Pubdate: Wed, 10 Nov 2010 Source: North Shore News (CN BC) Copyright: 2010 North Shore News Contact: http://www.nsnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/311 Author: Jane Seyd Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada) JUDGE TOSSES BRITISH PROPERTIES GROW OP CASE TWO men who were arrested leaving a British Properties grow op where police seized 450 plants have had the case against them tossed out of court, on the grounds West Vancouver police officers violated their rights. Ngoc Hang Huynh and Van Hoang Huynh were arrested Feb. 3, 2006 after police who were watching a suspected grow op saw the pair pull up to the house, go inside and drive off again. The pair were arrested shortly after, when officers pulled over their minivan. They were taken to the police station, fingerprinted and photographed. That same night, police searched the house at 547 St. Andrew's Rd. and discovered a marijuana growing operation with 450 plants being cultivated in three rooms of the house. Police discovered the Hydro meter had been bypassed and there were no personal effects or furniture of any kind in the house. The two men were later charged with both producing a controlled substance and possession of marijuana for the purposed of trafficking. But a B.C. Supreme Court judge recently threw out the case against the pair, saying police didn't have proper grounds to arrest the two men when they pulled over the van. Justice Catherine Wedge said police also violated the rights of the accused when they didn't act quickly to get a Vietnamese translator for the men, so they would know why they had been arrested and have the ability to speak with a lawyer. The judge added that neither of the men were told by police they had a right to a lawyer of their choice after they were arrested. In refusing to admit the evidence seized by police, Wedge wrote the police showed "indifference" and "a pattern of carelessness" regarding the rights of the accused in the case. According to court documents, police had set up surveillance on the house after receiving a report of suspicious activity by the homeowner. Officers who stopped by the property said they smelled marijuana from the road and thought they heard what sounded like fans coming from inside. The two men were later observed going into the house, turning on lights and later leaving. Wedge, however, said that alone wasn't "reasonable and probable" grounds to arrest the pair. Wedge noted there was nothing connecting the pair to the house and they weren't seen taking anything into or out of the house. At best, the officer making the decision, "had a suspicion that these individuals were part of a grow op," she wrote, in ruling the arrests were illegal. More troubling to the judge, however, was the delay in getting a Vietnamese translator for the two men. Wedge said it was apparent to officers who arrested the pair that both spoke Vietnamese and they were having trouble understanding English. Yet the officers waited two hours before contacting a translator for them. "I conclude the police acted in careless disregard of the accused's rights," wrote Wedge. "It violated the liberty interests of the accused in a serious manner." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake