Pubdate: Sat, 10 Jul 2010 Source: Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, CN NK) Copyright: 2010 Brunswick News Inc. Contact: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/onsite.php?page=contact Website: http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2878 Author: Tammy Scott-Wallace Referenced: Charter of Rights and Freedoms http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/charter/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Charter+of+Rights+and+Freedoms Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) JUDGE RULES POLICE WENT TOO FAR SUSSEX - A provincial court judge ruled police went beyond their authority and therefore deemed evidence collected during a search of a couple's Apohaqui home inadmissible. As a result, federal Crown prosecutor Gerry McCracken dropped a charge of marijuana production that had been laid against Jason McGrath and Angela Bernard. The couple was represented by defence lawyer Peter White during a voir dire hearing in late May. At the time, White argued McGrath and Bernard's rights were violated when Sussex RCMP officer Const. Justin Helm searched their home looking for a grow operation. Helm had been asked by social worker Michelle Campbell to accompany her to ensure her safety during a home inspection in February. She was there following up on a complaint that children in the home were not being parented properly and there were drugs in the house. In his decision in Sussex provincial court on whether or not there was a rights violation, Judge Henrik Tonning ruled that while Campbell acted within her authority under the Family Protection Act to investigate the complaint and inspect the home, the police went too far. The police officer was right to accompany the social worker, which she requested the day before the visit, Tonning said, but he was only supposed to be there to ensure peace was maintained between the parents and the social worker. The children were not home at the time. However, the officer accompanied Campbell partway through her tour of the home on Feb. 12 even though there was no apparent volatile situation with the homeowners and became overly involved when they came to the entrance of the basement. Tonning said while the police did not have enough information from the individual complaint against the family alone to get a search warrant, the officer went to the house with finding a drug grow operation in mind. Tonning said while "a grow op is no place for a kid," the police officer was not permitted by law to do more than accompany Campbell on her tour and did not have the authority to participate in a criminal investigation without a search warrant. At one point, when McGrath said he didn't want the basement visited and therefore was not offering his consent, Helm went so far as to ask him why. After being pushed by the visitors to allow them downstairs, "McGrath finally threw his arms up and said 'screw it,'" Tonning said. "McGrath clearly didn't consent to the search of the basement." The judge said "there was a fair amount of coercion on the part of the social worker and the police officer to carry out the search." He said, "It was almost inevitable they were going to get the search done. They were there looking for a criminal activity. "As far as I'm concerned it was not very cordial at this time," he added. "That's where the thing went off the rails." Tonning cited evidence by Helm that said not only was the officer looking for ways to get a search warrant before he went into the home because of the "bare allegation" about drugs inside, but he even had other police officers on standby that day in case he found a grow op inside. What was supposed to be an inspection turned into a search, the judge said. "He had no reasonable and probable grounds to get a search warrant," Tonning said. "Although righteous in his desire to find this grow op, he had no authority to start looking around the house," the judge added. "(It is clear) he was only there to find a grow operation. "He (Helm) went beyond what he was allowed to do while he was there. He could not be there trying to find a grow operation legally." Tonning said he believed the police made a deliberate attempt to find a grow op "on the back of the social worker." Under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the judge said, a person's home is sacred and people are "not entitled to be invaded by police unless they have clear authority to do so." It wasn't until after McGrath was arrested and put in cells that police got a search warrant. Bernard was not held because she was due to deliver the baby she was carrying at the time. Tonning said had Helm gone inside the home simply to look out for Campbell and happened to smell marijuana, or had the social worker smelled it and alerted police, then he may have had grounds for a search warrant without intruding on the home and the couple's rights as he did. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake