge after another expressed frustration with the difficulty of finding a workable balance between the many conflicting factors that arise in these battles over evidence. They said that the case under appeal, R v. Harrison, was a classic instance of a police officer searching a car without a valid reason, and later lying in court in an attempt to justify his actions. "It is never okay, I think you could say, to condone this kind of police misconduct," Madam Justice Rosalie Abella said at one point. "But there is a balancing that is at play. Is it ever possible to say that one factor is more important than another?" In the Harrison case, the court must decide whether to uphold a trial judge's decision to admit the cocaine as evidence even though he found that the search was a contrived and brazen breach of the defendant's constitutional rights. The court first set out last spring to rewrite the rules that govern excluding tainted evidence. It has yet to deliver rulings on two cases, R v. Grant and R v. Shephard, that were seen as its springboard to modernizing the all-important section of the Charter that applies to excluding evidence. Yesterday, the judges made it clear that they are struggling with the monumental task, and appealing to the lawyers before them for their assistance. "We are looking for help to finalize how the test should be ascribed," Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin told defence counsel Marie Henein. Chief Justice McLachlin noted that the existing legal tests require judges to balance such factors as the severity of the police misconduct, the importance of the tainted evidence to the Crown's case, the way a search and seizure was conducted, and the expectation of privacy an individual would have in the location where the search took place. "It is difficult for me to understand how we keep all the factors of this test in practice, because it all seems to boil down to one or the other outweighing all the other factors," Chief Justice McLachlin said. Ms. Henein urged the court not to continue sliding away from rules it created 15 years ago, under which evidence was excluded even in murder cases if police misconduct brought the justice system "into disrepute." By allowing evidence to be used when an offence is serious, she said that the courts invite police to break the law with impunity because they are investigating a major crime. "The seriousness of an offence is not a trump card," Ms. Henein said. "One cannot ignore the seriousness of the Charter breach because one is dazzled by the evidence - yet that is what happened in this case." Scott Fenton, a lawyer for the Criminal Lawyers'Association, said that excluding tainted evidence is an important way for the court to show disapproval of conduct that goes against its rules. He said that it also makes other police officers wary of breaking the law. However, Ontario Crown counsel Michal Fairburn, a legal intervenor, asked the court not to create inflexible rules that harm public confidence by allowing criminals to go free to "punish" erring police officers. "How can we say that it is more important to condemn Charter breaches than to prosecute, for example, a child murderer?" she asked. Ms. Fairburn argued that trial judges are perfectly situated to balance various factors in a case and make these judgment calls - and that appeal courts shouldn't second guess them. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin