Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Top court to weigh timing of roadside breath tests

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2021 03:59 PM
  • Top court to weigh timing of roadside breath tests

OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to hear a case that hinges on the time police took to arrange a breath test for a Quebec man.

Early one afternoon in April 2017, police got word of someone allegedly driving an all-terrain vehicle while drunk, arrived at the scene and stopped Pascal Breault, who was walking away.

Asked if he had been drinking, Breault said he'd had one beer, but insisted he had not been driving the vehicle, contradicting trail patrollers who had contacted the police.

The officers did not have an approved screening device — used to take an initial breath sample in advance of a full breathalyzer test of blood alcohol levels — so they radioed other nearby officers to obtain a device.

Breault repeatedly refused to provide a breath sample and was found guilty of failing to comply with a police officer's demand, even though there was no device at the scene and one never did arrive.

Breault was acquitted when the Quebec Court of Appeal ruled the officer's demand was invalid due to a provision which, at the time, required that a breath sample be provided "forthwith."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Woman transported to hospital after incident in Surrey

Woman transported to hospital after incident in Surrey
Just before 1:30 a.m. on November 7, a cell guard noted the woman had fallen from her bunk onto the floor. Upon further assessment the woman was found to be unresponsive and not breathing. An officer and the cell nurse began life saving efforts, until these efforts were assumed by BC Emergency Health Services and the Surrey Fire Department.

Woman transported to hospital after incident in Surrey

1,438 COVID19 cases over 3 days

1,438 COVID19 cases over 3 days
There are 4,282 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 202,898 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 407 individuals are in hospital and 121 are in intensive care. 

1,438 COVID19 cases over 3 days

VPD arrests 32 in weekend shoplifting clampdown

VPD arrests 32 in weekend shoplifting clampdown
Though shoplifting remains vastly under-reported, Vancouver Police have seen a surge in people using violence while stealing from stores. Cases involving weapons – things like knives, needles and bear spray – have shot up 550 per cent since 2019. Commercial robberies have gone up 126 per cent during that same time.

VPD arrests 32 in weekend shoplifting clampdown

Pandemic claims more than 19K lives: Stats Can

Pandemic claims more than 19K lives: Stats Can
Statistics Canada says more than 19,000 Canadians lost their lives during COVID-19 than would have been expected had the pandemic never happened. The report highlights the deadly toll COVID-19 has taken directly and indirectly on Canadian lives.

Pandemic claims more than 19K lives: Stats Can

Some Tory MPs' vaccine claims not helpful: O'Toole

Some Tory MPs' vaccine claims not helpful: O'Toole
O'Toole remains the lone leader in Parliament who refuses to disclose how many of his 118-member caucus are fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Immunization will be a requirement for MPs wishing to take their seat in the House of Commons when it resumes Nov. 22.

Some Tory MPs' vaccine claims not helpful: O'Toole

Canada only wants 'trusted' AI partners: minister

Canada only wants 'trusted' AI partners: minister
Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne offered the assessment in an interview Monday from Germany, part of a weeklong, three-country European swing that will take him to Paris later in the coming days for a major international conference on the future of AI.

Canada only wants 'trusted' AI partners: minister