Pubdate: Fri, 11 Sep 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 PLANTED EVIDENCE, JUDGE RULES Toronto police committed "egregious wrongful conduct" after they planted heroin in a drug suspect's car to create a pretext for searching the vehicle, a judge has found. In January 2014, police arrested Nguyen Son Tran in the city's Chinatown after finding 11 grams of plastic-wrapped heroin behind his car's steering column. But Ontario Superior Court Judge Edward Morgan ruled last week the officers never had the right to search the car and they knew that, so they scattered loose powder in a visible location next to the driver's seat. "I conclude from all of this that the loose heroin was placed on the console of the Toyota by the police after their search, and was not left there by the defendant prior to the search," Morgan said as he stayed charges against Tran. Toronto police spokesman Mark Pugash said Thursday an internal investigation by the Professional Standards Unit is underway. "We take all comments of this type very seriously," he said. "Whatever action is necessary will be taken." It is unclear if criminal charges are being pursued against the officers, who remain on regular duty. Tran's lawyer, Kim Schofield, said they should be charged with obstruction. The judge's findings come at a time when Toronto police have been accused of disproportionately targeting visible minorities during street checks, a tactic known as "carding." Court heard different accounts of the events that led to Tran's arrest. Tran testified that while sitting at a red light, he noticed Det.-Const. Benjamin Elliot in an unmarked car next to him. Elliott, who is with the major crimes unit, had arrested Tran a year earlier for heroin possession and Tran pleaded guilty. Tran said he pulled into a parking lot and was approached by a uniformed constable, Jeffrey Tout. He claims Tout was on his cellphone and overheard Tout say, "Exactly him." Two minutes later, Elliot and his partner, Sgt. Michael Taylor, pulled up and Elliot placed Tran under arrest before searching the car. The defence theorized that Elliot saw Tran drive by and called Tout to stop Tran until he and his partner could arrive. The officers gave a different account. Tout testified he approached Tran in the parking lot after seeing him go through a red light. Tout said he saw powder on the console and arrested Tran on suspicion of possessing a controlled substance. Elliot testified that the reason he and Taylor showed up was because he heard Tout say over the radio he had stopped a car and when Tout relayed the licence plate number he immediately recognized it from his arrest of Tran a year before. Taylor's handwritten notes also indicated that the reason they attended the scene was because they had overheard the licence plate number on the radio and "Elliot has investigated this before." Yet when the defence played the radio-dispatch recordings during cross-examination, the licence plate was never mentioned. "It appears I was mistaken," Elliot said. Like Elliot, Taylor "had no real explanation at all for the wrong information that the two officers so coincidentally shared," the judge later wrote, saying it was obvious the two had colluded to come up with a "patently untrue" story. "It is fair to say that Officer Elliot and Sgt. Taylor were caught flat-footed by the recordings." The judge also doubted the officers' account of what led them to search the vehicle. If Tran had gone to the trouble to hide the heroin, it is unlikely he would leave loose powder around the car, the judge said. Why didn't he sweep the powder away with his hand? Had the officers "genuinely seen" powder on the console, they would have called a forensic analyst to document the crime scene before searching the car. Instead, they called for an analyst after the fact, suggesting a strategy to "cover their own tracks." "This police misconduct outweighs the roughly 12 grams of heroin found by the police," the judge said. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt