Kyla Lee

Episode 445: Supreme Court Expands Police Power to Enter Private Property

This week, we discuss a major Supreme Court of Canada decision addressing whether police can enter private property to investigate suspected impaired driving.

Episode 445: Supreme Court Expands Police Power to Enter Private Property Read More »

How Body Cam Video Can Help or Hurt Your Traffic Ticket Dispute

A Vancouver taxi driver. A police officer on a motorcycle. A cell phone allegedly spotted in heavy traffic on the Dunsmuir Viaduct. And a body-worn camera that the driver thought would save him.

It didn’t.

The recent BC Supreme Court case of R. v. Sandhu is one of those situations that should be required reading for anyone thinking about fighting a traffic ticket on their own. Not because the driver was wrong, but because of how badly the legal process went for him, even when he had what seemed like compelling evidence.

How Body Cam Video Can Help or Hurt Your Traffic Ticket Dispute Read More »

Episode 444: Police Misleading an Accused About Counsel & New Tracking Warrant Powers

This week, Kyla Lee hosts the podcast solo and discusses a troubling impaired driving case involving police deception about access to counsel, along with proposed legislation that could expand police tracking powers.

Episode 444: Police Misleading an Accused About Counsel & New Tracking Warrant Powers Read More »

Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 389

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: The Chip Guru is Back in the Bag

It’s been a minute since I’ve donned my official Chip Guru hat, but the legal world has been suspiciously salty lately. If you thought the only drama in the chip aisle was whether to pick Ketchup or All-Dressed, think again. From secret cartels to microscopic mold, the courtroom is currently crunchier than a kettle-cooked chip.

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays we look at three stories proving that when it comes to potato chips, the law is never far behind.

Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 389 Read More »

Freedom of Information Request Halted Due to Lack of Interest by Requesting Party

We have all had that one hobby that perhaps got a little bit out of hand. For some, it is sourdough starters; for others, it is collecting vintage Volvos. But for David Eaglestone, a semi-retired businessman from Smithers, his passion project was a bit more bureaucratic: filing an astronomical number of information requests with the Insurance Council of British Columbia.

In the recent case of Eaglestone v. Insurance Council of British Columbia, we get a front-row seat to what happens when a hobbyist’s quest for documents meets a regulatory body’s breaking point, leading the court to finally throw up its hands and say, “enough is enough”.

Freedom of Information Request Halted Due to Lack of Interest by Requesting Party Read More »

Episode 443: Hit-and-Run Insurance, Breath Test Refusals & a Police Cruiser on a Trailer

This week, we discuss a B.C. Court of Appeal decision clarifying what victims must do to identify a hit-and-run driver before claiming compensation from ICBC. We also break down a judicial review involving a roadside breath test refusal and the Immediate Roadside Prohibition system.

Episode 443: Hit-and-Run Insurance, Breath Test Refusals & a Police Cruiser on a Trailer Read More »

Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 388

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Crypto Criminals, Poop Avengers, and the World’s Most Expensive Photograph

Welcome back to Weird and Wacky Wednesdays, where the legal news is stranger than fiction and the criminals are somehow getting dumber yet more ambitious and successful at the same time. This week, we are going full crypto. Not because cryptocurrency is inherently weird (though let’s be honest, it kind of is) but because the people using it apparently never got the memo that “anonymous” does not mean “unstoppable.”

Buckle up.

Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 388 Read More »

My Face is Not a Public Commodity – Clearview AI Loses Legal Challenge

In a digital world where we share photos of our lives daily, a recent landmark court decision in British Columbia has just set a huge legal boundary: just because your photo is online doesn’t mean it’s public property for any company to use.

The British Columbia Court of Appeal recently delivered its judgment in Clearview AI Inc. v. British Columbia (Information and Privacy Commissioner), a case with massive implications for our digital privacy.

My Face is Not a Public Commodity – Clearview AI Loses Legal Challenge Read More »

Episode 442: VPD Training Changes, Traffic Court Appeal & Motorcycle “Reasonable Excuse” Case

This week, we discuss Vancouver’s plan to create its own in-house police training academy, examine a traffic court appeal involving distracted driving and cross-examination fairness, and analyze an Alberta motorcycle case where the rider claimed he couldn’t hear police sirens because he modified his exhaust.

Episode 442: VPD Training Changes, Traffic Court Appeal & Motorcycle “Reasonable Excuse” Case Read More »

Scroll to Top
CALL ME NOW