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Posted
1 hour ago, J5V said:

The dog did his job correctly. The question is, did the agents? All it takes is a technicality.

The dog definitely did it's job, which gave the agent the information required for the search.

So I think that in the spectrum of procedural defences, that one is going to be tough.

Posted
21 hours ago, bigg jay said:

They'll have a hard time saying they didn't notice any of this in the car...

 

The offensive lineman might of thought the duffel bag was lunch. You know so it coulda maybe been an accident.

Posted
48 minutes ago, Geebrr said:

Farhan always under reports Lion salaries.

Grain of salt.

Whenever Farhan says a team is not out of the mix....they are out of the mix.

Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, Geebrr said:

Again, the dog whose sole job is to identify the presence of drugs doing alerting an agent seems like more than enough probable cause to search the vehicle without consent. 

I don't get the procedural error. Why have the dog at all?

The dog sniffing for drugs is IN OF ITSELF considered a search so the police can't use the dog alerting as probable cause for making a search.

I.E. police can't walk up and down streets with a drug sniffing dog and when the dog alerts at a house, use that alert as probable cause for obtaining a warrant to search the house for drugs.

It's a little less clear with dogs alerting during routine traffic stops - IF a driver has committed some other driving offense AND the dog alerts while the officer is dealing with that offense then the search for drugs is OK.  Checkpoints further complicate the question, from what I understand at checkpoints police need to have pre-determined that they will pull over every nth car (every 2nd car, 5th car, 10th car, etc) to check for whatever the checkpoint is there to check for.  They can't actually change their rules for the checkpoint mid-stream.

So the border agent whose dog alerted him OUTSIDE of the checkpoint might not actually have the right to tell the checkpoint to do a further search because his dog alerting outside of the checkpoint is actually an illegal search by the dog.

 

Edited by BomberfanMKS
Posted
4 minutes ago, BomberfanMKS said:

So the border agent whose dog alerted him OUTSIDE of the checkpoint might not actually have the right to tell the checkpoint to do a further search because his dog alerting outside of the checkpoint is actually an illegal search by the dog.

That's the sort of technicality a good lawyer is going to exploit in favour of his client and I'm sure Mr. Robinson will be able to afford a good lawyer.

Posted
4 minutes ago, JCon said:

Farhan's reporting that they're paying Holley in Save-On gift cards and Subway coupons, so they may still be able to fit Walker in. We'll see how this develops. 

His contract includes transportation compensation in the form of a Vancouver Transit bus pass.

Posted
12 minutes ago, JCon said:

Farhan's reporting that they're paying Holley in Save-On gift cards and Subway coupons, so they may still be able to fit Walker in. We'll see how this develops. 

Farhan has been reporting BC may be able to fit in walker before the cfl was created.

Posted
2 hours ago, J5V said:

The dog did his job correctly. The question is, did the agents? All it takes is a technicality.

Actually, there have been several cases in the US where it was proven in court that the dog handler had trained the dog to respond to a covert signal from the handler and react as if the dog had actually detected drugs. With that amount of ganja, it wouldn't take much for even a comatose dog to detect it.

Posted
Just now, Tracker said:

Actually, there have been several cases in the US where it was proven in court that the dog handler had trained the dog to respond to a covert signal from the handler and react as if the dog had actually detected drugs. With that amount of ganja, it wouldn't take much for even a comatose dog to detect it.

My buddy's dog ate a large quantity of his black hash once. Talk about a comatose dog.

 

Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, BomberfanMKS said:

The dog sniffing for drugs is IN OF ITSELF considered a search so the police can't use the dog alerting as probable cause for making a search.

I.E. police can't walk up and down streets with a drug sniffing dog and when the dog alerts at a house, use that alert as probable cause for obtaining a warrant to search the house for drugs.

It's a little less clear with dogs alerting during routine traffic stops - IF a driver has committed some other driving offense AND the dog alerts while the officer is dealing with that offense then the search for drugs is OK.  Checkpoints further complicate the question, from what I understand at checkpoints police need to have pre-determined that they will pull over every nth car (every 2nd car, 5th car, 10th car, etc) to check for whatever the checkpoint is there to check for.  They can't actually change their rules for the checkpoint mid-stream.

So the border agent whose dog alerted him OUTSIDE of the checkpoint might not actually have the right to tell the checkpoint to do a further search because his dog alerting outside of the checkpoint is actually an illegal search by the dog.

 

We are making some pretty big assumptions here. Until some actual informatiomation comes out staring otherwise, safe to assume the dog was being used in an authorized/legal way. 

I havent seen any actual report stating the dog was used outside of  what it is legally intended for as of yet. 

Cops are pretty aware of what the procedure is to follow, particularly special units.

 

Edited by Geebrr

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