Pubdate: Fri, 28 Aug 2015 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2015 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Author: Douglas Quan Page: A6 POLICE WANT TO PUT PUSHERS PHONES ON HOLD Look for Powers to Disrupt Dealers' Phone Numbers Police across the country are looking for new powers to seize, jam or de-activate the phone numbers of street-level "dial a dope" drug dealers. Currently, when police make an arrest and seize a suspected dealer's phone, its number lives on and can be used by associates or even hijacked by rivals to keep the flow of illicit drugs going. At their annual conference last week, Canada's police chiefs passed a resolution calling on law-makers to give them the ability to cut off those lucrative phone numbers. "Once a telephone number or 'drug line' has been established, it can operate non-stop at all hours of the day and distribute drugs to a broad base of customers," says a background document attached to the resolution. "As a result, once established, each drug line has an inherent value within the drug trafficking realm and can be bought, traded or taken over by rival drug trafficking networks. "Law enforcement has had limited success addressing these drug lines." Jonathan Dawe, a Toronto criminal defence lawyer, said one thing that concerns him is if police start unilaterally cancelling people's phone numbers before charges have been laid. "It would be something quite more disturbing (if ) police, on their own initiative, in cases where they don't have sufficient grounds to lay a charge, can nevertheless interfere with people's cellphones," he said. "If there was some provision that let (police) go around cancelling numbers willy-nilly ... it would also create a new way in which people could harass their enemies - send a tip to the cops about a cellphone, get their number de-listed." Bill Fordy, chief superintendent of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police detachment in Surrey, B.C., which has seen an outbreak of drugturf violence this year and spearheaded the resolution, did not rule out the possibility of cutting off phones without a charge. "Police are seeking lawful authority to disrupt these activities when reasonable grounds exist to believe that the line is being used for the furtherance of a criminal activity like the trafficking of non-prescription, illegal drugs," he said via email. "There will be occasions when an arrest has been made and charges submitted. The lawful disruption of the 'line' at this point would enhance police and public safety." Dial-a-dope operations typically work this way: a drug trafficker secures a phone number, then advertises it through business cards or word of mouth. A customer calls the number, uses a predetermined code to verify his identity, then tells the dealer what he is looking for. He might ask for "40 hard," for instance, meaning $40-worth of crack cocaine. They arrange a time and place to meet. Currently, when police arrest a suspected dealer, usually in an undercover sting where an officer poses as a buyer, they can seize phones, cash and other "offence-related property." But it is not uncommon, police say, for the suspect's partners to transfer the phone number to a new phone and continue the business. Fordy said his drug investigators have explored several options, including asking service providers to suspend phone numbers associated with criminal activity, but providers have generally been reluctant to do so without a court order. Investigators also looked into using auto-dialling computers to bombard a drug trafficker's phone number with calls to make it unusable. But this technique would amount to a "denial of service" attack and would contravene the Criminal Code. The resolution endorsed by police chiefs suggests amending the law so police can seize not only suspects' physical properties but "non-tangible" items, such as their phone numbers. "As technology becomes more advanced and we see the private sector developing the ability to encrypt things at a greater level, we feel that creation of a law enabling us to seize that (phone line) rather than have to decrypt it is a much more effective use of our resources and time," Fordy said. Tim Smith, spokesman for the Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police, said the association will gauge support for the resolution after the federal election in October. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom