Pubdate: Wed, 29 Jan 2014
Source: Maple Ridge News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2014 Maple Ridge News
Contact:  http://www.mapleridgenews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1328
Author: Monisha Martins

MARIJUANA SEARCH WARRANT MOSTLY LAWFUL

Tosses Out Evidence On Digital Camera Memory Card

A Maple Ridge woman accused of operating a marijuana grow operation
will go to trial after a judge refused to toss out evidence she
claimed RCMP obtained unlawfully.

Katherine Merle Brown was arrested in April 2010 after Ridge Meadows
RCMP raided a property at 28496 Bell Avenue on the suspicion that
power was being stolen via a Hydro bypass.

Investigation revealed that Brown was the registered owner of the
property, as well as the B.C. Hydro subscriber.

Officers found 1,082 marijuana plants in the garage and an
outbuilding.

A locked safe and an envelope containing $4,560 were also seized, as
were coffee cans with a large number of $20 bills, a grow chart, and a
book related to indoor cultivation of marijuana.

During the search, police also found a digital camera in the living
room. Believing the camera might contain photos of the people who
lived on the grow op property, police took the camera back to the
detachment to print the photos of a man and woman taken inside the
house.

Brown was taken into custody as she returned home. She was eventually
charged with producing and possessing marijuana, in an amount
exceeding three kilograms, for the purpose of trafficking.

Her lawyer, Neil Cobb, filed several applications to exclude evidence
from trial.

Cobb argued that the search of her home was illegal as the warrant was
obtained to determine who was stealing electricity.

He also claimed the information used to obtain the search warrant
should have specified where the Hydro meter was and where it was going.

Defence argued the "information to obtain" should not have resulted in
the search warrant being issued for the "outbuildings," on the basis
that there was no evidence linking the outbuildings to the theft of
electricity, and only mentioned one outbuilding.

Cobb also claimed Brown's Charter rights were violated because police
"arbitrarily" stopped her in her SUV and arrested her.

He also claimed that her Charter rights were violated for a second
time as police delayed to inform her about her rights to counsel.

In a ruling Thursday, Mr. Justice Robert Jenkins disagreed with
Brown's lawyer on most points.

The only evidence Justice Jenkins eventually excluded was the
warrantless search of the digital camera.

A trial for Brown is scheduled to take place in May.

* Read the judgement online. 
http://www.courts.gov.bc.ca/jdb-txt/SC/14/01/2014BCSC0112cor1.htm 
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D