Pubdate: Wed, 07 Dec 2011 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2011 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.leaderpost.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor.html Website: http://www.leaderpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Barb Pacholik, Leader-Post FORFEITURE LAW CHALLENGED Should a Regina man be forced to forfeit a $7,500 truck if it was used in a $60 drug deal? The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal is wrestling with that issue as it mulls over the first legal challenge to the Saskatchewan Seizure of Criminal Property Act. The law, which took effect July 1, 2009, was created with the goal of seizing property and cash from illegal activities and using the proceeds to fund victims programs and policing operations. Since then, the province has collected about $502,000 in cash and property. Most people just hand over the goods without a fight, but David Wayne Mihalyko was the first to actually legally fend off the application. He won before the Court of Queen's Bench and was allowed to keep his 13-yearold truck - but the province opted to seek a ruling from a higher court in what has become a test case for the legislation. After listening to legal arguments Tuesday, Justices Stuart Cameron, William Vancise and Robert Richards reserved decision on the case. Mihalyko sold two Oxy-Contin tablets, a prescription drug, to a woman last year in Regina. He thought the woman was a sex trade worker; she was actually an undercover Regina police officer - and he was subsequently busted. The sale came about as a result of a call to his cellphone after he had previously given the woman the number should she need any drugs. In February Mihalyko pleaded guilty to a trafficking charge and received a nine-month conditional sentence, served in the community. But he wasn't done paying for his crime. Regina police seized Mihalyko's cellphone and the Chevrolet Blazer he had used to deliver the drugs. The province then applied for an order forfeiting the items to the Crown as "instruments of unlawful activity." But Mihalyko's lawyer Brad Tilling had successfully argued at the Court of Queen's Bench forfeiture of the truck wasn't in the interests of justice - a so-called "escape clause" in the legislation. Finding no evidence that it was more than an isolated incident, Justice Peter Whitmore noted that police watched as Mihalyko, a man of "modest means" who had a prescription for the drugs, used the $60 profit to help fuel up his truck for $63. "It does appear to me that the impact (of losing the truck) on the respondent is significant and disproportionate to the offence of illegally selling two OxyContin tablets for $60," Whitmore said in declining to make the forfeiture order. But that's where Whitmore erred, Justice Department lawyer James Fitz-Gerald argued before the appeal court. He said the judge had to weigh more than the value of the truck and the pills. First, it was up to Mihalyko to prove the impact of losing his vehicle, but no such evidence was filed, said Fitz-Gerald. And the judge should have also considered the impact of drug trafficking on the community, the public interest in deterring crimes, the use of the funds collected, and whether or not forfeiture was "clearly" - as the legislation is worded - - not in the interests of justice. "This was a clearly considered breach of the criminal law ... The gravity of the breach is significant," Fitz-Gerald added. But Tilling said Whitmore carefully considered the facts and the law in reaching his conclusion. "If this isn't the low end of things, I don't know what is ... It couldn't be more minor," he said. Tilling said it was only "rampant speculation" by the police that Mihalyko was involved in anything bigger than one transaction. And that's what sets it apart from other cases. Although Mihalyko has a lengthy criminal record, his only previous drug conviction was from 1986 for simple possession. He added that Mihalyko's offence was "a moment of desperation." His gas tank"was "bone dry. It was a cold winter night ... It didn't go into a big roll of cash." Lawyer Neil Robertson, representing Regina's police chief, spoke in support of the province's appeal. He said the societal harm of drug trafficking has to be considered. "Trafficking in prescription drugs is no better than illegal drugs," said Robertson. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.