Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wandering Child No Excuse For Police To Search Home, Appeal Court Rules

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Mar, 2017 11:46 AM
    TORONTO — A man with a marijuana grow-op in his basement has had his drug conviction thrown out because police had no right to enter his home — even though his four-year-old had been found wandering alone near a busy intersection dressed only in a diaper, Ontario's top court ruled on Wednesday.
     
    While officers said they went into the home in Barrie, Ont., to check that the child would be safe, the Court of Appeal found that to be a ruse. What they did, the court found, amounted to an illegal search and a breach of Harley Davidson's rights.
     
    "Police can enter a home without a warrant if they have reasonable grounds to believe it is necessary to do so to protect a person’s life or safety," the Appeal Court said. "(That) does not give the police sweeping authority to enter a home without a warrant to investigate whether a child’s mother and father are good parents."
     
    The case arose when a passing motorist called 911 one June morning to report the boy standing alone next to the busy road. By the time they arrived, the child's mom had him safely in her arms, court records say.
     
    Davidson arrived soon after to say his son was autistic and tended to wander. Documents cite him as telling police his boy had managed to get out of the house despite a special lock on the door. Davidson agreed to allow police to look at the lock, but they then insisted on going inside, saying they were entitled to do so to check on the boy's well being, court records say.
     
    Once inside, the officers smelled marijuana and began looking around, including in cupboards and the fridge. The lead investigator went to the basement and found growing marijuana plants, court records say. Police arrested Davidson and charged him with various drug-related offences.
     
    At the start of his trial in 2014, Davidson argued among other things that police had violated his constitutional rights with the search — an assertion Superior Court Justice John McIsaac rejected. Essentially, McIsaac found police were entitled to do a "protective sweep" of the home because of their "child-protection concerns."
     
    McIsaac rejected any suggestion police were using the child as a ruse or pretext to "insinuate themselves into a suspected drug operation," according to court documents. He admitted the marijuana evidence and convicted Davidson.
     
    On appeal, the prosecution argued the search was appropriate and justified. The Court of Appeal, however, saw it differently.
     
    In quashing the conviction, the Appeal Court leaned on trial evidence from the lead investigator, who made it clear he had no concerns the boy was in serious danger in the home, and that he would have had no grounds to obtain a search warrant.
     
    Justice John Laskin, writing for the Appeal Court, noted the Supreme Court has found police have a duty to investigate 911 calls and a limited right to enter a home without a warrant.
     
    "Once inside the home, their authority is limited to ascertaining the reason for the (911) call and providing any needed assistance," Laskin said. "They do not have any further authority to search the home or intrude on a resident's privacy or property."
     
    Laskin found the rights breaches were serious enough to merit throwing out the marijuana evidence, and entered an acquittal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Health Canada Seizes Infertility, Breast Cancer Drugs Sold Online

    Health Canada Seizes Infertility, Breast Cancer Drugs Sold Online
    The agency says it has seized 10 products from EPCA Shipping Inc., which it says is the Canadian distributor for Extreme Peptides, a company that sells health products online.

    Health Canada Seizes Infertility, Breast Cancer Drugs Sold Online

    First Nations business forum to discuss BC resource opportunities

    First Nations business forum to discuss BC resource opportunities
    First Nations leaders have been calling for greater involvement in the resource enterprises which take place on their territories, says BC Assembly of First Nations

    First Nations business forum to discuss BC resource opportunities

    DARPAN’s 10 with Sergeant Jag Khosa

    DARPAN’s 10 with Sergeant Jag Khosa
    Prevention, education and awareness is the key to prevent our next generation from getting into gangs. Enforcement also plays a huge role in holding those accountable who pose the highest risk to public safety. 

    DARPAN’s 10 with Sergeant Jag Khosa

    Two-year-old Boy Dies After Being Hit By Vehicle On Rural B.C. Property

    Two-year-old Boy Dies After Being Hit By Vehicle On Rural B.C. Property
    North Okanagan RCMP Const. Jocelyn Noseworthy issued a news release saying the two-year-old boy was hit by a vehicle Monday afternoon.

    Two-year-old Boy Dies After Being Hit By Vehicle On Rural B.C. Property

    B.C. Man Shot By Police Repeatedly Stabbed Himself Before Shooting: Witnesses

    Naverone Woods, 23, was shot inside the Safeway by officers on the morning of Dec. 28, 2014, and died after he was taken to hospital.

    B.C. Man Shot By Police Repeatedly Stabbed Himself Before Shooting: Witnesses

    Woman Injured, Man In Custody, After Violent Attack In Campbell River, B.C.

    Woman Injured, Man In Custody, After Violent Attack In Campbell River, B.C.
     A woman has been seriously injured and a man is in custody following what RCMP in Campbell River describe as a break-in at a home in that east coast Vancouver Island city.

    Woman Injured, Man In Custody, After Violent Attack In Campbell River, B.C.