weird and wacky wednesdays

Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 380

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Bad Science Ends in Court

I learned to love science when I started working with a former RCMP toxicologist in my last year of law school. One of the nice things about DUI law is there is a lot of science, and as my career continued, I discovered there is a lot of bad science backing the assumptions police and prosecutors urge upon the courts. Bad science gets published. It gets funded. It gets defended with remarkable confidence. Most of the time, it only collapses when someone starts asking probing questions.

Here are three weird and wacky law stories where science wandered into the legal system and did not enjoy the experience.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 379

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: The market for human body parts

This could have been a topic I covered for Halloween, but a particularly strange legal story appeared just last week in the news. And so here we are, at Christmas, discussing the market for human body parts. Of course, not everybody celebrates Christmas as warm, bright, or celebratory. Some people are tired, and some people are grieving. This week I’m doing something slightly counterintuitive and talking about death and things in packages despite it being Christmas. 

Birth and death are not strange. They are the most banal human experiences because this happens to every one of us. What is unusual is to die and have your body parts become inventory, a good to be traded. This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays, we’re going to look at three recent and connected cases where the law had to step in because people were selling body parts. 

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 378

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: When Judges Forget They Are Judges

Judges hold enormous power. They control courtrooms, decide liberty, and are trusted to follow rules even when no one is watching. Most do. Some forget where the line is. This week’s stories share a common theme: judges who appeared to forget that wearing a robe does not turn you into a dispatcher, a police officer, or someone above the criminal law.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 377

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Who Gets the Pets When Love Ends

I love my dog. Wrigley has been my companion, my friend, my protector and when I’m down, my primary emotional support. He has given me so much, and we have a deep emotional bond. Sadly, he’s very old now. He can’t hear. He pees on my kitchen floor. But we still enjoy our time together, he enjoys being with me and I love him so.

One can understand the emotional bond people have with their pets. Certainly few people think of their pets as a possession but more akin to an important person in their life. Years ago, in a relationship split, I ended up with Wrigley, and my ex ended up with our other dog. We didn’t go to court; it just seemed like a sensible way. Nevertheless, I found it hard, and I think of my other older companion very often to this day.

When relationships end, property gets divided. People often think of pets as family. The law does not always share that view. Courts are generally not interested in feelings or bonds people have with their pets, although there seems to be an increasing recognition that this should be considered. This week, we look at four weird and wacky cases that show how messy it gets when the law meets the emotional lives of people and their animals.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 376

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Lottery Law Edition

I’d like to win a big lottery prize. Who wouldn’t? There have been two distillery owners who won big in Canadian lotteries, and I think I should be next. The odds aren’t good, however. But it appears the odds are good that with any winning ticket there will be some legal drama.

A winning ticket can bring out the best in people, although recent news stories about lottery wins suggest the opposite. Here are three recent cases that prove a lottery win may bring big legal headaches.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 375

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Under Age and Over the Line

Often, I give presentations at high schools, and I’m always presenting about the law. I feel somewhat conflicted in some respects. I think perhaps I should speak about the perils of drinking, the dangers of underage alcohol consumption, or the risks associated with alcoholism. Then again, I would feel like a bit of a hypocrite because firstly, I’m part owner of a distillery and, even though I drank quite a bit when I was young, I’ve succeeded in many of my endeavors in life.

Then this article showed up in my feed suggesting that people who are binge drinkers when they’re young are often more successful later in life. That threw a wrench into the works. This week on weird and wacky Wednesdays, we’re looking at a few stories where youthful drinking got people in hot water and my hope is to reconcile my feelings.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 372

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Playoff Loopholes and the Law of the Game

This week the World Series is reminding everyone how creative competitive minds can be. When the pressure is on, players and coaches look not just for skill advantages but for rule advantages. Baseball, like law, evolves by closing loopholes that someone clever exploited first.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 371

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Funny costume edition

Howdy folks! Buckle up, because today we’ve got three criminals who clearly skipped the normal planning step and just went straight to costume-and-crowbar. Costume season approaching, it seems like the appropriate time to discuss playing dress up. Here’s what’s said to have went down in these cases.

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Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: Volume 370

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays: When the Booze is Busted

This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesdays we have four legal stories from around the world reminding us there are always people try to skirt the system. What you may not know about me is that I am one of the owners of a distillery. While B.C. is in the middle of a liquor shortage due to government union job action, I thought it was important to remind people that you are not permitted to make or sell spirits without a license and all that goes with it. The only way to purchase spirits is from private liquor stores or directly from a distillery like ours at Deep Blue Distilleries. Vodka has been flying off the shelves these past few weeks. Inevitably someone will see this as an opportunity to make and sell illegal alcohol but I’m warning you now, bootleggers always get caught.

The Fake Label Factory – Athens, Greece

Greek police smashed a full-blown counterfeit alcohol ring earlier this year. Seventeen people were arrested and more than 2,000 litres of unlawful booze seized, along with thousands of fake labels, empty bottles, and firearms. The gang had everything set up to make their fakes look like the real deal.

The Backyard Brewery – Thane, India

In Ambernath, outside Mumbai, crime branch officers raided an illegal distillery that looked like something out of a movie set. A 24-year-old man was detained, and authorities seized 105 litres of liquor, nearly 900 litres of fermenting wash, and literally tonnes of raw material.

The Eatery Front – Kharar, India

In Mohali district, the police discovered that one local restaurant wasn’t just serving food. The owner had turned his eatery into a cover for illegal booze sales, stocking a wide selection of liquor and beer to sell out the back. The haul included 67 bottles of spirits, 112 beer bottles, 40 cans, and 35 ready-to-drink nips. A dinner special it wasn’t.

The After-Hours Club – Vancouver, Canada

Closer to home, police recently raided an unlicensed after-hours nightclub in Vancouver’s Davie Village, seizing liquor and other contraband. The B.C. government has gone so far as to target the owner’s home for forfeiture. It’s a stark reminder that in this province, getting caught selling outside the system comes with heavy consequences.

The Takeaway

In B.C., you don’t need to sneak around to buy spirits. But you may need to line up at a private store or stop by a distillery. At Deep Blue Distilleries, we sell superior vodka, legally, and by the case. When the shelves are empty elsewhere, it’s the perfect time to pour on the Charm or pick up a bottle of Fighter.

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