Pubdate: Fri, 01 Aug 2008 Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 Surrey Leader Contact: http://www.surreyleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236 Author: Ryan Starr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/unlawful+search POT BUST EVIDENCE GOES UP IN SMOKE Just because Delta Police smelled marijuana coming from a man's van, doesn't mean they were justified in searching it and, upon finding four garbage bags filled with pot plants, arresting him for possession for the purpose of trafficking. In a written decision released last week (July 22), Surrey Provincial Court Judge Peder Gulbransen ruled that the June 2007 search and arrest were unlawful and that the evidence obtained is therefore inadmissible in court. "Considering all of the relevant factors, I find that the defence has established, on a balance of probabilities, that the admission of the evidence obtained in the unlawful search of (the man's) motor vehicle would bring the administration of justice into disrepute," Gulbransen wrote in the ruling. "I therefore order that the evidence obtained in the search be excluded." On June 20, 2007 Delta Police were preparing to execute a search warrant on a home they believed contained a marijuana grow-op. Spotting a van slowly driving by the residence for the second time in a few minutes, one officer stopped the vehicle, suspecting the driver was connected with the person growing the marijuana. According to court documents, the officer detected the smell of marijuana coming from the open driver's window and immediately arrested him for possession of a controlled substance. Another officer searched the car, where he found four garbage bags on the rear seats, each containing a "large plastic container filled with marijuana clones," according to court documents. The driver was subsequently charged with possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking. In its case, the Crown argued that that the officer had reasonable grounds to suspect the man was involved in the growing and dealing of marijuana and therefore had the power to briefly detain him for investigation. The Crown said the man was in possession of a controlled substance, and as such, the search of the vehicle was "incident to a lawful arrest." But the defence countered that the officer stopped the vehicle "on a hunch, without any reasonable basis to believe the accused was involved in criminal activity." The arrest was unlawful, the defence argued, because it was based only on the smell of burned marijuana emanating from the vehicle. This established only that the accused had possessed marijuana in the past, they said. That particular marijuana could no longer be in the car, the defence argued, "because it had gone up in smoke." Regardless, in such a case the amount in question "would certainly be less than 30 grams, which under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act is a strictly summary conviction offence," the defence added. An officer can only arrest a person for a summary conviction offence if he or she finds the person actually committing the offence. In his written reasons for judgement, Gulbransen said that the mere smell of burned marijuana coming from a vehicle is not sufficient to constitute reasonable grounds for a search." He added: "Taking such quick action based on the smell alone makes it very difficult for a court to assess the objective basis for the officer's grounds to search. "An odour of burned marijuana can be fleeting or evanescent. It is subject to different interpretations, depending on the experience of the observer and on the acuity of the person's sense of smell. It cannot be measured or recorded." The Crown did not establish that the arresting officer's expertise in analyzing the odour of marijuana was "so exceptional that his evidence, based on detecting the odour over a matter of seconds, should be given significant weight," Gulbransen wrote. "I conclude, therefore, that on the evidence led on this hearing, (the officer) would not have had lawful authority to search the van... In this case the arrest was unlawful, as was the search that followed." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin