Pubdate: Fri, 16 Jul 2010 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/O3vnWIvC Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Shannon Kari JURY-VETTING PROMPTS COURT TO ORDER NEW TRIAL The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal has ordered a new trial for a man convicted of running a marijuana growop, in the first case in Canada to rule on improper jury-vetting by Crown prosecutors. The decision could have broad implications in Ontario, where the province's Court of Appeal has yet to rule in at least a dozen cases in which the police conducted secret background checks of potential jurors on behalf of the Crown. In Nova Scotia, the appeal court yesterday quashed the conviction of Kevin Hobbs because the federal Crown obtained an improper advantage in jury selection. A Halifax jury found Mr. Hobbs guilty on June 1, 2009. However, the Crown did not disclose until after the trial that Halifax police and the RCMP ran database checks on more than 300 potential jurors. The searches were wide-ranging and disclosed even if individuals had traffic tickets. Many of the checks were to see if potential jurors had any past connection with the criminal justice system. The Crown prosecutors maintained the background checks were done to ensure potential jurors were impartial. The Court of Appeal rejected the explanation, noting that the Supreme Court of Canada stressed nearly 20 years ago that the aim of the jury selection process is not so it will favour one side over the other. "The jury selection process must be fair," wrote Justice Duncan Beveridge, with Justices Nancy Bateman and Linda Oland concurring. "The failure to disclose the information, in the circumstances of this trial, gave the Crown an unfair advantage that actually impacted on the selection of the jury," the court added. Defence lawyer Luke Craggs was unsuccessful in arguing that the case should be thrown out completely, as a result of what he argued was an "abuse of process" by the Crown. "I see it as tainting the whole process," said Mr. Craggs, who noted that fewer people might be willing to serve as jurors as a result of the infringement of privacy rights. The jury-vetting in the case of Mr. Hobbs came to light after the National Post published an article in May 2009 that revealed improper background checks in some parts of Ontario. After the conviction and before the sentencing hearing, the Crown disclosed the jury checks once it learned the practice was "the subject of some controversy," the appeal court noted yesterday. The Public Prosecution Service of Canada now restricts background checks to ensuring that someone is eligible to serve as a juror. Any information must be disclosed to the defence. The Ontario Ministry of the Attorney-General also ordered an end to jury-vetting in the province last year, following a series of National Post stories and a report by the provincial Privacy Commissioner that disclosed the extent of the secret background checks. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom