Re: Charge Withdrawn - Success Story
Decatur wrote:?Most radar units I've dealt with are sent back to the distributor and calibrated on an annual basis or when any repairs are done.
Did any of the radar/lidar units you've dealt with carry stickers showing the name of the calibration lab, the date and the inspector's stamp? Are these radar/lidar units carrying seal stickers with words to the effect of "calibration void if seal broken"? A certified calibration includes affixing stickers so any operator can quickly tell if an instrument can be legally used and seals to ensure the instrument has not been tampered with since last calibration.
While equipment self-tests and operator administered tests (eg via tuning fork tests) are an essential part of any QA scheme, these are no substitute for regular full independent certifiable calibrations. A distributor, particularly of mass-produced electronics, is not usually considered independent. Metrology history proves an operator or vendor can seldom be fully trusted to impartially test a measuring device without significant oversight, which is why there are QA inspectors and independent certified testing/calibration labs.
No matter what company does the testing, the documentation to verify these calibrations and the Standards they trace back to should be readily available in the police detachment offices, as well as at the testing lab.
I am coming to believe no independent certified calibrations are done on any radar/lidar units in use in Ontario, ever. Tuning forks, perhaps, but the actual units? Doubtful.
No document trail, no calibrations can be claimed. Ask any ISO or Industry Canada inspector.
The case law (Canlii search 'radar calibration certification') shows a tortured path used by enforcement and the Crown to avoid producing anything which may cast doubt on the absolute accuracy of any enforcement instrumentation. To the point where the judge in R. v. Robichaud, 2008 NSPC 51 actually ruled that because the police keep no radar repair/calibration records, the defendant cannot ask for them in discovery.
Similarly, in Toronto Police Services Board (Re), 2006 CanLII 50669, "With respect to item 3 of the request, the Police state that the Radar Coordinator provided all the available details for the Radar Unit, being the serial number, make and model and the Radar Units repair history. The Police quote an excerpt from Order MO-1873 in support of their contention that the Traffic Services Unit does not keep any formal calibration log or details on any calibration of the Radar Unit. "
Nice trick.
So given the firm grounding and cogent explanation of real-world calibration that z24guy was obviously prepared to submit, the prosecution chose to dismiss/bury the case rather than risk upsetting decades of carefully managed avoidance regarding speed measuring devices. But blood alcohol machines have no such luxury.
R. v. Schmidt, 1999 CanLII 12394 "[15] In summary, based on all of the foregoing, I conclude that; (1) there is a duty of Crown counsel to make full disclosure; (2) that disclosure is triggered by a request of the defence counsel; (3) it is subject to Crown discretion as to relevancy; (4) the test of relevancy, as set out in Stinchcombe and OConnor, explained and expounded in the unanimous decision of the late Mr. Justice Sopinka in R v. Egger, is that the Crown is justified in withholding disclosure only if it can show that the evidence sought is clearly irrelevant."
How can maintenance/calibration records, or the lack thereof, be irrelevant where the Crown's case rests upon that measuring device? Speed or blood alcohol, should make no difference.