Pubdate: Thu, 23 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 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) POLICE SEARCHES BASED ON SKIN TONE Can The Cops Stop You Based On Nothing But The Colour Of Your Skin? In A Word, Yes Editor's note: This is the last in a series of guest columns on privacy and legal issues by local lawyer D. James Anderson. Last week he looked at who can let the police into your home or room. This week he tackles searches based on racial profiling. Let's take an unhappy detour into one of criminal law's heartbreaking culs-de-sac: the one where, in some situations, it's OK for the police to stop and question a person just because they have a certain skin tone. The authority for the police to detain a suspect was addressed in R. v. Mann. Back in 2000, Winnipeg police received a dispatch call regarding a break and enter. The suspect was described as a young native man of average height and build. The Winnipeg police found the accused, a young native man, within several blocks of the crime scene. They did a pat-down and felt a lump in one of his pockets. The officer reached in and found pot, Valium, and baggies. One of the questions at trial was: did the police have articulable cause to detain Mr. Mann? The court decided there was, and went on to define articulable cause as a discretionary power (can you say "hunch"?) that requires, first, that the investigating officer believe on reasonable grounds, considering all circumstances, that the individual is connected to a particular crime; and second, that such a detention is necessary. However, the scope of the search of Mr. Mann exceeded what was permissible. If an officer objectively and justifiably believes that a detained suspect might be armed and dangerous, a limited protective pat-down search is also permitted. If not, then no. Although the Supreme Court noted that "the potential for abuse inherent in such low-visibility exercises of discretionary power are all pressing reasons why the Court must exercise its custodial role," the police all too often have been happy to exploit the vague test established by Mann. Consequently, Mann is often cited as justification for stops based on little more than an individual's skin tone. For example, in what became known as R. v. Greaves, Vancouver police received a report of an assault committed by a black male accompanied by several white males. The police later observed a black male accompanied by two white males. Although the appearance of the black male did not closely match the description of the alleged perpetrator, the officers considered the grouping of a black male with two white males suspicious. They stopped the group, and after 40 minutes an officer took Mr. Greaves' cellphone and called a number labelled "Dad." The person who answered indicated that his son's cellphone had been stolen 10 days earlier. The police then charged Mr. Greaves with the robbery. The B.C. Court of Appeal found that even though the group was walking toward the liquor store (as opposed to walking away it), the people in the group differed in number from the broadcast description of the suspects, and the height, weight, age, and clothing of the persons detained did not closely match the broadcast description, there was articulable cause to detain the individuals. In spite of the fact the subsequent search went beyond what was permissible, none of the evidence was excluded. And yes, Mr. Greaves was convicted. The Supreme Court has stated that there is no hierarchy of Charter rights. Section 9 of the Charter - the right to be protected against arbitrary detention - should not be subordinate to any other Charter right. In practice, however, an unreasonable detention is accepted essentially as an unfortunate cost of policing. Using the language of Charter analysis, the decisions in Mann and Greaves indicate that a limit on one's liberty based on race may be "demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society" unless allowing the improperly obtained evidence will bring the administration of justice into disrepute. The message is clear: the police power to search can (note: not will) trump a member of a racial minority's right not to be stopped just because they're a member of a racial minority. Not too long ago, a black man named Mr. Coward was walking down a busy Calgary street when he was stopped by a cop and told that he matched the description of a person (i.e., a black man) seen waving a knife in the area. The cop asked him if he had a knife. Mr. Coward said he did not, and would not consent to a search of his person (as was his right). He was arrested, handcuffed, and searched in public. When no knife was found, he was released. No charges were laid. He later laid a complaint against the Calgary police alleging racial discrimination, but the Calgary police disagreed. So did the Alberta Human Rights Commission and the Alberta Court of Queen's Bench, who found that while race is a prohibited ground of discrimination, it is also a relevant descriptor. So are a number of other things, but while the courts want more than a description of a white person as "a white person," they are less picky when it comes to minorities. Perhaps until they want more, the minority man will be just that: only a minority man, and always a possible locus for fear. Reasonable? You tell me. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom