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Supreme Court to review cocaine acquittal over questionable sniffer dog
A Nova Scotia man, who allegedly landed at a Halifax airport with a suitcase full of cocaine, will get the chance to argue at the Supreme Court of Canada that a new trial to potentially overturn an acquittal in this matter is unjust, partly because a sniffer dog named Boris can't be trusted. (www.canada.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
Yeah, our Charter is pretty strong in Canada. It seems he was arrested first. It wasn't like they grabbed his bag opened it without consent then arrested him. But... we have to go back to the beginning, was there reasonable grounds to arrest him in the first place. I dunno, seems kinda dodgy that police could come on to a plane and pick one person to make an example of just based on a profile, we have to forget the crime here unfortunately when dealing with this case, now.
While I don't agree with the original judge's decisions (in the US that search would be considered reasonable), I don't understand Canadian law at all. In the US, they couldn't appeal an acquittal. That would be double jeopardy.
We have cases thrown out of the courts all the time on vague technicalities. We can't simply correct those technicalities and bring the person up on the exact same charge resulting from the same incident. We can, however, go after them again on another incident. The RCMP should be up this guy's six day and night.
We have cases thrown out of the courts all the time on vague technicalities. We can't simply correct those technicalities and bring the person up on the exact same charge resulting from the same incident. We can, however, go after them again on another incident. The RCMP should be up this guy's six day and night.
The Charter of Rights and Freedoms has a double jeopardy clause with this exception. An appeal of an acquittal may occur if the appeal is based on whether the judge made an error in applying the law and that this error contributed to the acquittal.
So it's not really the dog, Boris, that's questionable but rather how the original trial judge interpreted how questionable the questionable Boris was, even though you can't really question Boris because, doggonit, he's just a dog.
For anyone interested, the full details of the case are here:
http://canlii.ca/en/ns/nsca/doc/2011/2011nsca82/2011nsca82.html
http://canlii.ca/en/ns/nsca/doc/2011/2011nsca82/2011nsca82.html
At the stage of the “detention” no charter rights need be read except that the individual(s) be informed he/she/they is/are detained for the purposes of an investigation (drugs, DUI, murder etc.). Once the element(s) for a violation/charge is determined under a respective Act or statute then the alleged offender must be afforded their constitutional rights as that is the point where the person’s freedom is truly curtailed. And by the way a police officer can “unarrest” a suspect as fast as he or she “arrested” them once the RPG have been established to be without basis.
As for the other conveyance sniffed by Boris and his false alert on the “cooler” (no drugs found) , this has no bearing on the case – simple proximity with the bag that contained the narcotics can result in a false alert – contact high if you will…