How police fumbled one of N.L.'s biggest drug busts, allowing accused men to walk free
CBC
A group of alleged drug runners in St. John's have been let off the hook — for now — after police officers illegally searched a shipping crate that turned out to contain nine kilograms of cocaine.
The RCMP didn't have a warrant when officers entered a Mount Pearl transport warehouse in March 2019, but announced just days later that they'd completed Project Bowman, one of the biggest drug busts in the history of Newfoundland and Labrador.
The cocaine was estimated to have a street value of up to $3 million.
But last month in provincial court, five men accused of trafficking that cocaine had their charges dismissed, due in part to the RCMP's error when officers found the drugs.
According to Judge Lori Marshall's decision, handed down in October, officers seized a wooden crate from the warehouse, brought it back to their headquarters and found the drugs in a hidden compartment at the bottom, even though there was no smell or visual evidence the crate contained anything illegal.
That crate had been shipped as freight from Brampton, Ont., but sat unclaimed for two days, prompting warehouse staff to look inside for contact information, they said.
They found only a few packages of floor tiles. Suspecting the crate had a false bottom, they called police.
The warehouse manager testified he couldn't remember whether the officers or warehouse staff removed the crate's lid to look inside when the RCMP showed up.
Meanwhile, the two police officers who arrived on the scene that day contradicted each other in court: one said neither cop unsealed the crate, while the other said one of them did in fact ask to borrow a drill to close the lid.
That meant Marshall couldn't agree with the prosecutors' argument that police had simply looked inside an already-open crate — which would have been fair game under Canadian law. Instead, she concluded police had opened the crate without a warrant.
Section 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms protects against unreasonable search and seizure, and says police must have reasonable grounds to examine private property.
"There is no current legislation in place giving the police free access to inspect the contents of freight received on the premises of a private company," Marshall wrote, continuing that she didn't think police were acting on anything more than a "hunch."
She also worried the officers had knowingly breached charter rights.
"I am concerned that [the officer] was not only playing too close to the line in this situation, but that he may have crossed it," she said. "Such conduct cannot be condoned by the courts."