Pubdate: Mon, 05 Oct 2009
Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN)
Copyright: 2009 The StarPhoenix
Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400
Author: Heather Polischuk, Saskatchewan News Network; Regina Leader-Post

DOG SEARCH IN DRUG CASE REJECTED BY COURT

The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal has ruled against the Crown in a 
case involving use of a drug-sniffer dog -- an issue that has been a 
bone of contention in Canadian courts in recent years.

The court handed down last week its decision in the case of an Ottawa 
man, Kang-Po Tom Yeh, who had been arrested and charged with 
possession of drugs for the purpose of trafficking and possession of 
crime proceeds following a traffic stop by RCMP near Caronport in April 2007.

He went to trial but was acquitted by Queen's Bench Justice Ellen 
Gunn, who found police had no grounds to call in a drug-sniffer dog 
to perform a vehicle search that turned up about 5,000 ecstasy pills, 
8.5 kilograms of marijuana and $10,000 in cash.

In a rare move, seven members of the province's highest court sat in 
on the appeal argued by Crown prosecutor Doug Curliss, who asked the 
court to order a new trial on the basis that Gunn had erred in 
throwing out the evidence.

Defence lawyer Aaron Fox disagreed, stating his client's charter 
rights regarding search, seizure and detention had been violated. 
While the Crown had argued that police believed Yeh was impaired by 
marijuana, Fox said there was no odour of marijuana detected by 
police, nor anything in plain view that would have otherwise alerted 
police to the presence of drugs.

While the judges split somewhat on reasons, they all came to the same 
conclusion: That Gunn hadn't erred in law by throwing the case out.

In one of the separate, yet essentially concurring decisions 
upholding the Queen's Bench decision, Chief Justice John Klebuc and 
justices Gary Lane, Robert Richards, Gene Anne Smith and Ysanne 
Wilkinson said Yeh's rights were violated by the sniffer dog search 
"and the trial judge made no error in excluding the evidence obtained 
as a result of that breach." Justices Georgina Jackson and Darla 
Hunter concurred with that finding in their decision.

Richards -- writing on behalf of all but Jackson and Hunter -- found 
the arresting officer didn't have adequate training or background in 
drug-use detection and used "patchy logic" to decide Yeh had used 
drugs, meaning he didn't meet the reasonable suspicion test referred 
to by the Crown.

Meanwhile, Jackson -- writing also on Hunter's behalf -- said "there 
is a good reason to limit dog searches when a person is detained."

Jackson said police powers shouldn't be expanded to allow the use of 
dogs in searches in instances where police officers themselves 
couldn't by law perform a search.

"Police conduct must be considered objectively from the perspective 
of the ordinary travelling public, as well as from the perspective of 
crime prevention," Jackson wrote. "If the police can use a sniffer 
dog when a person is detained in the circumstances such as the case 
at bar, the traffic stop runs the risk of becoming a pretext for a 
search for drugs."
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