News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Top Court Frees Police To Use Infrared Devices |
Title: | Canada: Top Court Frees Police To Use Infrared Devices |
Published On: | 2004-10-30 |
Source: | Globe and Mail (Canada) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-17 20:24:55 |
TOP COURT FREES POLICE TO USE INFRARED DEVICES
Finding Marijuana Grow-Ops Through Thermal Equipment Acceptable,
Judges Rule
The Supreme Court of Canada put marijuana enforcement ahead of privacy
yesterday, freeing police to use sophisticated heat-detection
equipment to ferret out indoor growing operations.
The 7-0 decision reversed an Ontario Court of Appeal ruling that had
urged a more liberal attitude toward marijuana and the right to be
free of unfair search and seizure.
It provided a jolting welcome to the Supreme Court for newly appointed
Madam Justice Rosalie Abella, author of the lower-court ruling her new
colleagues unanimously overturned.
"The community wants privacy, but it also insists on protection," Mr.
Justice Ian Binnie wrote. "Safety, security and the suppression of
crime are legitimate countervailing concerns."
In the finding, which runs counter to a 2001 U.S. Supreme Court
decision, Judge Binnie restored an 18-month sentence for marijuana
trafficking and weapon-possession convictions against Walter Tessling.
The Windsor handyman's hydroponic marijuana operation was detected by
police flying overhead with thermal infrared equipment.
Peter Zaduk, a Toronto lawyer who has defended scores of grow-op
charges, predicted that police forces will silently rejoice. "I can
see them systematically flying over whole neighbourhoods," he said.
"Their mindset is that marijuana grow houses are an epidemic. They are
obsessed with the idea of them being on every block.
"I can really see there being a big impetus to buy helicopters and put
everybody's house under surveillance, including those in Rockcliffe [a
tony Ottawa district], where Supreme Court judges live."
Constitutional expert Mahmud Jamal praised the ruling as forging "a
distinctly Canadian balance between privacy and protection.
"One cannot help but notice that Judge Binnie wrote all three Charter
rulings released this week, all were unanimous, and in all he sided
with the government," Mr. Jamal said.
"Clearly, he is now an intellectual leader of the court, and has
already built a legacy as one of the great Supreme Court justices of
our time."
The Tessling case turned on a tricky legal point: Is heat produced
inside the home entitled to a high level of privacy after it seeps
into the outside world?
Led by Judge Abella, the Ontario Court of Appeal panel reasoned that
escaping heat is a product of activity taking place inside the home --
and that an individual's home is rightly viewed as his castle.
She also noted that a growing consensus that marijuana is not a
particularly harmful drug makes the idea of tossing out illegally
gained evidence more palatable.
However, Judge Binnie said the expectation of privacy enjoyed by a
marijuana cultivator does not compare with that which an average
citizen has for his body or home.
"Few people think to conceal their home's heat-loss profile, and would
have difficulty doing so if they tried," he said. "Living as he does
in a land of melting snow and spotty home insulation, I do not believe
that the respondent had a serious privacy interest in the heat
patterns on the exposed external walls of his home."
Known as forward-looking infrared, the heat-detection equipment at the
heart of the case is simply a method of gaining information about a
home that might or might not indicate what is going on inside, he
said. It is not enough in itself for police to obtain a search
warrant, Judge Binnie said.
"It cannot even 'see' through a transparent window," he observed. "It
is not X-ray technology."
Judge Binnie took pains to stress that his ruling is not intended to
erode genuine privacy issues in an era of increasingly intrusive state
interest.
Courts must be careful not to downgrade privacy interests simply
because man y people have come to believe many of their conversations
and functions may be monitored, he added.
The court added that Judge Abella's apprehensions about future
Orwellian uses of heat-detection technology are well placed, but can
be tested only when appropriate cases come along.
"Where we differ, perhaps, is that in my view, such technology must be
evaluated according to its present capability," Judge Binnie said.
Finding Marijuana Grow-Ops Through Thermal Equipment Acceptable,
Judges Rule
The Supreme Court of Canada put marijuana enforcement ahead of privacy
yesterday, freeing police to use sophisticated heat-detection
equipment to ferret out indoor growing operations.
The 7-0 decision reversed an Ontario Court of Appeal ruling that had
urged a more liberal attitude toward marijuana and the right to be
free of unfair search and seizure.
It provided a jolting welcome to the Supreme Court for newly appointed
Madam Justice Rosalie Abella, author of the lower-court ruling her new
colleagues unanimously overturned.
"The community wants privacy, but it also insists on protection," Mr.
Justice Ian Binnie wrote. "Safety, security and the suppression of
crime are legitimate countervailing concerns."
In the finding, which runs counter to a 2001 U.S. Supreme Court
decision, Judge Binnie restored an 18-month sentence for marijuana
trafficking and weapon-possession convictions against Walter Tessling.
The Windsor handyman's hydroponic marijuana operation was detected by
police flying overhead with thermal infrared equipment.
Peter Zaduk, a Toronto lawyer who has defended scores of grow-op
charges, predicted that police forces will silently rejoice. "I can
see them systematically flying over whole neighbourhoods," he said.
"Their mindset is that marijuana grow houses are an epidemic. They are
obsessed with the idea of them being on every block.
"I can really see there being a big impetus to buy helicopters and put
everybody's house under surveillance, including those in Rockcliffe [a
tony Ottawa district], where Supreme Court judges live."
Constitutional expert Mahmud Jamal praised the ruling as forging "a
distinctly Canadian balance between privacy and protection.
"One cannot help but notice that Judge Binnie wrote all three Charter
rulings released this week, all were unanimous, and in all he sided
with the government," Mr. Jamal said.
"Clearly, he is now an intellectual leader of the court, and has
already built a legacy as one of the great Supreme Court justices of
our time."
The Tessling case turned on a tricky legal point: Is heat produced
inside the home entitled to a high level of privacy after it seeps
into the outside world?
Led by Judge Abella, the Ontario Court of Appeal panel reasoned that
escaping heat is a product of activity taking place inside the home --
and that an individual's home is rightly viewed as his castle.
She also noted that a growing consensus that marijuana is not a
particularly harmful drug makes the idea of tossing out illegally
gained evidence more palatable.
However, Judge Binnie said the expectation of privacy enjoyed by a
marijuana cultivator does not compare with that which an average
citizen has for his body or home.
"Few people think to conceal their home's heat-loss profile, and would
have difficulty doing so if they tried," he said. "Living as he does
in a land of melting snow and spotty home insulation, I do not believe
that the respondent had a serious privacy interest in the heat
patterns on the exposed external walls of his home."
Known as forward-looking infrared, the heat-detection equipment at the
heart of the case is simply a method of gaining information about a
home that might or might not indicate what is going on inside, he
said. It is not enough in itself for police to obtain a search
warrant, Judge Binnie said.
"It cannot even 'see' through a transparent window," he observed. "It
is not X-ray technology."
Judge Binnie took pains to stress that his ruling is not intended to
erode genuine privacy issues in an era of increasingly intrusive state
interest.
Courts must be careful not to downgrade privacy interests simply
because man y people have come to believe many of their conversations
and functions may be monitored, he added.
The court added that Judge Abella's apprehensions about future
Orwellian uses of heat-detection technology are well placed, but can
be tested only when appropriate cases come along.
"Where we differ, perhaps, is that in my view, such technology must be
evaluated according to its present capability," Judge Binnie said.
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