Pubdate: Mon, 05 May 2008
Source: Law Times (CN ON)
Copyright: CLB Media 2008
Contact:  http://www.lawtimesnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3095
Author: Tim Naumetz
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?237 (Drug Dogs)

SCC MUZZLES RANDOM POLICE DOG-SNIFF SEARCHES

OTTAWA -- Two Supreme Court of Canada decisions saying police dog
sniffing constitutes a search under Charter  s. 8 are landmark rulings
that separate Canadian and  U.S. jurisprudence and affirm
constitutional rights of  high school students and travellers, say
civil  liberties lawyers.

The first case involved a bus traveller convicted of cocaine
possession, and all nine justices found a  police-dog-sniff of his gym
bag amounted to be a search  under Charter s. 8.

The court found the search unconstitutional because the dog was led
to sniff the bag when police had no  reasonable and probable grounds
to believe the man was  carrying drugs.

In the other case, a Crown appeal of a unanimous Ontario Court of
Appeal ruling, seven of the justices  agreed that a dog-sniff of
backpacks in a Sarnia high  school also constituted a search and
violated the  Charter.

The majority agreed in both cases police nonetheless possess a common
law power allowing canine searches, as  long as the dog handlers and
other officers comply with  the Charter.

"Because they [dogs] are so effective, and they are intimidating and
they are imposing, their use has to be  subject to constitutional
scrutiny," says Jonathan  Lisus, counsel for the Canadian Civil
Liberties  Association as an intervener in both cases.

"The police should be allowed to use dogs in a  legitimate enforcement
of law and legitimate  investigation and legitimate furtherance of
public  health and safety, but random mass speculative  investigations
are not a legitimate exercise of police  power and they are not a
legitimate use of dogs," adds  Lisus, a McCarthy Tetrault LLP partner
in Toronto.

In the first case, R. v. Kang-Brown, RCMP staked out the Calgary bus
terminal as part of a program involving  ongoing surveillance of civil
society.

The program, called Jetway, "monitors the travelling public in an
effort to identify and arrest drug  couriers and other individuals
participating in  criminal activities," wrote Justice Ian Binnie in
his  partially concurring reasons.

An officer at the bus depot struck up a conversation with Gurmakh
Kang-Brown, who had just arrived on a bus  from Vancouver, got his
permission to look into his  bag, and then called over an officer
handling a dog  named Chevy after Kang-Brown jerked the bag away when 
the Mountie tried to grab it.

The dog sat down as he had been trained to do when he sniffed
narcotics, and the officer arrested Kang-Brown  even before he opened
the bag containing 17 ounces of  cocaine.

The only unusual signals Kang-Brown had given were "elongated" stares
and other quirks the Mounties had  been trained in the Jetway program
to recognize as  suspicious.

In the decision, Justice Louis LeBel suggested there was a
"reasonable suspicion" of criminal activity, but  said the existing
threshold of "reasonable and probable  grounds" for the exercise of
police powers should apply  and any extension of police powers through
the use of  sniffer dogs should be left to Parliament.

Binnie and the other justices noted privacy expectations are lower at
airports and border  crossings.

The constitutional right to privacy, even at a bus  terminal, was
central to Kang-Brown. Privacy was also  crucial in the other, R. v.
A.M.

Ontario appealed the case after the Court of Appeal unanimously held
a youth court judge was right to  acquit a student who was charged
with drug possession for trafficking after the sniffing-dog search in
 Sarnia.

"This was a warrantless, random search which was not authorized by
either the criminal law or the Education  Act," wrote Binnie.

Police, at the principal's earlier general invitation,  randomly
selected a day to have their drug dog sniff  backpacks at the school,
while school authorities  detained all the students in their classrooms.

"As with briefcases, purses and suitcases, backpacks are the
repository of much that is personal,  particularly for people who lead
itinerant lifestyles  during the day as in the case of students and 
travellers," wrote Binnie.

"No doubt ordinary businessmen and businesswomen riding along on
public transit or going up and down on  elevators in office towers
would be outraged at any  suggestion that the contents of their
briefcases could  randomly be inspected by the police without
'reasonable  suspicion' of illegality."

Lisus notes the Sarnia dog team had already performed more than 140
drug searches in high schools and the  tactic has become widespread
throughout Ontario.

He says schools should teach students respect for constitutional
rights and civil liberties and "you  don't teach them that by
arbitrarily confining them,  separating their backpacks, and searching
them with  dogs."

Binnie noted that a divided U.S. Supreme Court has declined to grant
any constitutional protection against  unwarranted searches by
narcotic sniffer dogs and "the  result of this U.S. jurisprudence is
that use of police  sniffer dogs for crime investigation sits entirely
 outside the Fourth Amendment."

AM's lawyer, Walter Fox, says police and prosecutors were seeking the
wider use of sniffer dogs available to  U.S. police.

Frank Addario, representing the Ontario Criminal Lawyers' Association
as an intervener, agreed the court  has reigned in the police.

"If the two public places identified in these appeals, bus terminals
and schools, are a proper hunting ground  for enthusiastic police
investigators, where else could  they go?" he asks
rhetorically.

"Could they go to grocery stores? Could you be sniffed  in a grocery
store? Could you be sniffed in a shopping  mall? Could you be sniffed
at your place of worship?  Could you be sniffed on a sidewalk in front
of your  house? Those were on the table."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin