Times Colonist

Tip on dial-a-dope scheme not enough, judge rules

- JIM BRONSKILL

OTTAWA — An unsubstant­iated tip that someone is dealing drugs from a phone number doesn’t amount to reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.

In a 5-4 decision Friday on a pair of related cases, the high court said police must take sufficient steps to verify such tips to avoid entrapping suspects.

“As state actors, police must respect the rights and freedoms of all Canadians and be accountabl­e to the public they serve and protect,” said a majority of the court.

“At the same time, police require various investigat­ive techniques to enforce the criminal law. While giving wide latitude to police to investigat­e crime in the public interest, the law also imposes constraint­s on certain police methods.”

In each case, Toronto police were acting on tips to investigat­e alleged dial-a-dope schemes, where a buyer calls a seller and arranges to purchase drugs at an agreed location.

Javid Ahmad and Landon Williams were charged with drug offences after police officers bought cocaine from each man in the respective probes.

At their trials, the men argued for stays of the drug-related proceeding­s on the basis of police entrapment, but only Williams was successful. In Williams’ case, police received a tip from a confidenti­al source, contacted the suspected dealer in early 2011 and bought crack cocaine from him twice.

He was charged with drug traffickin­g, possession of crime proceeds, and firearms and breach-of-recognizan­ce offences.

The trial judge found the police did not have a reasonable suspicion Williams was involved in drug traffickin­g when the officer first presented the chance to commit an offence, resulting in a stay of the drug-related charges.

Police similarly received a tip that prompted a call to Ahmad and a meeting to buy powdered cocaine in 2012. The trial judge found Ahmad guilty and refused his request for a stay on the basis of entrapment.

The Ontario Court of Appeal ruled the police conduct in the two cases carried no risk that innocent people would commit a crime that they wouldn’t have otherwise carried out.

The appeal court said the defence of entrapment was unavailabl­e to the accused men since the police relied on legitimate investigat­ive techniques to address the modern realities of the drug trade.

 ??  ?? The Supreme Court of Canada says police must take steps to verify tips that someone is dealing drugs from a phone number.
The Supreme Court of Canada says police must take steps to verify tips that someone is dealing drugs from a phone number.

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