Pubdate: Tue, 09 Jun 2009 Source: Kings County Record (CN NK) Copyright: 2009 CanadaEast Interactive, Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://kingscorecord.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact&paper=record Website: http://www.kingscorecord.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4656 Page: A1 Author: Charlene MacKenzie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis) GROUNDS FOR POLICE WARRANT CALLED INTO QUESTION AT TRIAL SUSSEX - The grounds for a police raid of Arden Gregg's Marrtown property last year, which led to drug and weapons charges, has been called into question. In Sussex Provincial Court June 4, Judge Henrik Tonning announced his ruling that the ITO (information to obtain) filed by police didn't support the warrant authorized by Judge Andrew LeMesurier for the May 20, 2008 search. The ruling does not constitute a decision on the admissibility of the evidence but merely on the grounds for the search warrant. Tonning accepted defence lawyer Randy Maillet's position that the search of Gregg's property last year may constitute a breach of Section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Following the police raid last year, Gregg was charged with drug trafficking, possession of marijuana and cocaine for the purpose of trafficking, unsafe storage of firearms, possession of 49 weapons without proper licences and possession of unlicenced tobacco. Prior to announcing his decision, Tonning said he'd been waiting a couple of weeks for the defence brief on the Gregg case. In an earlier voir dire on the Charter issue, the defence had made oral submissions with supporting jurisprudence, but the judge only received the written brief by fax June 3, on the eve of his decision. In the meantime, Tonning explained, a relevant decision by another New Brunswick judge occurred which became an important factor in his decision. He was referring to the May 28 decision by Justice Marc Richard in the matter of Her Majesty the Queen v. Joseph Arsenault, which set a precedent about search warrants based on tips from police informants. In the Gregg case, police requested the warrant on the basis of evidence from four informants, one who had been working with police for decades and others who'd only been tipsters for a few months. The evidence was vetted prior to going before the court to protect the identity of the informants. Tonning explained he considered the extent of the evidence based on sources outside the police, the credibility and reliability of the sources and the extent to which police were able to substantiate the tips. He pointed out examples of how the informants' evidence, as presented to him, was "extremely vague" and failed to provide specific dates and incidents which could later be corroborated. The judge said police didn't seem to try to corroborate the evidence received, other than doing a computer check of Gregg's licence to get his address. "There was absolutely no surveillance of any kind, no checking of any detail. Not even a drive-by," he said. There was no corroborating evidence the accused had ever been seen in the Golden Arrow Sports Bar where he allegedly sold drugs or that police had even done a walk-through there. "There are the kinds of things we expect to see," he said. He referred to other investigations where police would back up tips with surveillance, garbage searches and checks on electricity usage to provide an "air of reality" to the tips before proceeding with a warrant. "There's a lot of innuendo and rumour," Tonning said, but no satisfactory grounds for the search. "I can only come to the conclusion there are rumours that Mr. Gregg was a bad guy, deals drugs and has some in his house." Under Section 24.2 of the Charter, which addresses practices surrounding evidence brought against individuals in trials, evidence obtained in a way that infringes on Charter rights can be excluded. When a court concludes evidence was obtained in a manner that infringed on Charter rights, the defence can argue to have the evidence deemed inadmissible if it establishes admission of the evidence would bring the administration of justice into question. The Crown, on the other hand, can apply to have the evidence deemed admissible and proceed with the charges. The Gregg matter proceeds to a hearing July 10 at 10 a.m. in Sussex court. - --- MAP posted-by: Doug