Statements establishing arrest grounds in a Charter voir dire do not require proof of voluntariness.
The defendants were jointly charged with possessing a controlled substance.
During trial, they sought exclusion of heroin found in their vehicle based on alleged violations of their Charter rights (sections 8 and 9).
The central issue was whether police had reasonable grounds to arrest them.
The Crown sought to introduce a statement made by one defendant to police in 2012 during an unrelated investigation as part of the officer's grounds for arrest.
The defence objected, arguing the Crown must first prove the statement was voluntary.
The court ruled that the Crown does not need to prove voluntariness of an accused's statement prior to its admission in a Charter voir dire, following the reasoning in R v Paterson.
R v Endeladze & Jimsheleishvili, 2016 ONCJ 761