Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court to rule on privacy rights for cellphone users arrested by police

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 01:45 PM

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada delivers a precedent-setting ruling Thursday that's expected to dictate how much warrantless access police can have to a person's cellphone.

    The case centres on a 2009 armed robbery at a Toronto jewelry kiosk that saw police seize and search the cellphone of Kevin Fearon.

    Police were responding to a call about the robbery when they arrested Fearon. Upon perusing his unlocked cellphone, they found photos of cash and a gun, as well as a text message mentioning jewelry.

    A judge convicted Fearon after rejecting his lawyer's argument that his Charter right to unlawful search and seizure had been breached because police didn't immediately get a search warrant to look at his phone.

    The Ontario Court of Appeal agreed, ruling it was acceptable for police to take a cursory look through the phone if they thought it contained relevant evidence to a crime.

    The court ruled that if the phone had been password-protected or locked, it would not have been appropriate to look at its contents without a search warrant.

    It will be the first time the Supreme Court has ruled on cellphone privacy.

    The high court will be attempting to bring some clarity and consistency to an issue that has been addressed by a series of previous lower court rulings dealing with what police can do without a warrant with a cellphone after an arrest.

    Those rulings have found:

    — The police are allowed to search your phone.

    — Cursory searches are permissible.

    — Police are not allowed to dump all the data from a phone to an external drive.

    — Police can search the phone because of "exigent circumstances" — an imminent threat or danger that overrides privacy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Veterans deserve special constitutional rights like aboriginals, lawyer argues

    Veterans deserve special constitutional rights like aboriginals, lawyer argues
    VANCOUVER — A lawyer representing six soldiers disabled while fighting for Canada in Afghanistan says veterans deserve special treatment under the constitution in the same way aboriginals are given unique rights.

    Veterans deserve special constitutional rights like aboriginals, lawyer argues

    PETA plans billboard pitch based on corpse kept in Hamilton home for 6 months

    PETA plans billboard pitch based on corpse kept in Hamilton home for 6 months
    HAMILTON — An animal rights group known for some controversial ad campaigns is proposing a new billboard in Hamilton based on the case of a woman who kept her husband's corpse in a bedroom for six months.

    PETA plans billboard pitch based on corpse kept in Hamilton home for 6 months

    Swing stage company fined in 2009 scaffolding collapse that killed four workers

    Swing stage company fined in 2009 scaffolding collapse that killed four workers
    TORONTO — The company that supplied a swing stage involved in a deadly scaffolding collapse in Toronto on Christmas Eve 2009 has been fined $350,000 for failing to ensure the platform was in good condition.

    Swing stage company fined in 2009 scaffolding collapse that killed four workers

    Alberta premier puts gay youth bill on hold; takes blame for causing divisions

    Alberta premier puts gay youth bill on hold; takes blame for causing divisions
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Jim Prentice has put on hold a controversial bill that would have allowed gay students to form support groups, but only if schools approved them.

    Alberta premier puts gay youth bill on hold; takes blame for causing divisions

    Industry minister approves Burger King deal to takeover Tim Hortons

    Industry minister approves Burger King deal to takeover Tim Hortons
    OTTAWA — The federal government approved the takeover of Tim Hortons Inc. by Burger King Worldwide Inc. on Thursday after securing promises on jobs and that the coffee shop chain will remain a distinct brand.

    Industry minister approves Burger King deal to takeover Tim Hortons

    CF-18s step up sorties against ISIL; military confident no civilian deaths

    CF-18s step up sorties against ISIL; military confident no civilian deaths
    OTTAWA — The Canadian military says it is confident that no civilians have been killed to date as a result of its airstrikes against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

    CF-18s step up sorties against ISIL; military confident no civilian deaths