Pubdate: Fri, 03 Sep 2010 Source: Chilliwack Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 Chilliwack Times Contact: http://www.chilliwacktimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1357 Author: Tyler Olsen BUNGLED GROW OP ARREST ALLOWS MAN TO WALK FREE Police bungling of a marijuana grow operation investigation has allowed a Surrey man to walk free. Huu V. Hoang was acquitted Monday of charges of producing marijuana and possession for the purpose of trafficking after Judge Russell Mackay threw out all evidence that tied Hoang to a grow-op on Strathcona Road. Charges of theft of electricity were stayed by the Crown after Mackay dismissed the evidence. On Nov. 28, 2008, police stopped a van driven by Hoang in front of a home in the 46500 block of Strathcona Road. Mounties suspected the home harboured a marijuana grow operation and later testified it was not the first time a white van was seen in front of the home. Officers handcuffed Hoang, placed him in the back of a police car and proceeded to search the van, in which officers testified they found a "substantial amount of marijuana." About 1,200 plants were later found in the home's basement. While Mackay said police had reason to stop the van, he ruled that police "egregiously" and needlessly breached Hoang's rights when they made a "de facto arrest" before searching the vehicle. Police also erred, Mackay said, by searching the van without a warrant. Such a warrant, the defence argued, could have been obtained relatively easily, but was not. "I concluded that the detention and de facto arrest was unlawful," said Mackay. About the need for the warrant, he said: "The problem was [that] not enough thought seems to have been directed at the issue." Prosecutor Susan Gill argued that drivers expect less privacy and that the fact that the vehicle had been seen at the grow-op justified Hoang's detention. But Mackay didn't buy that argument. He said the lack of any dates or times at which the van had been seen at the house pointed to the sightings of the vehicle at the grow house to be second-hand information. There was, he said, no guarantee that the white van seen at the house was even the same vehicle Hoang was found driving, and no assurance that Hoang had driven the van before. "He was never seen in the van prior to the date in question," said Mackay. In his ruling, Mackay stated that officers had breached Hoang's rights under both sections 8 and 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. "The violation cannot be classified as a mere technicality," he said. "His general right to be left alone by the state was interfered with. "This constitutes a very egregious, if not serious, violation of [Hoang's] rights." Evidence obtained through improper means is not automatically dismissed. But Mackay noted that if the means through which the evidence is obtained would jeopardize the reputation of the Canadian legal system, the evidence cannot be admitted. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt