Proposed Drunk Driving Law Would Face Constitutional Challenge

By: Ryan MacIsaac · October 4, 2009 · Filed Under Constitutional Law, Criminal Law · 3 Comments 

Roadside CheckReported by Canwest News Service, the Canadian Department of Justice is proposing a new law that would allow police officers to randomly demand breath samples in an effort to curtail drunk driving, without respect to whether or not the officer thinks the driver has consumed alcohol. The idea was brought forth by federal Justice Minister Rob Nicholson at a recent meeting of Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD).

Currently, s. 254(3) of the Criminal Code stipulates that an officer must first suspect consumption of alcohol before commanding a breath sample:

Samples of breath or blood

(3) If a peace officer has reasonable grounds to believe that a person is committing, or at any time within the preceding three hours has committed, an offence under section 253 as a result of the consumption of alcohol, the peace officer may, by demand made as soon as practicable, require the person

(a) to provide, as soon as practicable,

(i) samples of breath that, in a qualified technician’s opinion, will enable a proper analysis to be made to determine the concentration, if any, of alcohol in the person’s blood, or

(ii) if the peace officer has reasonable grounds to believe that, because of their physical condition, the person may be incapable of providing a sample of breath or it would be impracticable to obtain a sample of breath, samples of blood that, in the opinion of the qualified medical practitioner or qualified technician taking the samples, will enable a proper analysis to be made to determine the concentration, if any, of alcohol in the person’s blood;

(emphasis added)

The emphasized qualification in s. 254(3) above protects against unreasonable search and seizure, a constitutional right as laid out in s. 8 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms:

Search or seizure

8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.

If Parliament were to change the statute in the Code, then a constitutional challenge would almost certainly ensue. (It harks back to another recent road-related challenge: street-racing laws which place absolute liability on a driver caught racing). It would probably be found that the new statute violates Charter s. 8; the issue would then be if this limitation of rights can be “demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society”(Charter s. 1).

Impaired driving kills between 1350 and 1600 people per year. Would it be reasonable and proportional to limit the fundamental rights of all Canadians to enable a tool in combating this scourge?

What if you don’t “look like” your passport photo?

By: Law is Cool · July 28, 2009 · Filed Under Civil Rights, Constitutional Law · Add Comment 

Woman held in Kenya gives up DNA samples

What is known for certain is that no Canadian official has checked Mohamud’s story in Toronto with her best friends, neighbours, employer, ex-husband, 12-year-old son or the son’s babysitter, Boulakia said.

AdviceScene

Confessions of an Obamaniac in Canada

Obamania… Mania.. in the House

With the U.S. presidential elections only days away now, it seems we might just have a president that is more popular abroad than he is at home for the first time in many years.

The French are ecstatic, and have high hopes of reverting back to their name for fried shreds of potato.

Other Europeans offer more succinct explanations. Simon Heffer of the Daily Telegraph says,

Many Britons will feel it would be rather nice to have a vote, too. Well, maybe not a whole vote: I would settle for one worth 50 per cent of those cast by American citizens.

Canada is no exception, with “Obamania” sweeping the country. Some Canadian commentators attribute this to an anti-Bush sentiment – frustration with unilateralism and naked self-interests at the rest of the world’s expense.

But Thomas Walkom offers a word of caution,

Which U.S. presidential candidate talks of expanding the war on terror by attacking more countries? If you answered John McCain, you’re wrong. The correct response, of course, is Barack Obama.

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