News (Media Awareness Project) - CN YK: Crown To Appeal Grow-Op Judgment |
Title: | CN YK: Crown To Appeal Grow-Op Judgment |
Published On: | 2007-06-01 |
Source: | Yukon News (CN YK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 04:51:37 |
CROWN TO APPEAL GROW-OP JUDGMENT
Crown lawyers will appeal a territorial court judgment that prevented
some evidence collected on nine men allegedly involved in marijuana
grow operations from being heard at trial.
"We'd like to have the court of appeal review some of the legal
conclusions that Judge Karen Ruddy arrived at," Crown lawyer Noel
Sinclair said on Friday.
In April, Ruddy found the RCMP violated the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms several times during its investigation. She
excluded evidence flowing from those breaches.
So during a May 2 trial, the Crown presented no evidence against four
of the men who faced multiple charges of producing and possessing
marijuana at five houses in Whitehorse.
The four men were acquitted, but the charges were not dropped.
The charges stem from Project Mobile, an investigation that ended
with the RCMP charging nine men for possessing and producing
marijuana following a series of busts in 2005 that closed six
grow-operations and seized more than 4,500 pot plants.
Three of the nine men originally charged under the operation have
pleaded guilty and have been sentenced.
One is awaiting a hearing in Vancouver.
The ninth man, Zhi Jiang Xu, was never apprehended. A warrant is
still out for his arrest.
Sinclair was not sure when the appeal will be heard. He expects it
will take several months. Crown lawyers will appeal a territorial
court judgment that prevented some evidence collected on nine men
allegedly involved in marijuana grow operations from being heard at trial.
"We'd like to have the court of appeal review some of the legal
conclusions that Judge Karen Ruddy arrived at," Crown lawyer Noel
Sinclair said on Friday.
In April, Ruddy found the RCMP violated the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms several times during its investigation. She
excluded evidence flowing from those breaches.
So during a May 2 trial, the Crown presented no evidence against four
of the men who faced multiple charges of producing and possessing
marijuana at five houses in Whitehorse.
The four men were acquitted, but the charges were not dropped.
The charges stem from Project Mobile, an investigation that ended
with the RCMP charging nine men for possessing and producing
marijuana following a series of busts in 2005 that closed six
grow-operations and seized more than 4,500 pot plants.
Three of the nine men originally charged under the operation have
pleaded guilty and have been sentenced.
One is awaiting a hearing in Vancouver.
The ninth man, Zhi Jiang Xu, was never apprehended. A warrant is
still out for his arrest.
Sinclair was not sure when the appeal will be heard. He expects it
will take several months. Crown lawyers will appeal a territorial
court judgment that prevented some evidence collected on nine men
allegedly involved in marijuana grow operations from being heard at trial.
"We'd like to have the court of appeal review some of the legal
conclusions that Judge Karen Ruddy arrived at," Crown lawyer Noel
Sinclair said on Friday.
In April, Ruddy found the RCMP violated the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms several times during its investigation. She
excluded evidence flowing from those breaches.
So during a May 2 trial, the Crown presented no evidence against four
of the men who faced multiple charges of producing and possessing
marijuana at five houses in Whitehorse.
The four men were acquitted, but the charges were not dropped.
The charges stem from Project Mobile, an investigation that ended
with the RCMP charging nine men for possessing and producing
marijuana following a series of busts in 2005 that closed six
grow-operations and seized more than 4,500 pot plants.
Three of the nine men originally charged under the operation have
pleaded guilty and have been sentenced.
One is awaiting a hearing in Vancouver.
The ninth man, Zhi Jiang Xu, was never apprehended. A warrant is
still out for his arrest.
Sinclair was not sure when the appeal will be heard. He expects it
will take several months.
Crown lawyers will appeal a territorial court judgment that prevented
some evidence collected on nine men allegedly involved in marijuana
grow operations from being heard at trial.
"We'd like to have the court of appeal review some of the legal
conclusions that Judge Karen Ruddy arrived at," Crown lawyer Noel
Sinclair said on Friday.
In April, Ruddy found the RCMP violated the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms several times during its investigation. She
excluded evidence flowing from those breaches.
So during a May 2 trial, the Crown presented no evidence against four
of the men who faced multiple charges of producing and possessing
marijuana at five houses in Whitehorse.
The four men were acquitted, but the charges were not dropped.
The charges stem from Project Mobile, an investigation that ended
with the RCMP charging nine men for possessing and producing
marijuana following a series of busts in 2005 that closed six
grow-operations and seized more than 4,500 pot plants.
Three of the nine men originally charged under the operation have
pleaded guilty and have been sentenced.
One is awaiting a hearing in Vancouver.
The ninth man, Zhi Jiang Xu, was never apprehended. A warrant is
still out for his arrest.
Sinclair was not sure when the appeal will be heard. He expects it
will take several months. Crown lawyers will appeal a territorial
court judgment that prevented some evidence collected on nine men
allegedly involved in marijuana grow operations from being heard at trial.
"We'd like to have the court of appeal review some of the legal
conclusions that Judge Karen Ruddy arrived at," Crown lawyer Noel
Sinclair said on Friday.
In April, Ruddy found the RCMP violated the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms several times during its investigation. She
excluded evidence flowing from those breaches.
So during a May 2 trial, the Crown presented no evidence against four
of the men who faced multiple charges of producing and possessing
marijuana at five houses in Whitehorse.
The four men were acquitted, but the charges were not dropped.
The charges stem from Project Mobile, an investigation that ended
with the RCMP charging nine men for possessing and producing
marijuana following a series of busts in 2005 that closed six
grow-operations and seized more than 4,500 pot plants.
Three of the nine men originally charged under the operation have
pleaded guilty and have been sentenced.
One is awaiting a hearing in Vancouver.
The ninth man, Zhi Jiang Xu, was never apprehended. A warrant is
still out for his arrest.
Sinclair was not sure when the appeal will be heard. He expects it
will take several months. Crown lawyers will appeal a territorial
court judgment that prevented some evidence collected on nine men
allegedly involved in marijuana grow operations from being heard at trial.
"We'd like to have the court of appeal review some of the legal
conclusions that Judge Karen Ruddy arrived at," Crown lawyer Noel
Sinclair said on Friday.
In April, Ruddy found the RCMP violated the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms several times during its investigation. She
excluded evidence flowing from those breaches.
So during a May 2 trial, the Crown presented no evidence against four
of the men who faced multiple charges of producing and possessing
marijuana at five houses in Whitehorse.
The four men were acquitted, but the charges were not dropped.
The charges stem from Project Mobile, an investigation that ended
with the RCMP charging nine men for possessing and producing
marijuana following a series of busts in 2005 that closed six
grow-operations and seized more than 4,500 pot plants.
Three of the nine men originally charged under the operation have
pleaded guilty and have been sentenced.
One is awaiting a hearing in Vancouver.
The ninth man, Zhi Jiang Xu, was never apprehended. A warrant is
still out for his arrest.
Sinclair was not sure when the appeal will be heard. He expects it
will take several months.
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