News (Media Awareness Project) - CN MB: Drug Charge Dismissed |
Title: | CN MB: Drug Charge Dismissed |
Published On: | 2004-09-03 |
Source: | Winnipeg Sun (CN MB) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 01:05:44 |
DRUG CHARGE DISMISSED
Suspect's Charter Rights Violated, Judge Says
An improper police search resulted in a woman's drug charge being
thrown out of court yesterday, even though cops found cocaine, a crack
pipe and a constantly ringing cell phone in the car she was driving.
Winnipeg resident Carrie Dawn Coutu was acquitted of one charge of
possessing cocaine yesterday when a Queen's Bench justice ruled her
Charter rights were violated during a traffic stop on Jan. 8, 2002.
Coutu's lawyer said the ruling represents a serious victory for his
client.
"My client was a victim of abuse of police power," said defence lawyer
Martin Glazer. "The courts have served as a safeguard against that."
In a voir dire held to determine whether the Crown's evidence was
admissible, court heard how Coutu was pulled over when police noticed
the two-door Cutlass she was driving had a flat tire.
The officers asked her to produce her licence and then noticed a
cellphone inside her purse was continually ringing or buzzing.
Suspicious, the officers asked her to exit the vehicle so they could
verify her identity.
Coutu denied the purse belonged to her and then emptied $150 out of
her pockets when police asked her to.
She then told the cops to bring the purse and her wallet from the car,
which is when they discovered a glass crack pipe and a pink box
containing one gram of cocaine, court heard.
"Give it to me, it's mine. You got no right to take my stuff," Coutu
reportedly said when asked by officers if the purse belonged to her.
When questioned in court, Coutu admitted she initially gave the
officers a false name and the crack pipe in the car was hers. She also
said she'd been "harassed" by police in the weeks leading up to the
incident and was pulled over repeatedly for unspecified reasons.
UNRELIABLE WITNESS
In a written ruling released yesterday, Queen's Bench Justice Wesley
Swail found Coutu was an unreliable witness but also found the
arresting officers had difficulty remembering exactly how the events
unfolded.
Swail found the cops were justified in stopping her car and asking her
to exit the vehicle when she couldn't produce a licence.
But he also found the officers were wrong to ask her to empty her
pockets, in asking her where she got the $150 and in failing to advise
her of her right to remain silent when she was charged with failing to
produce the licence.
Swail refused to admit as evidence the fact Coutu asked the police to
get her purse from the car, since she hadn't been properly advised of
why she was being detained. The search of her purse and her car was
conducted without a warrant, he ruled, resulting in the evidence being
inadmissible.
Suspect's Charter Rights Violated, Judge Says
An improper police search resulted in a woman's drug charge being
thrown out of court yesterday, even though cops found cocaine, a crack
pipe and a constantly ringing cell phone in the car she was driving.
Winnipeg resident Carrie Dawn Coutu was acquitted of one charge of
possessing cocaine yesterday when a Queen's Bench justice ruled her
Charter rights were violated during a traffic stop on Jan. 8, 2002.
Coutu's lawyer said the ruling represents a serious victory for his
client.
"My client was a victim of abuse of police power," said defence lawyer
Martin Glazer. "The courts have served as a safeguard against that."
In a voir dire held to determine whether the Crown's evidence was
admissible, court heard how Coutu was pulled over when police noticed
the two-door Cutlass she was driving had a flat tire.
The officers asked her to produce her licence and then noticed a
cellphone inside her purse was continually ringing or buzzing.
Suspicious, the officers asked her to exit the vehicle so they could
verify her identity.
Coutu denied the purse belonged to her and then emptied $150 out of
her pockets when police asked her to.
She then told the cops to bring the purse and her wallet from the car,
which is when they discovered a glass crack pipe and a pink box
containing one gram of cocaine, court heard.
"Give it to me, it's mine. You got no right to take my stuff," Coutu
reportedly said when asked by officers if the purse belonged to her.
When questioned in court, Coutu admitted she initially gave the
officers a false name and the crack pipe in the car was hers. She also
said she'd been "harassed" by police in the weeks leading up to the
incident and was pulled over repeatedly for unspecified reasons.
UNRELIABLE WITNESS
In a written ruling released yesterday, Queen's Bench Justice Wesley
Swail found Coutu was an unreliable witness but also found the
arresting officers had difficulty remembering exactly how the events
unfolded.
Swail found the cops were justified in stopping her car and asking her
to exit the vehicle when she couldn't produce a licence.
But he also found the officers were wrong to ask her to empty her
pockets, in asking her where she got the $150 and in failing to advise
her of her right to remain silent when she was charged with failing to
produce the licence.
Swail refused to admit as evidence the fact Coutu asked the police to
get her purse from the car, since she hadn't been properly advised of
why she was being detained. The search of her purse and her car was
conducted without a warrant, he ruled, resulting in the evidence being
inadmissible.
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