Pubdate: Sat, 30 Jul 2011
Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC)
Copyright: 2011 The Vancouver Sun
Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477
Author: Douglas Quan, Postmedia News

RCMP CHARTER VIOLATIONS PROMPT JUDGE TO TOSS EVIDENCE IN DRUG PROBE

A B.C. judge has tossed out all evidence seized in a massive 
Richmondbased ecstasy-production investigation after finding that RCMP 
officers "ignored" the Charter rights of five suspects to such a 
degree that "one might have thought that the investigation took place 
before the Charter of Rights had been enacted."

In a 34-page ruling, the judge took officers to task for hosing down 
two half-naked suspects outside their home in the cold, failing to 
bring in interpreters to read suspects their rights, failing to allow 
suspects to read warrants and not filing court documents in a timely manner.

"The officers in charge just did not seem to care," B.C. Provincial 
Court Judge Paul R. Meyers wrote.

"I find that the cumulative violations in this case lead to the 
conclusion that the officers in charge of this investigation operated 
throughout in 'bad faith.'"

The scathing judgment, dated June 21 and posted online this week, came 
after more than two dozen hearings carried out over two years.

A spokeswoman for the Public Prosecution Service of Canada, which 
handles drug-related cases, said the decision will not be appealed.

Over 14 months, RCMP drug investigators multiple locations in Richmond 
under surveillance.

Police learned that ecstasy tablets were being produced, packed into 
foil bags marked "Chinese tea" and then shipped to Toronto and 
elsewhere - an operation that a police expert later testified was 
capable of producing $10-million worth of pills.

In January 2007, police watched as two men discarded two large plastic 
garbage bags into a dumpster. Believing the suspects had clued in that 
police were watching them and were now dismantling their production 
plant, officers decided to move in and arrest the suspects.

The missteps by police, according to the judge, began immediately.

Even though police had a "pretty good idea" that some of the suspects 
had limited English skills, police "basically just closed their eyes 
to this real, potential problem" and did nothing in advance to plan 
for it, such as having warrants translated into Chinese or bringing in 
Chinese interpreters, the judge said.

In at least one instance, a suspect answered "no" when asked by the 
arresting officer whether he understood his rights after they were read to him.

At one home, two occupants were forced to lie handcuffed on the front 
lawn on their stomachs: One was wearing only boxers, the other was 
wearing boxers and a T-shirt.

Because police believed the men had been exposed to toxic chemicals, 
they called in a fire crew to decontaminate the men by spraying their 
bodies with cold water.

"It is not an insignificant thing to force someone to stand or sit, 
halfnaked, while being hosed down in front of their neighbours, in the 
middle of the day and in the middle of winter," the judge said.

"This humiliation so easily could have been avoided" if police brought 
in portable privacy screens.
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