Pubdate: Sat, 7 Aug 2010 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Peter McKnight Referenced: R. v. Cornell, 2010 SCC 31 http://scc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/2010/2010scc31/2010scc31.html FLAWED RULING MEANS POLICE DON'T HAVE TO KNOCK FIRST The Supreme Court knocks down a centuries-old principle and shows that the majority doesn't always get it right Picture this: You're in your home and suddenly a team of armed men smash their way through your front door. Would you not do everything in your power to protect yourself and your family, including using a weapon if you had one at your disposal? In 2007, Laval businessman Basil Parasiris did so. Parasiris grabbed his revolver and shot at the men he believed were home invaders, killing one and injuring another. As it turned out, the men were police officers, and Parasiris was charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder. But he was acquitted on the ground that he was acting in self-defence, and he is now suing the police. The " knock and announce" rule, which requires police officers to knock on the door and announce their presence before making forced entry into a house, was designed to avoid precisely what happened in the Parasiris case. It is a fundamental rule, and a very old one, first encoded in the Statute of Westminster in 1275. The rule became part of the English common law in Semayne's Case in 1604, and has since been endorsed by courts across Canada. The courts have noted that the rule exists primarily to protect the safety of both homeowners and the police. And indeed, " hard" or "dynamic" entries - entries where police fail to knock and announce - have resulted in the deaths of both homeowners and the police, though police studies suggest that they are most dangerous to police officers. This is not to say that the rule is absolute. If exigent circumstances exist - if, for example, the police have reasonable grounds to believe that they or others will be harmed, or evidence destroyed, if they knock and announce - they can dispense with the rule. But given the rule's role in enhancing safety, courts have typically required the police to provide careful "particularized" information to justify using a dynamic entry. It is unfortunate, then, that a recent decision of the Supreme Court of Canada broadened considerably the circumstances under which police may ignore the rule. The decision has received little attention since it was released the same day as the Pickton judgment, but it's worth considering, given its importance to police and public safety. In November, 2005, nine armed, masked members of the of the Calgary Police Services Tactical Unit broke down the door to Lorraine Cornell's home pursuant to a search warrant. The only person at home at the time was Cornell's mentally disabled son Robert, who was deeply traumatized and required medical aid after he was handcuffed face down on the floor. After entering the home, the tactical unit members did identify themselves, saying they had a search warrant. But they didn't have a copy of the warrant, which was held by a detective who arrived between four and nine minutes later. That may not sound like a long time, but it took Basil Parasiris only 30 seconds to shoot two police officers, one fatally. Police had obtained the search warrant after providing evidence that Cornell's other son, Jason, had been storing cocaine for a gang-affiliated drug dealer. Police had previously witnessed the dealer, who had been arrested shortly before the Cornell raid, making brief stops at the Cornell home on several occasions. The police therefore had provided some evidence that Jason Cornell was aiding a drug dealer, which is why they were successful in obtaining the warrant. But none of this goes to the matter of police ignoring the knock and announce rule. After Jason Cornell argued that he was subject to an unreasonable search and seizure, the Crown provided limited evidence to support the police's actions. And that limited evidence was sufficient for four judges of the Supreme Court, though three other judges considered it woefully inadequate. This reveals that there is considerable dissension in the court over the issue, and it is unfortunate that two judges did not hear the appeal. In any case, the majority found the dynamic entry justified both to protect the officers' and home occupants' safety and to prevent the destruction of evidence. As to the safety issue, Justice Thomas Cromwell cited with approval the trial judge's comments that police knew "a cocaine trafficker who associated with violent people was welcome in the [ Cornell] residence," and " those who traffic in cocaine frequently are violent." While the trial judge's statements are true, the upshot of the decision is that police will be justified in departing from the knock and announce rule any time they are dealing with people suspected of aiding a cocaine trafficker. The decision goes even further than this. Concerning the destruction of evidence, Cromwell also cited with approval the trial judge's observation that " there were reasonable grounds to believe that cocaine would be found on the premises and that it is a substance that is easily destroyed." Yet since cocaine can always be easily destroyed, the police will now be justified in dispensing with the knock and announce rule any time they suspect cocaine is on the premises. This represents a grand departure from the 800-year history of the knock and announce rule, as the stinging dissent made clear. Writing for the minority, Justice Morris Fish noted that the police had no information about whether the Cornell home or its occupants might be dangerous, because they never made any effort to find out: " They had conducted no particularized inquiry to determine whether a violent assault on appellant's home appeared justified in the circumstances - apart from their surveillance of the premises, which in fact indicated the contrary." Indeed, while a risk analysis had been completed, it didn't concern the Cornell home and was never communicated to the tactical team that conducted the raid. Further, while a drug dealer had been seen at the residence previously, he was already in police custody at the time of the raid. And none of the occupants of the home, including Jason Cornell, had a criminal record or any history of violence. As to the destruction of evidence, Fish noted that the law requires police to first ascertain whether there is a " real likelihood" that the drugs would be destroyed: " It is well established that generic information about the potential presence of drugs in a home is insufficient to warrant" a dynamic entry. Yet it seems that generic information is precisely what the majority relied on - generic information about drugs and generic information about drug traffickers. This has never been an appropriate way of dealing with departures from the knock and announce rule, but it is now, unfortunately. Finally, the majority did not seem particularly troubled by the fact that the tactical team lacked a copy of the search warrant, though Cromwell did say it would have been " better practice" if they had had one. The minority, on the other hand, was deeply troubled, with Fish noting that the failure to carry the warrant " is not a technical or insignificant breach of the law. It is a violation of a venerable principle of historic and constitutional importance. And it is of practical importance as well in avoiding violent resistance by those present in the home." The Calgary police must also have been troubled, since shortly after the Cornell raid, they began requiring the tactical team to carry a copy of the search warrant. Despite Fish's harsh words for the police, his harshest comment appears directed at the majority, which means, fortunately, that this might not be the last we hear from the Supreme Court about this matter. In concluding his decision, Fish stated that courts must fulfil their "duty to ensure that police respect the legal and constitutional restraints by which they are bound." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake