Pubdate: Tue, 24 Oct 2006
Source: Abbotsford Times (CN BC)
Copyright: 2006 The Abbotsford Times
Contact:  http://www.abbotsfordtimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1009
Author: Christina Toth, Staff Reporter

BLOOD, PEE TESTS NOT CONSTITUTIONAL

Judges cannot order convicted criminals to surrender blood and urine 
samples on demand when on probation, the seven-member Supreme Court 
of Canada ruled on Oct. 13.

The decision stems from the case of Abbotsford resident Harjit Singh 
Shoker, who in a drug stupor, broke into an Abbotsford home at 
midnight on Sept. 7, 2003, and crawled naked into the bed of an RCMP 
officer's wife. He followed the woman into the kitchen when she 
called 911, but her husband came home and arrested the intruder 
before the local police arrived.

Shoker was subsequently convicted of break and enter with intention 
to commit a sexual assault, and was sentenced to 20 months in jail 
and two years probation.

Probation conditions required Shoker to submit to random drug tests 
when ordered by police or his probation officer. Shoker had used 
heroin, speed, cocaine and marijuana. Drug tests could include 
urinalysis, breathalyzer and blood tests.

However, in December 2004, the three-member B.C. Court of Appeal 
ruled 2-1 that Shoker's constitutional right to be secure against 
unreasonable search and seizure was violated by the probation order. 
columnist Ian Mulgrew noted last week that Victoria cut funding for 
the urinalysis program in March 2003, meaning Shoker never actually 
had to produce a sample.

The Supreme Court agreed on June 30, 2005 to hear the B.C. Crown 
prosecutors' appeal of the Court of Appeal finding.

The Supreme Court found the Criminal Code of Canada did not authorize 
search and seizure of bodily substances.

"The seizure of bodily samples is highly intrusive and it is subject 
to stringent standards and safeguards to meet constitutional 
requirements," wrote Madam Justice Louise Charron in the unanimous ruling.

She said while "there is no question that a probationer has a lowered 
expectation of privacy . . . it is up to Parliament, not the courts, 
to balance the probationers' Charter rights as against society's 
interest in effectively monitoring their conduct."
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MAP posted-by: Elaine