Pubdate: Thu, 16 Apr 2009 Source: See Magazine (Edmonton, CN AB) Copyright: 2009 SEE Magazine Contact: http://www.greatwest.ca/see/Intro/letters.htm Website: http://www.seemagazine.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2367 Author: D. James Anderson HOW PRIVATE ARE YOUR BOXER SHORTS? The Answer Depends On Your Living Situation, And Just How Much You Trust Your Mom Editor's note: This is a guest column on privacy issues by local lawyer D. James Anderson. Last week he looked at whether police can search your home if they smell pot. This week he looks at who can let the police into your home or room. Here's the question: can a roommate, a parent, or a landlord let the police search your room or apartment without your consent? Well, let's return to the reasonable expectation of privacy pool for another lap. A little over 10 years ago, a young Edmonton man I'll call "F" was being investigated by the police regarding an alleged sexual assault. They decided to visit his home (he lived with his parents) to gather some evidence. They did not have a warrant. F wasn't home, but his mother was. The police told her that they were looking for items of F's clothing they could use for a DNA analysis, and explained the implications. A helpful mother, she agreed, and led the officers to F's room. The door was closed but not locked. They entered, collected a pair of F's boxer shorts, and left. As there had been a warrantless search of F's room, the question at trial became: "Did F have a reasonable expectation of privacy regarding the boxer shorts?" If yes, the question would become: "Was the police search an unreasonable intrusion into that privacy?" If no, then the analysis would end right then and there. In a 1996 decision called R. v. Edwards, Supreme Court of Canada Justice Peter Cory established the test for whether a reasonable expectation of privacy exists. Although the "totality of circumstances" are to be considered, Cory played favourites. Concerns that "may" be considered, he wrote, include whether the subject was present at the time of the search; whether they were in possession or control of the property or place searched; whether they owned the property or place; the historical use of the property or item; the subject's ability to regulate access to the place; the existence of a subjective expectation of privacy; and the objective reasonableness of that expectation. Edwards had been arrested on a drug charge. The drugs were later found in his girlfriend's apartment, but as Edwards was found not to have a reasonable expectation of privacy in his girlfriend's apartment, he himself was found not to have been subject to a Charter violation - this in spite of the fact he regularly visited her apartment, occasionally stayed their overnight, and even had his own keys. However, he did not contribute to paying rent or other household expenses, and only his girlfriend was able to regulate access. Edwards has since been applied to other circumstances. Generally, a passenger in a vehicle has no reasonable expectation of privacy. A hotel guest making use of a "Do Not Disturb" sign often has a reasonable expectation of privacy only when it comes to items neither left in plain view nor requiring daily maintenance by hotel staff. And while landlords can grant the police access to the common areas of an apartment building, the police still require, in the absence of either a warrant or a common law duty, the consent of the "dwelling resident" to enter an apartment proper. (Landlords are entitled to enter an apartment without notice or consent only in an emergency. In all other circumstances - including repairs, pest control, or to show the space to a prospective renter - they can enter without consent but with at least 24 hours' written notice. The notice must indicate when and for how long entry will be made, and for what purpose.) However, a recent Ontario decision may have returned some teeth to privacy advocates' mouths. Again, it was a case where an apartment was shared, but the evidence was found not in the bedroom belonging to the accused, but in another. The court warmed the hearts of civil libertarians everywhere by finding that the Charter would inadequately protect Canadians' privacy if the ability to regulate access was by itself the deciding factor. Unfortunately for young Mr. F, it was. Applying Edwards, the court found that because F was not present at the time of the search and could not regulate access to his room (his mother would go into his room for laundry and to clean up on a weekly basis), he had no reasonable expectation of privacy. He was out of luck, and wound up convicted on the basis of the DNA evidence turned up by the search. Now let's all go buy locks for our bedroom doors. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin