Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jan 2014 Source: Metro (London, CN ON) Section: Front Page Copyright: 2014 Free Daily News Group Inc. Contact: http://metronews.ca/London/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5477 Author: Scott Taylor ILLEGAL SEARCHES IMPEDE WEED GROW-OP CASE Court. London Cops Deliberately Disregarded Charter Rights: Judge There's been a setback for the prosecution in a marijuana grow-operation case tied to a London real-estate agent. A federal judge has disallowed much of the evidence gathered by London police in the investigation that led to the arrest of Thu Tran and six others in June 2012. Tran is accused of knowingly selling homes that would be turned into grow-ops. Superior Court Justice A.J. Goodman has ruled two sections of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms were breached during "illegal" searches of homes on London's Oakville Avenue and Highview Crescent in 2010. Lawyers for defendants Tam Van Bui, Toan Nguyen and Thoa Thi Pham argued that Ontario Court Justice Gregory Pockele erred in allowing evidence from search warrants executed at the addresses. Goodman agreed, citing charter breaches. He said when London police officers were turned down in their initial request for a search warrant, they simply rewrote the application and took it to another judge the same day. The error was so egregious, Goodman added, that allowing the evidence from those searches would "bring the administration of justice into disrepute." He added it was "unfortunate that the police conduct in this case demonstrated a deliberate disregard of charter rights." The Ontario Court of Appeal has already criticized Pockele in the case for stereotyping an ethnic group involved with marijuana production. The suppression of the evidence, according to Goodman's ruling, may scuttle the Crown's case against Nguyen, though Bui and Pham may still face prosecution based on evidence obtained from a third residence searched on Sunnyside Drive. None of the allegations have been proven in court. Sutton Realty broker of record Gerry Weir went to police in 2010 after noticing that three of four homes added to the London police grow-op registry had been sold by Tran. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D