Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court of Canada grants oral hearings bong shop owner, employee

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Aug, 2014 08:53 AM
    OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has granted oral hearings to a B.C. bong shop owner and his employee who expected undercover police officers to respect a posted sign ordering police to stay away.
     
    Timothy Felger and his employee Natasha Healy were charged after a sting operation at the shop in Abbotsford, B.C., in 2009.
     
    Undercover officers bought marijuana on five separate occasions and also saw other customers making similar purchases.
     
    Felger and Healy argued at trial that a posted sign instructing police to stay out without a warrant meant the sting amounted to an unreasonable search.
     
    The trial judge ruled the evidence could not be used and acquitted the pair in 2012, but the B.C. Court of Appeal has ordered a new trial.
     
    The court says in a written decision that the store was a public place, meaning the police were free to investigate marijuana sales there.
     
    Oral hearings can be granted in criminal cases involving an indictable offence if the appeal court set aside an acquittal and ordered a new trial.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tekmira stock soars after FDA relaxes precautions on experimental Ebola drug

    Tekmira stock soars after FDA relaxes precautions on experimental Ebola drug
    TORONTO - Shares of Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TSX:TKM) shot up about 46 per cent Friday following a U.S. regulatory decision that relaxes safety precautions on the Vancouver-based company's experimental drug for treating Ebola.

    Tekmira stock soars after FDA relaxes precautions on experimental Ebola drug

    Multimillion-Dollar Billing Error: ICBC Says The Cheque Is In The Mail To Overcharged Drivers

    Multimillion-Dollar Billing Error: ICBC Says The Cheque Is In The Mail To Overcharged Drivers
    VANCOUVER - Four months after B.C.'s public auto insurer identified a multimillion-dollar billing error, cheques are being mailed to customers reimbursing them for the mix-up.

    Multimillion-Dollar Billing Error: ICBC Says The Cheque Is In The Mail To Overcharged Drivers

    Vancouver Whitecaps Looking For More Ahead Of Date With Sporting Kansas City

    Vancouver Whitecaps Looking For More Ahead Of Date With Sporting Kansas City
    VANCOUVER - Carl Robinson needs a little bit extra from the Vancouver Whitecaps. The rookie head coach has watched his team earn points in seven of its last Major League Soccer games but with just one win over that span Vancouver has tumbled out of a Western Conference playoff position.

    Vancouver Whitecaps Looking For More Ahead Of Date With Sporting Kansas City

    Shocking: Canada Sees Drop In Full-Time Jobs In July, 35,400 Stop Looking For Work

    Shocking: Canada Sees Drop In Full-Time Jobs In July, 35,400 Stop Looking For Work
    OTTAWA - Trouble in Canada's anemic jobs market continued into July as a paltry 200 jobs were added during the month, falling spectacularly short of expectations.

    Shocking: Canada Sees Drop In Full-Time Jobs In July, 35,400 Stop Looking For Work

    Justin Bourque Pleads Guilty To First-Degree Murder Charges In RCMP Shootings

    Justin Bourque Pleads Guilty To First-Degree Murder Charges In RCMP Shootings
    MONCTON, N.B. - A New Brunswick man pleaded guilty today to three first-degree murder charges in the fatal shootings of three RCMP officers in Moncton.

    Justin Bourque Pleads Guilty To First-Degree Murder Charges In RCMP Shootings

    How Sweet It Is: Saskatchewan Woman Wins National Cheesecake Prize

    How Sweet It Is: Saskatchewan Woman Wins National Cheesecake Prize
    MELVILLE, Sask. - She isn't from the culinary centres of Canada, but a Saskatchewan woman has taken the cake in a national baking contest.

    How Sweet It Is: Saskatchewan Woman Wins National Cheesecake Prize