Pubdate: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2008 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/info/letters/index.html Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: James Turner RULING GIVES POLICE ROOM TO SEARCH FOR GUNS Manitoba's highest court has ruled that when it comes to guns, the need to protect public safety trumps an individual's right to privacy when police go searching for weapons in homes. The Court of Appeal decision gives the police more legal breathing room to seek out guns in the absence of a search warrant when they believe firearms might be present. In a decision handed down this week, the Manitoba Court of Appeal refused Ryan Tereck's bid to have key evidence used to convict him on drug-production charges tossed. Police came across a marijuana grow operation in his Dauphin home while conducting a search for a gun they believed he was going to use to commit suicide. Police forced their way into Tereck's home in April 2005 under the authority of the Mental Health Act, which allows authorities to "take reasonable measures" to intervene when they have grounds to believe a person threatens their own life or the lives of others. Tereck was arrested without incident and removed from the home while two officers conducted a "sweep search" - or superficial search - of the home looking for other people or weapons. In doing so, they discovered evidence of the grow-op and withdrew from the home to apply for a warrant to search further. Police later returned to the house where they seized 300 marijuana plants and other equipment. Tereck was convicted and handed a 10-month conditional sentence, a long-weapons prohibition and a small fine on Jun. 29, 2007. Tereck appealed his conviction, asking that the drug evidence be quashed by the appeal court, saying while police had the right to enter his home and detain him under the powers of the Mental Health Act, they had no right or reason to search his home. At Tereck's trial, the presiding judge found police had acted appropriately based on information they received that Tereck had access to an automatic weapon - and that when it comes guns, the public's collective safety trumps privacy. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin