Pubdate: Mon, 11 Feb 2008 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Joey Thompson LET'S HOPE THESE COPS NOW HAVE THE MESSAGE Storm-Trooper Antics Belong On TV, Not In Canada Perhaps B.C. Supreme Court Justice Catherine Bruce had seen enough of the harm caused when Rambo-rabid cops barge into places with guns drawn before sussing out a situation. Perhaps she wanted to get the word out that in Canada law enforcers are expected to do some old-fashioned footwork before scrambling into storm-trooper gear to put lives at risk. A lot of Province readers were outraged by the court ruling last week that saw evidence of a substantial grow operation in a stylish Surrey manor tossed out. Police have to smash into drug suspects' homes with battering rams and weapons to nab the guy in the act, stop the destruction or concealment of evidence and protect their lives from trigger-happy thugs, they argued. Well, they don't usually, unless they're on TV. I can't recall the last reported incident of a shootout or police death during a raid on a B.C. grow-op. And yet coroner statistics show that, since 1992, 267 citizens have lost their lives in B.C. during police-related incidents. One involved the death of a young man with a channel-changer in his hand. Police who burst into his living room fired, thinking he had a gun. According to Bruce's summary, Mounties watched the house on 157A Street on nine previous occasions. Not once did they have reason to believe violent people lived there or that guns or other weapons were inside. In fact, when they pounded on the front door, then entered a garage side door and without warning used a battering ram to split open an interior basement door, they didn't even know if anyone -- never mind anyone armed -- was inside. They could have found a two-year-old playing stick 'em up with a water pistol. And what did they think whoever was inside would do? Flush 700 leafy plants, 1,000-watt heating lamps and industrial-strength electrical cords down the toilet? Flee while surrounded by six officers toting guns in the ready position? What are the chances a marijuana farmer would risk life in jail for murdering a cop when in B.C. pot production might net you two years? "An unexpected intrusion of a man's property can give rise to violent incidents," one of Canada's top judges warned years ago. "It is in the interests of personal safety of the householder and the police, as well as respect for the privacy of the individual, that the law requires, prior to entrance for search or arrest, that a police officer identify himself and request admittance." It's what's known to police in Canada as the "knock-and-announce" rule. And it's common sense in situations where police have absolutely no reason to suspect a violent response or any risk of the destruction of evidence. "The actions of police created a real risk of harm to an occupant by accidental shooting and to the police in terms of an aggressive response to the violent entry," Bruce wrote. She noted that violent, forceful entries with guns drawn appeared to be standard practice at the Surrey RCMP detachment, that neither pre-entry surveillance nor a risk assessment to determine the amount of force required for a safe entry was normal procedure there. Hopefully, they will be from now on. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek