The Supreme Court of Canada, a criminal’s best friend
I see the Supreme Court of Canada is practicing judicial activism again.
If these were cases brought forward in which the people were searched and not guilty I could understand. That would make sense but if that indeed happened there’s no way to tell. In this case they were both guilty as sin of drug possession. The police did their job and did it well by catching the criminal which last time I checked was their job.
Too bad the SCOC didn’t see that. Criminals must be rubbing their hands in glee tonight. Score another one for crime. Good work SCOC.










Comments (13)
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Also, SCC are the initials for Supreme Court of Canada.
BTW, sentences start with a capital. :)
I don't have any problem with random sniffer dogs searches in schools. So they find a student's packsack with drugs. Or someday a search will turn up a bomb or a gun. The innocent has nothing to fear from police searches. This sacred-cow privacy for even a students packsack is so much BS. It's a result of barking leftists running amok again in our system.
Anon, how would you feel if a cop showed up at your house one day for "a random search"? If you have nothing to hide, you shouldn't mind it, right? That's where this goes next, if things like this are allowed.
It is WRONG to think that something is okay, just because you feel you are innocent. The next person that loses their freedom could by YOU.
It reminded me of the story below in which a guy obviously dealing or at the very least transporting drugs for sale gets off because of the way he was caught. If innocents are being violated and have a complaint than bring it forward but that the guilty are upset about the way they were caught? I don't have any sympathy in that regard.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/story/2000/09/07/ns_bagnell000907.html
The fact of this kid involved being innocent or guity is irrelevant. The SCC's rulings are used as reference for future cases; they set the legal precedent in the country. If this was allowed to go through, then ANY time someone's privacy is infringed in the future, by what most people would consider an unjustified/unreasonable search, this case is used as a reference point in the decision.
In other words, say a year from now you are sitting in a parking lot, a cop could walk up to your car completely at random and tell you that he's searching it, for no reason at all. It would be allowed, because if you challenge it in court, the first thing that will be noted by the prosecuting attourney is THIS case's SCC judgement, which will give you zero ability to defend your privacy against what had happened to you.
How can you think that this is OK? That seriously wouldn't bother you?
I understand the concerns but keeping the criminals a little on edge that they might get caught and might not see it coming seems to be a good thing. I don't think if the SCC had ruled the other way that police would start wandering into my house and tear the place apart as some have alluded to at other forums.