Pubdate: Wed, 03 Aug 2011 Source: Richmond Review, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2011 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/P92NTYdG Website: http://drugsense.org/url/WcGUPNub Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/704 POLICE BUNGLING FURTHER HURTS RCMP'S CAUSE Richmond RCMP have received a second black eye, this one from a provincial court judge who tossed out drug charges from a 2007 ecstasy bust and rebuked police on their handling of the case. (The other black eye was the tasering death of Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski by four Richmond RCMP officers in 2007.) In throwing out charges to Tin Lik Ho, Qing Hou, Shao Wei Huang, Yi Feng Kevin Li and Kai Lai Kyle Zhou, Judge Paul R. Meyers said police consistently "ignored and flaunted the accuseds' Charter of Rights, and did so consistently over a 14-month period." In 2007, police busted an ecstasy lab at 3671 Raymond Ave. But what seemed like a slam-dunk case quickly eroded from there. According to the judgment, police had a search warrant, but didn't show or read it to two of the accused. Police did not bring along an interpreter when one of the accused--who did not speak English--had his rights read to him. "The police basically just closed their eyes to this real, potential problem, by doing nothing in advance to plan for it," Judge Myers wrote. And two of the accused were forced to sit outside, half-naked in midwinter in front of their neighbours, where they were "decontaminated" by fire hoses. They then failed to file a written report with the court registry within the required seven days of the execution of a search warrant. "It is fundamental to the courts' ability to supervise the proper execution of warrants and it is fundamental to the rights of people who are about to have their homes searched by the police, to know that the courthouse in their area, will have all of the legal documents pertaining to the intrusion of their privacy, available for them to inspect," Judge Myers wrote. This judgment won't help the RCMP's cause in B.C. The RCMP's contract is up next year and this latest bungling will only lead to further demands to switch a provincial police force, as in Ontario. While RCMP has been reeling following in-custody deaths, lack of co-operation with other police forces, a beating caught on tape in Kelowna and more. This only undermines all the great work the RCMP does in B.C. the majority of the time. What most critics object to is the lack of accountability from RCMP brass in Ottawa, with its top-down approach. Unless that attitude quickly changes, provincial politicians will have great difficulty defending the renewal of the RCMP contract next year. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.