Pubdate: Thu, 30 Mar 2006
Source: NOW Magazine (CN ON)
Copyright: 2006 NOW Communications Inc.
Contact:  http://www.nowtoronto.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/282
Author: Alan Young

COPS NOT PLAYING BY BOOK

Police Want Public's Trust? Then Don't Whine About How Charter Handcuffs 
Probes.

Toronto police haven't exactly been winning any awards when it comes to 
solving murders. Only 58 per cent of last year's murders have led to 
charges, while the clearance rate for murders in the previous five years 
(2000 to 2004) has hovered around 63 per cent - a dramatic decline from the 
86 per cent clearance rate recorded in 1993.

There is little doubt that last year's unusually low clearance rate is 
primarily attributable to the fact that many of those murders appear to be 
gang-related, and witnesses have been reluctant to come forward.

However, a few weeks ago Deputy Chief Tony Warr provided another 
explanation for the declining efficiency of murder investigations: the 
Charter Of Rights And Freedoms.

He spoke of the added burden of having to be "more complete and thorough 
than ever before," and the "painstaking" constitutional demands for the 
police to disclose to the Crown and defence the entire fruits of their 
investigation.

It's not uncommon for police to complain that legal rights often lead to 
guilty people being set free, but now they're suggesting that the Charter 
Of Rights is preventing them from even bringing cases to court. The idea 
that the generous protection of the Charter thwarts the effective 
investigation of crime is becoming a thoughtless mantra of modern policing.

To fight gang-related shootings, it is essential that the police build 
trust and contacts in the communities plagued by these gangs. Trust cannot 
be built on a foundation of unreasonable search and arbitrary detention.

If the police live by the dictates of the Charter of Rights, there is a 
greater chance that community residents will see the process as fair and 
just, and perhaps will then be more willing to cooperate in the 
investigation of unsolved gang murders.

Unquestionably, the constitutional entrenchment of legal rights for accused 
persons has increased the level of complexity and difficulty in some police 
investigations and, on occasion a criminal will escape justice as a result.

But nothing can be done about the unfortunate fact that some very bad 
people will also be the beneficiaries of rights that serve to protect 
everyone from unjustified state intrusions.

There is no empirical evidence to demonstrate that the Charter has been a 
significant impediment to effective police investigations.

In fact, after 24 years we have little reliable data on how the Charter has 
changed the face of criminal justice. There are lots of cases and lots of 
constitutional challenges, but social scientists haven't really carried out 
a systemic study.

Based on the few existing studies, one could conclude that police practice 
hasn't changed dramatically under the Charter.

For example, a 1981 Law Reform Commission study reported that 59 per cent 
of search warrants were invalidly issued, whereas two post-Charter studies 
(1995 and 1999) found the rate to be 39 per cent and 69 per cent respectively.

Before the police can blame the Charter for hampering their investigations, 
they need to demonstrate that they are actually complying with the burdens 
imposed by the Constitution.

I have some sympathy for the police complaint that the Charter right to 
disclosure has converted the crime fighter into a part-time stenographer 
buried under a mountain of paper.

But constitutional rights have never been about system efficiency. They are 
about the promotion of individual dignity and autonomy.

Without full disclosure of the evidence, the accused can only bumble around 
in the dark looking for an unknown defence to a mysterious allegation. If 
the state can play hide-and-seek with its evidence, we can never have true 
confidence in the legitimacy of any conviction.

When you look at cases in the Canadian Hall of Fame of wrongful 
convictions, it's no surprise that the failure of the state to fully 
disclose all its evidence was a prime factor leading to the miscarriage of 
justice.

The police need to embrace the Charter and learn to live with their 
constitutional obligations instead of blaming the Constitution for the high 
rate of unsolved murders. The suggestion that the Charter bears some 
responsibility for this disturbing statistic is as compelling an excuse as 
"The dog ate my homework."
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D