Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court to rule on privacy rights for cellphone users arrested by police

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 01:45 PM

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada delivers a precedent-setting ruling Thursday that's expected to dictate how much warrantless access police can have to a person's cellphone.

    The case centres on a 2009 armed robbery at a Toronto jewelry kiosk that saw police seize and search the cellphone of Kevin Fearon.

    Police were responding to a call about the robbery when they arrested Fearon. Upon perusing his unlocked cellphone, they found photos of cash and a gun, as well as a text message mentioning jewelry.

    A judge convicted Fearon after rejecting his lawyer's argument that his Charter right to unlawful search and seizure had been breached because police didn't immediately get a search warrant to look at his phone.

    The Ontario Court of Appeal agreed, ruling it was acceptable for police to take a cursory look through the phone if they thought it contained relevant evidence to a crime.

    The court ruled that if the phone had been password-protected or locked, it would not have been appropriate to look at its contents without a search warrant.

    It will be the first time the Supreme Court has ruled on cellphone privacy.

    The high court will be attempting to bring some clarity and consistency to an issue that has been addressed by a series of previous lower court rulings dealing with what police can do without a warrant with a cellphone after an arrest.

    Those rulings have found:

    — The police are allowed to search your phone.

    — Cursory searches are permissible.

    — Police are not allowed to dump all the data from a phone to an external drive.

    — Police can search the phone because of "exigent circumstances" — an imminent threat or danger that overrides privacy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Government not doing enough to keep tabs on northern food-subsidy program: audit

    Government not doing enough to keep tabs on northern food-subsidy program: audit
    OTTAWA — The auditor general says the federal government can't tell if northerners are reaping the full benefit of a program aimed at helping to offset the high cost of food in the North.

    Government not doing enough to keep tabs on northern food-subsidy program: audit

    No one-stop shop for data on government auto bailouts, auditor finds

    No one-stop shop for data on government auto bailouts, auditor finds
    OTTAWA — Canadians would have to sift through a stack of different reports if they wanted to piece together how their tax dollars were spent on big auto bailouts, says a new report by the federal auditor general.

    No one-stop shop for data on government auto bailouts, auditor finds

    Canada's collective memory at risk due to shortcomings at Archives: auditor

    Canada's collective memory at risk due to shortcomings at Archives: auditor
    OTTAWA — Future generations may not be able to enjoy Canada's recorded heritage — including photos, maps and important documents — because Library and Archives Canada is not collecting all of the material it should from federal agencies, the auditor general says.

    Canada's collective memory at risk due to shortcomings at Archives: auditor

    Highlights from the fall 2014 report of the federal auditor general

    Highlights from the fall 2014 report of the federal auditor general
    OTTAWA — Highlights from auditor general Michael Ferguson's fall 2014 report, released Tuesday:

    Highlights from the fall 2014 report of the federal auditor general

    Harper earmarks $5.8B for federal infrastructure, including parks, museums

    Harper earmarks $5.8B for federal infrastructure, including parks, museums
    LONDON, Ont. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper unveiled a $5.8-billion menu of federal infrastructure improvements Monday in an announcement one political rival immediately described as a batch of recycled promises.

    Harper earmarks $5.8B for federal infrastructure, including parks, museums

    Vets needing PTSD benefits face dizzying paperwork, eight-month wait: auditor

    Vets needing PTSD benefits face dizzying paperwork, eight-month wait: auditor
    OTTAWA — Many of Canada's battle-scarred veterans wait up to eight months to find out if they are eligible for long-term, mental-health disability benefits and the department responsible for their care has no idea if its treatment programs are effective, the auditor general said Tuesday.

    Vets needing PTSD benefits face dizzying paperwork, eight-month wait: auditor