News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Judges Set To Determine Whether Trash Is Private |
Title: | Canada: Judges Set To Determine Whether Trash Is Private |
Published On: | 2008-10-09 |
Source: | Globe and Mail (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-10-11 02:55:02 |
JUDGES SET TO DETERMINE WHETHER TRASH IS PRIVATE
Nothing was stirring but the raccoons on Dec. 17, 2003, when Calgary
police swooped down in a predawn raid to snatch Russell Patrick's garbage.
Reaching over Mr. Russell's property line, officers made off with
several bags of refuse, eliciting enough evidence of a potential
drug-manufacturing operation to obtain a search warrant on his house.
Shortly afterward, Mr. Patrick was charged with producing and
trafficking the methamphetamine MDA, launching a classic battle over
the constitutional right to privacy.
At a Supreme Court of Canada hearing tomorrow, the judges will be
asked to overturn Mr. Patrick's conviction and exclude the evidence
on the grounds that seizing a citizen's garbage is the mark of a police state.
"The policy implications of the Crown's position are profound,"
lawyers Jonathan Lisus and Alexi Wood said in a Canadian Civil
Liberties Association brief. "The state would be free to harvest
waste in 'bad neighbourhoods' to build a database of information it
would never otherwise be able to gather.
In a brief to the Court on behalf of Mr. Patrick, lawyer Jennifer
Ruttan said that, while a hand reaching over a fence may seen like a
minor intrusion, it can easily lead directly to a search warrant
being issued for a dwelling.
Nothing was stirring but the raccoons on Dec. 17, 2003, when Calgary
police swooped down in a predawn raid to snatch Russell Patrick's garbage.
Reaching over Mr. Russell's property line, officers made off with
several bags of refuse, eliciting enough evidence of a potential
drug-manufacturing operation to obtain a search warrant on his house.
Shortly afterward, Mr. Patrick was charged with producing and
trafficking the methamphetamine MDA, launching a classic battle over
the constitutional right to privacy.
At a Supreme Court of Canada hearing tomorrow, the judges will be
asked to overturn Mr. Patrick's conviction and exclude the evidence
on the grounds that seizing a citizen's garbage is the mark of a police state.
"The policy implications of the Crown's position are profound,"
lawyers Jonathan Lisus and Alexi Wood said in a Canadian Civil
Liberties Association brief. "The state would be free to harvest
waste in 'bad neighbourhoods' to build a database of information it
would never otherwise be able to gather.
In a brief to the Court on behalf of Mr. Patrick, lawyer Jennifer
Ruttan said that, while a hand reaching over a fence may seen like a
minor intrusion, it can easily lead directly to a search warrant
being issued for a dwelling.
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