Pubdate: Sun, 24 Aug 2008 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Copyright: 2008 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Alan Shanoff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) It's enough to make a good cop cry We expect a lot from the police. We expect them to help clean up crime ridden neighbourhoods, knowing full well that they are risking their lives when they do so. That's why the police shake their heads in amazement every time a judge acquits an obviously guilty person and releases the criminal back into the neighbourhood. Here's what happened one night in January 2006 in a Toronto apartment complex known for its drug use, drug trafficking, guns and gang violence. The police were present with the permission of the landlord. Two officers were walking up a stairwell when they smelled marijuana. They opened the door to the ninth floor to find a man tightly clenching a knapsack. The police asked "Hey buddy, what are you doing?" He said the one thing criminals are apt to say in this situation, namely "Oh s--t." He then did what criminals in this situation are apt to do: He ran. He also grabbed a shopping cart and tried to block the pursuing officers. He raced to another stairwell and threw away his knapsack. For much of this time the police are yelling "Stop, police." The police finally tackle the "suspect" on another floor. They retrieve the knapsack and in what must have been a huge surprise found 680 grams of cocaine, two digital scales and three cellphones. And, of course our suspect had cash, $1,720 of it in his pocket. Not Difficult Does this seem like a difficult case to you? I didn't think so. But it was a difficult case for the trial judge who acquitted this "suspect." You see, the judge concluded that the police had no good reason for stopping the "suspect" and therefore everything that happened from the "Hey buddy" was a gross violation of the rights of this fine upstanding citizen. Worse yet, this shameful conduct by the police was so egregious that the admission of the evidence found in the knapsack would bring the administration of justice into disrepute. Hence no evidence. Hence no conviction. I know judges have a difficult job. We expect them to protect our rights, but we also expect them to convict where the evidence cries out for a conviction. We get upset when they allow rights of citizens to be violated, but we get even more upset when they release obviously guilty people. So I'm prepared to give judges a lot of leeway in the difficult cases. But really, how difficult was this case? The suspect ran when he saw the police. He used or tried to use force to obstruct the police. He tried to get rid of his knapsack, the one he had been holding so tightly. Oh, did I mention it was late in the evening and this was an apartment building in a complex known for drugs, guns and gangs and there was cocaine in the knapsack? Surely once a suspicious person tries to get rid of a knapsack by throwing it away there is no reason why the police cannot open the knapsack. This isn't the same as the police rifling through the garbage you set out in front of your house or toss down the garbage chute. That's a harder issue and one that the Supreme Court of Canada is going to consider later this year when it hears argument in the Russell Stephen Patrick case. In that case the Alberta Court of Appeal ruled 2-1 that there is no expectation of privacy in household garbage so the garbage is fair game for police to search without a warrant. Little Argument There should be little argument however in a case where a suspect tries to get rid of something while trying to escape from the police. In those circumstances it is ludicrous to think the suspect has any expectation of privacy in the object tossed away. There's a reason why we have appellate courts. It's to deal with and reverse these sorts of decisions and that's exactly what the Ontario Court of Appeal did about one week ago when it allowed the Crown's appeal, set aside the acquittals and ordered a new trial for Peter Nesbeth. The OCA was pretty brief in its reasons -- only 26 paragraphs, but the message to trial judges should be loud and clear. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake