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Major Studies of Drugs and Drug Policy | ||||
Canadian Senate Special Committee on Illegal Drugs | ||||
Volume 2 - Policies and Practices In Canada |
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Chapter 14 - Police PracticesPolice
powers [1][17]
There are those who argue that
police have been granted powers that are far too extensive in relation to drug
enforcement and that in this fight against drugs, society has come to tolerate
a battery of investigative techniques–wiretapping, strip-searches, the use of
paid informants, entrapment, etc–which are offensive to our basic notions of
civil liberty. As will be discussed in more detail, the nature of drug offences
renders them difficult to enforce. This results in police agencies requesting
and using a variety of unusual methods of enforcement. While there is a long
history of special police powers in relation to drug enforcement, this chapter
will focus primarily on modern police powers.
No one questions the fact that
police require powers for the maintenance of law and order in our society. In
investigating criminal offences, the police may use less intrusive
investigative techniques such as observation and interrogation. In other cases, they may be required to use
more intrusive methods such as electronic surveillance and reverse sting
operations. While such methods are not limited to drug enforcement and may be
used in other criminal matters, they are certainly used much more extensively
in drug investigations. These powers must be constrained,
however, so as to protect individuals from excessive police activity. As stated
by La Forest J.: “The restraints imposed
on government to pry into the lives of the citizen go to the essence of a
democratic state.”[2][18]
In determining whether police conduct is acceptable, conflicting
interests generally have to be weighed. First, there are the individual’s
interests, including the interest of being free from state intrusion. Second,
there are the state’s interests, including that of protecting society from
crime. Because these interests generally conflict, it can sometimes be
difficult to agree on where the line should be drawn in relation to police
conduct. The courts have recognized that, as
crimes become more sophisticated, police must be able to use more sophisticated
investigative techniques to detect their commission. In addition, with respect
to drug-related offences and other consensual types of offences,[3][19] it is acknowledged that routine
investigative techniques are often insufficient because of the difficulty in
detecting these activities. Generally, because there is no “victim,” no one is
there to complain or report the offence to police. Both Parliament and the courts
appear to agree that additional police powers may be warranted in these
circumstances. It is believed that police need to be proactive, rather than
reactive, as is generally the case for other non-consensual offences. An
example of this viewpoint is expressed in the following statement by former
Chief Justice Laskin of the Supreme Court of Canada: Methods
of detection of offences and of suspected offences and offenders necessarily
differ according to the class of crime. Where, for example, violence or
breaking, entering and theft are concerned, there will generally be external
evidence of an offence upon which the police can act in tracking down the
offenders; the victim or his family or the property owner, as the case may be,
may be expected to call in the police and provide some clues for the police to
pursue. When “consensual” crimes are committed, involving willing persons, as
is the case in prostitution, illegal gambling and drug offences, ordinary
methods of detection will not generally do. The participants, be they deemed
victims or not, do not usually complain or seek police aid; this is what they
wish to avoid. The police, if they are to respond to the public disapprobation
of such offences as reflected in existing law, must take some initiatives. [4][20] The
Le Dain Commission had also recognized the special nature of drug offences. The
peculiar nature of drug crimes–the fact that the people involved in them are consenting
and co-operative parties, and there is rarely, if ever, a victim who has reason
to complain, as in crimes against persons and property – makes enforcement of
the drug laws very difficult. The police are rarely assisted by complainants.
For the most part they have to make their own cases. Moreover, the activity
involved in non-medical drug use is relatively easy to conceal. It can be
carried on, by agreement of the parties involved, in places which are not
easily observed by the police. Further, the substances and equipment involved
are relatively easy to conceal or dispose of. All
of these difficulties have given rise to the development of unusual methods of
enforcement. [5][21] [1][17] This section is in essence a
summary of Police Powers and Drug-Related
Offences, a paper prepared for the Special Senate Committee on Illegal
Drugs by Gérald Lafrenière, Law and Government Division, Parliamentary Research
Branch, Library of Parliament, 6 March 2001. [2][18] R. v. Dyment, (1988) 45 C.C.C. (3d) 244 at p. 254 (S.C.C.). [3][19] Other consensual offences include
gambling and prostitution. [4][20] R. v. Kirzner (1977) 38 C.C.C. (2d) 131 (S.C.C.) at page 135. [5][21] Commission of Inquiry into the
Non-medical Use of Drugs (1972) Cannabis,
A Report, Ottawa, page 239. |