Pubdate: Sat, 26 Apr 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Gerry Bellett WARRANTLESS SEARCH UPSETS HOMEOWNER Jim Peach Says Officials Threatened To Cut Off His Power When He Balked At An Inspection Of His Home As lawyers argued this week over the authorities' right to demand access to homes suspected of containing marijuana grow-ops, Coquitlam resident Jim Peach was still fuming at being confronted by a posse of police and inspectors who came to his door last week because his electricity use was high. "I had to suffer the indignity of having my home invaded because they thought I had a grow-op," Peach said. Peach was surprised when city inspectors and two RCMP officers showed up at his home April 9 with a bylaw notice saying they wanted to search the home on Hull Court because electricity consumption was abnormally high. Peach denied he was growing marijuana but told them to come in anyway and look around. "They said no. They would be back the next day," he said. Peach lives on Vancouver Island and stays in the Coquitlam home four days a week. He was planning to return to Vancouver Island the next day. "I said that's not convenient because I'm going away Thursday and wouldn't be at home," Peach said. "They told me if I didn't cooperate they'd cut off my power." Peach was told his Hydro consumption was 143 kilowatt hours a day. Normal consumption is around 32 kilowatt hours a day. Under provincial legislation, BC Hydro has to inform local authorities if a customer's energy consumption shows unusually high levels -- in the region of 92 kilowatt hours a day -- which could indicate commercial-scale marijuana cultivation. Using a recent amendment to the B.C. Safety Standards Act, fire and safety officers accompanied by police carry out safety inspections. This process allows police into a home without a warrant and is under attack by lawyers representing a Surrey couple whose power was cut off for refusing to allow police in during an inspection that found no signs of marijuana cultivation. Peach was surprised his home was using such large amounts of electricity, as his Hydro bills didn't seem unusual. "I rent this house and it's only got electrical power and it's pretty drafty," said Peach, who said he has never had any trouble with the law or been involved in any offences involving marijuana. "I'm just an accountant. I've never had any problems at all," he said. The fire officer told Peach that even if all his baseboard heaters, water heater and appliances were turned on full they wouldn't consume such an amount of electricity, and Peach became alarmed that the home had some sort of electrical fault or that someone was stealing his power and his monthly bill would be enormous. He called BC Hydro and was told his bimonthly bill was $560. "I said, 'Is this a problem?' and the woman said, 'No you're okay' and I told her what had happened, and she said there were a whole bunch of people in Coquitlam who were upset because of these searches," he said. Next, he phoned a city information number that was on the bylaw notice demanding entry. A woman answered and Peach said he told her a mistake had been made and that Hydro had told him there was nothing unusual about his power consumption. "She said, 'No you've got it wrong and the inspection will take place as scheduled,' and if I didn't let them in they'll shut the power off," he said. Then he complained to the fire chief's office, the city manager and the mayor's office without result, he said. When he spoke with someone in the fire chief's office he was asked why he was so upset. "I said, 'How would you feel if the RCMP showed up at your home and demanded to get in?' " Peach said. "'How many firefighters and city officials have had police inspecting their houses like this?' And he had no answer." Then he went to the Internet and looked up the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and found Section 8, which deals with a citizen's right to be protected from unreasonable search and seizure -- the issue being argued this week in front of B.C. Supreme Court Justice William Smart. "I'd resigned myself to the fact it was going to happen, so next day eight of them show up, including two police officers, and I told them, 'You're making a mistake, you've either miscalculated or been given misleading information,' and they told me I didn't know what I was talking about," he said. "I told the police that under Section 8 they couldn't carry out a search without a warrant and they said they were there as protection for the inspectors, and if I didn't let them in, the inspectors wouldn't go in and they'd cut the power. As far as I'm concerned, that was a form of extortion and intimidation and I didn't like it. "This is a cold, drafty house and they found nothing. It's embarrassing, too. All the neighbours saw what was going on. In fact, the guy next door came over and said they should search his place because his Hydro bills were the same as mine," said Peach. Mayor Maxine Wilson was asked why Peach was made to submit to a search during an inconvenient time after he had offered to let police in, and was threatened with his power being shut off if he didn't comply. She said she couldn't comment on the affair as she didn't have any information. "I sympathize with Mr. Peach, but he was delivered a notice 48 hours in advance," she said. Peach denied ever receiving a notice, nor was any notice given to his sons, who live in the home, he said. Coquitlam corporate communications manager Therese Michelson said the reason the first team wouldn't do the search was that a full team was needed to carry out an inspection. Asked why a team of two police officers, a fire inspector and a bylaw safety officer wouldn't be capable of finding a commercial-sized marijuana operation in a family home, she said searches followed a protocol that required a full team, including an electrical inspector. Asked why Peach was threatened with having his power cut off, she said she doubted this threat had been made, as that was not policy. "When get refused access we don't cut power," she said. "We can issue a ticket or seek a warrant. Cutting power is not something we do." Told that Peach had been repeatedly threatened with having his power cut off, Michelson said that if that was going on it would have to stop. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek