Supreme Court of Canada sides with police in internet child luring case
OTTAWA — Undercover police officers do not need to obtain a judicial warrant before using email or instant-message services to communicate with someone suspected of child luring, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.
The high court decision came Thursday in the case of Sean Patrick Mills, a Newfoundland man convicted of internet luring after a police officer posed online as a 14-year-old girl named “Leann.”
The constable created an email account and Facebook page for the fictitious girl in 2012 to see if people online were preying on underage children.