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Pubdate: Tue, 23 Feb 2010 Source: National Post (Canada) Copyright: 2010 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/O3vnWIvC Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?216 (CN Police) COURT KEEPS 'ENTRAPMENT' DEFENCE UNDER CONTROL Rejoice! The Ontario Court of Appeal has produced a common-sense ruling on entrapment and the use of undercover investigations by police. We never thought we'd write the words common sense and Ontario Court of Appeal (OCA) in the same sentence. On a whole host of subjects from gay rights to dividing matrimonial property to free speech and prisoners' rights, the OCA -- one of the nation's most aggressively liberal courts -- has used the "judicial review" clause of the Charter as a sledgehammer to demolish traditional universal rights and read in new ones that favour special interest groups. But in the case of Aliu Imoro, a drug dealer from Toronto, the court has overturned his acquittal by a trial judge who sought to establish a new, impossibly broad definition of entrapment, the legal doctrine that holds police may not entice citizens into committing crimes, then arrest them. In February 2006, Toronto police received an anonymous tip that a man was dealing drugs on the 12th floor of an apartment block in the city's notorious Jane and Finch district. When an undercover officer was sent to investigate, he exited the building's elevator on the 12th floor and was immediately approached by Imoro, who said, "Come with me." The officer then asked, "You can hook me up?" To which Imoro replied "Yeah man." He then led the officer and another passenger of the elevator into his apartment, where he sold the other man marijuana and the undercover policeman some cocaine, both from a stash of prepackaged, single supplies. The officer returned again the next day, bought more cocaine, then obtained a search warrant under which various drugs were found in Imoro's home. Despite all these facts, the trial judge ruled that the policeman's question, "You can hook me up?" had provoked the defendant to sell drugs -- in legal parlance it had provided the opportunity to commit a criminal act that would not have existed without the policeman's inquiry. The trial judge found that nothing in Imoro's behaviour prior to that moment had demonstrated or implied he was selling drugs. The spur for the crime was the officer's question. While agreeing with the trial judge that police are not permitted "to randomly test the virtue of citizens, or to offer citizens an opportunity to commit a crime without reasonable suspicion that they are already engaging in criminal activity," the OCA said in this case, the lower-court judge had "mischaracterized" the policeman's actions and failed "to properly distinguish between legitimately investigating a tip and giving an opportunity to commit a crime." Too true. Police had been summoned to the apartment building by a report of some selling drugs there, specifically on one floor. When the officer arrived on that particular floor, the suspect approached him, not the other way around. Then the suspect took the officer a few feet to his apartment where he had ready supplies of drugs waiting. Perhaps if Imoro had not had drugs ready to sell the instant the officer and the other man entered his apartment, and the officer had nonetheless encouraged Imoro to find some that he might sell him, there would be a case for entrapment. But in this case, police had a tip about a drug dealer that was immediately confirmed when their officer arrived. That constitutes reasonable suspicion under any but the most extreme definitions. Had the OCA permitted the trial verdict to stand, most undercover police tactics might have been at risk from sharp defence lawyers crying "entrapment" at every turn. In this case, the officer would have had to ask something such as, "Excuse me, sir. Are you an established purveyor of illegal narcotics, well known as such to neighbours and residents of this area, who currently has surplus supplies of these commodities and is engaged, at this moment, in their vending?" Thankfully, the appeals court judges set aside the trial court decision, entered a verdict of guilty and sent Imoro back to the trial division for sentencing. We worry, too, about protecting the innocent from unreasonable police actions, but then, so do most good police officers. But there is a greater danger of overly aggressive judges erring on the side of criminals' rights and so hamstringing the police that their already tough job of catching the bad guys is rendered impossible. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom