Calgary police cellphone surveillance device must remain top secret, judge rules - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 11:10 PM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgary police cellphone surveillance device must remain top secret, judge rules

To protect the Calgary Police Service's investigative techniques, its controversial cellphone surveillance device will remain so secretive not even the make and model can be released to the public, according to a court ruling released Monday.

Alleged gangsters Barakat Amer and Tarek El-Rafie were targets of the cellphone interception tool

A surveillance tool called an MDI device can tap cellphone signals and cull information from kilometres away, without ever being detected by the targeted users. (Francisco Seco/Associated Press)

To protect Calgary policeinvestigative techniques, their controversial cellphone surveillance device will remain so secretive, not even the make and model can be released to the public, according to a court ruling released Monday.

The judge's decision was given to lawyers in August but it took two-and-a-half months for them to agree on redactions, which appear throughout the 17-page decision.

The MDI(Mobile Device Identifier) technology which mimics cell towers and intercepts data from nearby phones is controversial in part because in at least one Canadian case, prosecutors have taken watered down plea deals rather than disclose information related to the device.

BarakatAmerandTarekEl-Rafie were arrested along with five others in 2016 as part of a major police gang investigation called Operation Hybrid.During the investigation, Amer and El-Rafie were the targets of several MDIdeployments.

Earlier this year, lawyersfor the pair who are headed to trial on 17 counts of attempted murder argued they had a right to some evidence related to the device and the deployments.

In this case, investigators said they gained no relevant evidence against the pair so they destroyed all of the data.

Court of Queen's Bench Justice GlenPoelmaninitially agreed with defence lawyers Kelsey Sitar and Clayton Rice and granted them the right toquestion the CPS officer involved in using theMDIregarding its make, model, features and the circumstances that may or may not affect its use.

But after Poelman's first ruling, prosecutor Brian Holtby invoked a section of the Canada Evidence Act that allowed the Crown toargue at an in-camera hearing that disclosing CPS investigative techniques would be contrary to public interest.

Now, Poelmanhas ruledthe police investigative techniques are privileged, and he prohibitedthe release ofthe make, model and software of the MDI as well as "any further information which would have the effect of disclosing the technique by which MDI obtains cellphone identifier information."

Poelman noted in his unsealed decision that according to evidence from Sgt. Scott Campbell, CPS has usedits MDIin 14 investigations and continues to use it.

But the fight isn't over for defence lawyers, who will make further submissions that their clients' rights to a fair trial outweigh the police privilege. If Poelman agrees, and if the police and prosecution refuses to hand over the information, defence lawyers would seek to have the charges against their clients dropped.

36 Quebec chargesstayed

In recent years, RCMP have been so secretive about their use of the devices duringinvestigations thatin certain casesprosecutors have offered extreme plea deals and might have stayed charges rather than disclose information related to thetechnology.

Last year, six Montreal gangsters originally charged with first-degree murderpleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder, and another to accessory after the fact,after the Crown declined todisclose details of the technology to defence lawyers.

In March, Quebec prosecutorsstayed 36 charges against suspected members of the Montreal Mafia. The Crown said that decision was based on "many factors," but the move didraise speculation prosecutors were concerned about evidence gathered using MDI devices that would have to be handed over to defence lawyers.

No other Canadian police agency, including theRCMP, Ontario Provincial Police or Winnipeg police,has disclosed the make and model of their devices.