Close X
Saturday, November 30, 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

    New national chief for Assembly of First Nations to be chosen today

    New national chief for Assembly of First Nations to be chosen today
    WINNIPEG — Voting is underway in Winnipeg to elect a new national leader for the Assembly of First Nations.

    New national chief for Assembly of First Nations to be chosen today

    BC Weather Warnings Put Courtenay, Delta In State Of Emergency

    BC Weather Warnings Put Courtenay, Delta In State Of Emergency
    VANCOUVER — Cities across B.C.'s south coast are bracing for more flooding as two municipalities have already declared a state of emergency in the midst of strong winds, heavy rainfall and high river tides.

    BC Weather Warnings Put Courtenay, Delta In State Of Emergency

    Watch: Sweet Child 'O Mine, PM Harper Rocks Out At Conservative X-mas Party

    Watch: Sweet Child 'O Mine, PM Harper Rocks Out At Conservative X-mas Party
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper channelled Axl Rose for his musical encore at the annual Conservative Christmas party on Tuesday night.

    Watch: Sweet Child 'O Mine, PM Harper Rocks Out At Conservative X-mas Party

    Jury weighs fate of Toronto-area woman accused of ordering hit on her parents

    Jury weighs fate of Toronto-area woman accused of ordering hit on her parents
    NEWMARKET, Ont. — A Toronto-area jury is now weighing the fate of a woman accused of plotting to have her parents killed in a phoney home invasion because they disapproved of her boyfriend.

    Jury weighs fate of Toronto-area woman accused of ordering hit on her parents

    Nearly Half Of Canadian Web Users Now Streaming Music, Most Using Mobile: Poll

    Nearly Half Of Canadian Web Users Now Streaming Music, Most Using Mobile: Poll
    TORONTO — Almost half of all Canadian Internet users say they now stream music online, according to the results of a newly released survey.

    Nearly Half Of Canadian Web Users Now Streaming Music, Most Using Mobile: Poll

    High household debt still a key risk to Canadian economy: Bank of Canada

    High household debt still a key risk to Canadian economy: Bank of Canada
    OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is once again pointing a finger at mounting household debt as one of the biggest weak spots in the country's economic armour.

    High household debt still a key risk to Canadian economy: Bank of Canada