Pubdate: Wed, 28 Jun 2017 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2017 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/opinion/send_a_letter Website: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Katie May Page: B3 DRUG CHARGES TOSSED AFTER SUSPECTS' RIGHTS VIOLATED DRUG bust worth about a quarter of a million dollars has been tossed out of court because city police violated the charter rights of two men they detained and subjected to a warrantless search. Court of Queen's Bench Justice Sheldon Lanchbery dismissed all drug trafficking charges against Benjamin James White and Jaden Joshua Omeasoo earlier this month, after he ruled officers violated their rights every step of the way. "We will never know how this incident may have evolved if those rights had been provided," Lanchbery said in his decision. "The officers are not permitted Ato pick and choose when section 10 (charter) rights are given to an accused person and when they are not." After 1:30 a.m. on Sept. 14, 2014, general patrol officers happened upon White and Omeasoo, who were both coming from Alberta, in a Tim Hortons parking lot near Archibald and Marion streets. The officers were investigating a call about a road-rage incident in which two men in a red pickup truck reportedly had waved a handgun at other motorists in the area. The suspects were described as Caucasian men wearing baseball caps and hoodies, driving a red Chevrolet Silverado. The truck police saw in the parking lot was a red Dodge with an Alberta licence plate. One of the two men inside the truck fit the racial description. The other was indigenous and was wearing a baseball cap. Neither of the men was wearing a hoodie. Omeasoo got out of the truck and walked into the coffee shop and one of the police officers would later tell the judge he believed he was headed toward the washroom. The officers asked White, who was in the driver's seat, if they could take a look inside the vehicle, and White agreed. They were looking for a gun, but they didn't see one. Twelve minutes later, they told the men they were free to go - despite not having advised them of their legal rights when they detained them in the first place. The initial fruitless search took a turn, ending in the seizure of 2.5 kilograms of drugs - including cocaine, crystal meth, ecstasy and marijuana - when one of the officers, preparing to leave the scene, went to the Tim Hortons washroom and found a .22-calibre bullet in the urinal. The police called for backup and decided they then had enough ammunition to arrest White and Omeasoo and do a more in-depth search of the truck. Police had estimated the street value of the seized drugs at $256,460. But the bullet wasn't the smoking gun they needed to justify an arrest, Justice Lanchbery ruled. He called it a "proverbial red herring." "Finding the bullet is as close to a red herring as it could possibly be," he said. The two men were appropriately advised of their rights prior to the second search, which also yielded a .22-calibre long-barrel rifle and ammunition. But that didn't matter, the judge decided, because police had already violated their charter rights not to be arbitrarily detained, not to be subjected to unreasonable searches and to be informed of their rights upon being detained. Without its key evidence, the Crown closed its case, after which the judge dismissed all of the criminal charges. Both of the accused were out on bail and are now free. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt