HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html
Pubdate: Thu, 8 May 2008 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2008 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 COURT RULINGS ALLOW FOR PROTECTION OF STUDENTS AND THEIR CHARTER RIGHTS A recent Supreme Court of Canada decision concerning police use of trained dogs to ferret out drugs in schools has some school administrators up in arms. But the decision is a reasonable one, as it protects students' constitutional rights while still allowing police searches in certain circumstances. The case concerned a search conducted at a Sarnia, Ont., high school. Having heard rumours of drugs in the school, the principal told police in 2000 that they were welcome to bring their dogs into the school. Two years later, the police decided to do so, and they found marijuana and magic mushrooms in the backpack of a student who was then charged with drug offences. The youth court judge who presided over the student's trial found that the search violated the student's Charter right to be free from unreasonable search, a decision upheld by the Ontario Court of Appeal. And while justices of the Supreme Court issued several separate decisions, seven of the nine judges agreed that the student's Charter right was infringed. The position of the Crown -- and of more than a few school administrators -- is that such searches shouldn't attract any Charter protection at all, given that administrators need to protect students and given a lowered expectation of privacy in schools. This argument, which seems to suggest that students check their constitutional rights at the school door, was soundly rejected by the court. Citing previous case law, the court noted that while some latitude is necessary to allow school authorities to carry out their responsibilities, there is no reason "why police should not be required to comply with the usual standards, merely because the person they wish to search is in attendance at an elementary or high school." That said, the court was alive to the fact that students have diminished expectations of privacy in school, particularly with regard to the search of their backpacks (as opposed to a body search.) For this reason, the court noted that police were not required to show reasonable and probable grounds before conducting a search by drug-sniffing dogs, and hence were not required to obtain a search warrant. But the court held that the lower standard of "reasonable suspicion" - -- something more than mere speculation that a student might be in possession of illegal drugs -- had to be fulfilled before police could conduct a search. Both the courts and Parliament have adopted the reasonable suspicion standard in situations involving a diminished expectation of privacy, such as at border crossings. In the present case, however, both the police and the school principal admitted at trial that they had no specific information about the existence of drugs or a threat to the safety of students. The principal merely stated that "[I]t's pretty safe to assume that [drugs] could be there." Now this hardly sounds like reason enough to bring in the police to conduct a search. Indeed, the court noted that the search therefore violated the rights, not just of the student who was charged, but of all students who had their belongings searched. This doesn't, of course, mean that trained dog searches in schools could never pass Charter scrutiny. If, for example, there is some evidence concerning a specific student or students, then such a search might be acceptable. Consequently, the decision still allows school administrators significant latitude in their responsibilities to protect their students, while also ensuring that students' rights are protected. And these two forms of protection should not be seen as in conflict. As the court noted, schools also have a duty to foster respect for constitutional rights, and these values "may be undermined if the student's rights are ignored by those in authority." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake