Re: If A Cop Claims That Your Speed Was 84 Km/hr In 60 Zone
You need focus on the essential elements the crown needs to prove in order to get a speeding conviction.
For an Ontario Speeding Ticket, the only disclosure items you need to ask are in the sample form here: http://www.ontariohighwaytrafficact.com/topic2959.html
* A full copy of the officer's notes, typed if not legible;
* If short-form writing is used in the officer's notes, please have the officer provide an explanation for the short forms;
* A copy of the manual for the speed-measuring device used by the officer
They most likely won't even give you a copy of the manual, only the testing pages. The other items you've requested will require a Freedom of Information Request, which may cost you hundreds of dollars. Solely because the crown does not have those other items in their possession, and most importantly do need them in order to get a speeding conviction.
You need to read decisions on CanLII, LexisNexis and look at recent and case-law decisions on Speeding. The creativity you're displaying here means absolutely nothing. Everyone from the prosecutor, officer, justice of peace and even the court reporter are seasoned professionals with speeding trials.
R. v. Vancrey, 2000 CanLII 26961 (ON CA)
R. v. Niewiadomski [2004] O.J. No. 478
R. v. Roshani-Kalkhoran [2005] O.J. No. 238
R. v. Hayes [2005] O.J. No. 5057
R. v. Schlesinger [2007] O.J. No. 2365
R. v. Lounsbury [1993] M.J. No. 510
R. v. Puncher [2007] O.J. No. 2510
R. v. Kololgi [2009] O.J. No. 5742
R. v. Martin [2008] O.J. No. 1803
R. v. Meli [2011] O.J. No. 5314
Peel Regional Police Services Board (Re), 2008 CanLII 1829 (ON IPC)Recent Cases
R. v. Isik [2014] O.J. No. 1604
Mangov v. Toronto (City) [2014] O.J. No. 3477
R. v. Giorgio [2014] O.J. No. 3827
York (Regional Municipality) v. Chair [2014] O.J. No. 5599
R. v. Strati [2014] O.J. No. 1413
R. v. Xu [2012] O.J. No. 2074
R. v. DePoe [2012] O.J. No. 2751
R. v. Priolo [2012] O.J. No. 4024
R. v. Gagetek [2012] O.J. No. 4723
R. v. Raina [2013] O.J. No. 2562
If you're serious about fighting this on your own, I recommend reading these.
The prosecutor only needs to prove these essential elements
*Officer is trained in the use of the speed measuring device
*Officer tested the device before and after your traffic stop and is in proper working order
*Officer stopped your vehicle and identified you correctly
And unfortunately items one and two will only be available during cross-examination. Officer may not go into detail in his notes how he tests the device before and after his shift. You'll have to elicit that information through cross-examination. If you're showing up at trial, item 3 is of no contest.
The recent cases have not changed the law; but you'll see a pattern of what the crown needed to secure a conviction. You will see how the crown does not need to disclose: officer copy, sworn signatures of authorization, typed version if the handwritten is legible, training records, occurence report, video, full owner's manual (you only need testing pages), repair history, records of calibration, official procedure, traffic stop procedure.
These extra items will require an expensive Freedom of Information Request at the police department, which will get denied and you'll have to go through mediation and appeals and ultimately the information won't help you at your speeding trial.
These are not essential elements that the crown needs to prove in order to get a speeding conviction. They don't have these extra items in their possession and you'll have to move mountains in order to convince the police service board you need them.
The courts don't really care about colour, dark blue, black, brown. It's all the same. Obviously if it's white vs. black then you have something. But you will have to expand on this somehow. The officer allegedly pointed his laser device at your vehicle, and stopped it without losing sight of the vehicle. The fact that he doesn't recall the exact colour or number of doors after he stopped you... does not throw out his other evidence.
There's an expectation from the police and the courts of how much notes they need to take. If it's a DUI/Criminal Charge they may take a notebook worth of evidence, especially if it involved a collision with multiple victims/witnesses. For speeding, a page or two is more than enough.