Pubdate: Mon, 7 Jan 2008
Source: Law Times (Canada)
Copyright: CLB Media 2008
Contact:  http://www.lawtimesnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3095
Author: Robert Todd
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/af.htm (Asset Forfeiture)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)

SUPREME COURT WILL HEAR CHALLENGE TO PROPERTY SEIZURE LAW

The Supreme Court of Canada will scrutinize Ontario's Civil Remedies 
Act after granting a Toronto-area man leave to appeal an Ontario 
Court of Appeal decision that backed the seizure of his property.

Police found Robin Chatterjee in 2003 in a vehicle, carrying $29,020 
in cash and equipment often used in marijuana grow operations, but he 
was not charged.

The Attorney General's Office later seized the cash and equipment 
under the CRA, which Chatterjee argues treads into federal 
jurisdiction. He also claims the law violates the Charter of Rights 
and Freedom's presumption-of-innocence guarantee.

A Superior Court judge turned down Chatterjee's constitutional 
challenge, a ruling the Ontario Court of Appeal affirmed in May 2007.

James Diamond, one of Chatterjee's lawyers, says his client is 
pleased by the Supreme Court's Dec. 20, 2007 decision to hear the challenge.

"If provinces can legislate into the criminal sphere, that presents a 
possible slippery slope for the future," Diamond tells Law Times.

A number of other provinces have legislation similar to Ontario's 
Civil Remedies Act, and Diamond says the constitutionality of all 
those laws could be in jeopardy if the Supreme Court agrees with 
Chatterjee's challenge.

"Any attempt by provinces to piggyback . . . is outside the ambit of 
provincial jurisdiction," says Diamond.

Ontario's Civil Remedies Act came into effect in 2002. It allowed the 
province to seize assets if it can prove on the balance of 
probabilities that the assets were obtained "in whole or in part" due 
to illegal activity. The act aims to compensate crime victims, remove 
property obtained through crime, and prevent property from being used 
in crimes.

The Ministry of the Attorney General's application of the law came 
into question last year, as a noticeable increase in its use led to 
allegations of government backing police misconduct and wrongly using 
the CRA as a source of revenue.

Paul Burstein, who represents intervener The Criminal Lawyers' 
Association, calls the Civil Remedies Act a "shameless effort" by the 
province to step into criminal law matters. He says the Supreme Court 
likely wanted to take on this case as one that deals with a matter of 
national interest - the division of powers - in light of the similar 
legislation found countrywide.

"I'm sure the Supreme Court saw this as a good, early opportunity to 
give a final answer to challenges that would arise in all of those 
different provinces until the Supreme Court passed final judgment on 
whether this type of legislation was constitutionally valid."

Brendan Crawley, a spokesperson for the Ministry of the Attorney 
General, says he can't comment on the case beyond what the lower 
courts have ruled. 
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