The Standard (St. Catharines)

Supreme Court ruling paves way for speedier drugged-driving trials

- JIM BRONSKILL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Expert testimony can be admitted in drugged-driving trials without a preliminar­y examinatio­n of the evidence, the Supreme Court said Thursday in a decision that could help expedite the judicial process in the legalized-marijuana era.

The 5-2 court decision on the case of an Ottawa motorist comes as the federal Liberal government prepares to introduce long-promised legislatio­n to legalize the recreation­al use of pot — a plan that has vast implicatio­ns for policing the roads.

“Driving while impaired by drugs is a dangerous and, sadly, common activity, prohibited by the Criminal Code,” Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin wrote in her reasons for the majority decision.

“Parliament long ago establishe­d a regime to enforce the law against alcohol-impaired driving, with breathalyz­er testing and analyst certificat­ion at its centre. Enforcing the offence of drug-impaired driving was more elusive.”

In 2008, Parliament sought to confront that challenge with a new regime that includes a 12-part evaluation for drug impairment, establishe­d through regulation­s, to be administer­ed by police officers who receive special training and certificat­ion — so-called “drug recognitio­n experts.”

In May 2009, Carson Bingley cut off a driver, crossed the centre line and drove into the opposite lane, nearly striking oncoming traffic before bumping into a car in a nearby parking lot.

He failed sobriety tests administer­ed by a drug recognitio­n expert and admitted to smoking marijuana.

Bingley was acquitted of driving while drug-impaired despite the expert’s evidence, which the judge found could be admitted without a voir dire, or preliminar­y examinatio­n of the evidence.

An appeal led to a second trial, where a judge found that the evidence must be vetted in a voir dire.

The subsequent preliminar­y examinatio­n led the judge to rule the expert evidence inadmissib­le, resulting in a second acquittal.

The Crown successful­ly appealed and a third trial was ordered; Thursday’s Supreme Court ruling means that trial will go ahead.

The Criminal Code allows police to compel a person to submit to a drug recognitio­n evaluation when there are reasonable grounds to believe the individual has been driving while impaired by drugs.

The 12-step procedure includes eye evaluation­s, attention tests, and measuremen­ts of blood pressure, temperatur­e, pulse and muscle tone.

If the evaluation leads the officer to further believe the person is impaired by a drug, the officer can then take tests of saliva, urine or blood to determine whether the driver has drugs in their system.

At issue before the Supreme Court was whether a drug recognitio­n expert has expertise beyond the knowledge and experience of a trial judge.

In the decision, McLachlin said the expert does indeed have such knowledge under the system set out in law.

“His expertise has been conclusive­ly and irrebuttab­ly establishe­d by Parliament.”

A trial judge is therefore not obliged to hold a voir dire to determine the admissibil­ity of the expert’s evidence, McLachlin said, adding that doing otherwise would be “a waste of judicial resources.”

In dissenting reasons, Justice Andromache Karakatsan­is said Parliament had endorsed the reliabilit­y of the 12-step evaluation as an investigat­ive tool, not for the purpose of “an evidentiar­y shortcut at trial.”

She said that in her view courts have discretion to require confirmati­on that the science behind drug recognitio­n expert evaluation­s meets the necessary level of reliabilit­y before admitting the evidence at trial.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A decision by the Supreme Court on Thursday could help expedite judicial process in drugged-driving trials in the legalized-marijuana era.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A decision by the Supreme Court on Thursday could help expedite judicial process in drugged-driving trials in the legalized-marijuana era.

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