Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Traffic Cop Should Know Better Than To Routinely Search Cars, Court Rules

Darpan News Desk, 06 Apr, 2016 12:53 PM
    TORONTO — A traffic officer who routinely searched vehicles he stopped was out of line and should have known better, Ontario's top court ruled Wednesday.
     
    In throwing out a drug conviction, the court found a car search by Const. Robert Sinclair violated the rights of the accused, Alexander Harflett.
     
    "I do not doubt that Const. Sinclair believes that he is doing the right thing," the Court of Appeal said.
     
    "(But) as an instructor of other police officers, he ought to be fully conversant with his legal authority — but the evidence shows either that he was not or that he was prepared to search regardless."
     
    Sinclair, with the Ontario Provincial Police highway enforcement team, was at a service centre on Highway 401 when he spotted a vehicle with Quebec plates. As a demonstration for a colleague, the officer ran a search on the places and found Harflett's driver's licence had been suspended for unpaid fines.
     
    The officer pulled him over down the highway, where Harflett, of Oshawa, Ont., produced a valid Quebec licence.
     
    Sinclair arrested him for using another licence while his Ontario one was suspended. He also called a tow truck to move the car from the highway to a nearby hotel to allow Harflett to pay his fines and get his licence back.
     
    Sinclair then took what he called an "inventory" of the vehicle — something he testified he always did — an approach that didn't sit well with the Appeal Court.
     
    "He resisted the notion that what he did was a 'search;' this was plainly a search," the Appeal Court said.
     
     
    "A check stop does not and cannot constitute a general search warrant for searching every vehicle, driver and passenger that is pulled over."
     
    During the search, Sinclair discovered marijuana in the trunk. He arrested Harflett for possessing the drug for trafficking purposes.
     
    At trial, Sinclair admitted he had been conducting a traffic investigation when he detained the accused and had no reason to suspect any criminality. However, he argued he needed to verify if the car had any valuables or dangerous items inside.
     
    In March 2014, Ontario court Judge Catherine Kehoe found his actions reasonable, decided any violation of the accused's rights was technical or minor, admitted the drug evidence, and convicted him.
     
    In throwing out the case, the Appeal Court found Sinclair had no authority for the search.
     
    "The inventory search cannot be justified on the basis of officer safety or any suspicion that the appellant was involved in criminal conduct," the Appeal Court said. "Sinclair had no public safety concerns, since he was going to release the car to the appellant."
     
    The court also noted two other cases where Sinclair had been found to have abused his search powers leading to the exclusion of evidence.
     
     
    "The impact of an unjustified search is magnified where there is a total absence of justification for it," the court said.
     
    Without the drugs as evidence, the prosecution had no case, so the Appeal Court entered an acquittal.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Release Terrifying Photo Of Axe-Wielding Robber In Tinted Helmet

    Police Release Terrifying Photo Of Axe-Wielding Robber In Tinted Helmet
    RCMP Cpl. Rick Mills says in nine years he has never seen a convenience store robbery similar to the one Saturday night in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador

    Police Release Terrifying Photo Of Axe-Wielding Robber In Tinted Helmet

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada
    In a letter to Citizenship Minister John McCallum, the groups say it's time to put an end to what has been a 20-year battle to deport Helmut Oberlander.

    Jewish Groups Demand Ottawa Strip Helmut Oberlander Of Citizenship, Deport Him From Canada

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.
    Charles Neil-Curly, 23, has been homeless for about five months and living in a North Battleford, Sask. shelter, but he says the province cut his funding, forcing him to find somewhere else to go.

    Homeless Saskatchewan Man Given One-way Bus Ticket Hopes For New Life In B.C.

    Canada To Admit Record Number Of Immigrants In 2016

    Canada To Admit Record Number Of Immigrants In 2016
    The government of Canada announced an ambitious plan for 2016 immigration levels on Tuesday, aimed at reuniting more families.

    Canada To Admit Record Number Of Immigrants In 2016

    Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase

    Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase
    Everton Biddersingh argues there is still evidence in his case which has not been submitted to court.

    Dad Appeals Conviction In Death Of Daughter Whose Body Was Found In Burning Suitcase

    Strong Gusts Down Trees, Cut Power To Thousands Of South Coast Homes

    Strong Gusts Down Trees, Cut Power To Thousands Of South Coast Homes
    Environment Canada says potentially damaging wind gusts of up to 90 kilometres per hour are sweeping across most of region.

    Strong Gusts Down Trees, Cut Power To Thousands Of South Coast Homes