Pubdate: Thu, 28 Feb 2013 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2013 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Les MacPherson Page: A3 DID POLICE VIOLATE WOMAN'S RIGHTS? YOU BE THE JUDGE Today, we're going to play You Be the Judge. You are only competing against The Honourable Martel Popescul, chief justice of Saskatchewan's Court of Queen's Bench, who presided over the trial. The following details are from his written judgment, issued last week: The case begins in the fall of 2010 with a young woman driving alone in her sister's 2002 Acura from Calgary to Winnipeg. Near Swift Current on Highway 1, she is seen by a patrolling RCMP officer to be using a handheld cellphone. She stops promptly when the red and blue lights come on behind her. When the officer approaches her car, he finds her accompanied by a small dog, barking its head off. He has to ask her three times to produce her papers. She seems more nervous than circumstances seem to warrant, he testifies. She keeps insisting she was not speeding or using the cellphone visible on the console. Back in his own vehicle, the officer learns through his mobile computer that the car is not registered to the driver and that the driver had at one time faced a criminal charge related to a marijuana grow-op. The charge was stayed a year ago when the prosecution, for reasons unknown, chose not to proceed. Suspecting that the driver is a drug courier, the officer detains the driver while another officer brings a drug sniffing dog to the scene. The dog signals that drugs are present in the vehicle and a search reveals 10 kilos of marijuana in a storage tub in the trunk. At her trial, the accused argued the marijuana should not be accepted into evidence. Police only found it, she says, by violating her right to freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, among others. The prosecution argued the search was justified based on observations that the officer knew through his training and experience to be indicative of illegal drugs. He had completed and was now an instructor in the RCMP's Pipeline Convoy training program, in which officers learn how to identify drug couriers on the highway. The officer had taught the course in Canada and internationally and used its methods to intercept more than 600 drug couriers. Alas, the officer was not asked how many drivers he has searched and found not to be drug couriers. He did testify in detail, however, as to how drug couriers give themselves away. They use third-party vehicles, for example, so a routine licence plate check will not reveal their criminal records. They travel with a dog to distract the drug-sniffing dog. They often travel from Calgary, a drug distribution centre, to Winnipeg, a drug destination. The accused in this case rang all the bells, as well as being nervous and slow to produce identification, presumably so the officer would not learn of her previous marijuana charges. Defence counsel for the accused argues there could be innocent reasons for any of the so-called indicators. A lot of people drive from Calgary to Winnipeg. A lot of people travel with a dog. A lot of people are nervous when stopped by police. A lot of people drive vehicles registered to someone else, and so on. The accused produced her licence within a minute of being asked. Other important indicators were absent, including evidence of the vehicle being lived in and the smell of marijuana or air freshener. So that's the case, more or less. Do you allow the marijuana to be entered as evidence and convict the accused or do you acquit to protect us all from unreasonable searches? If you entered a conviction, you are on side with Chief Justice Popescul. He found the police search to be justified by the accumulation of indicators, however innocent they might appear when viewed individually. Using the stayed charge as grounds for suspicion, the judge conceded, was "problematic," given the legal presumption of innocence. He ruled, however, that the charge had investigative value and there was no good reason for the officer not to consider it, along with all the other indicators. Drug couriers will be thinking about changing their procedures. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt