OPP officers 'acted lawfully' in Pikangikum arrest that left

When police officers are involved in incidents where someone has been seriously injured, dies or alleges sexual assault, the Special Investigations Unit has the statutory mandate to conduct independent investigations to determine whether a criminal offence took place.

OPP officers 'acted lawfully' in Pikangikum arrest that left

Postby Thomas » Sat Aug 29, 2020 9:05 am

OPP officers 'acted lawfully' in Pikangikum arrest that left man with broken wrist: SIU

Ontario's Special Investigations Unit won't pursue charges against a provincial police officer involved in an arrest that left a 28-year-old man with a broken wrist.

The incident occurred at about 4 a.m. on Feb. 11, when Red Lake OPP officers were dispatched to a residence in Pikangikum, First Nation following a report of a domestic disturbance.

Three officers responded — identified in the investigation as the subject officer, and three witness officers — and were granted entrance by one of the people who lived there.

They found a man in one of the bedrooms, along with three small children, according to the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) report.

Another person at the home told police that no assault had taken place.

The SIU said the officers didn't believe they had the grounds to arrest anyone with assault, but were aware that the complainant was on bail, and one of the conditions was that he stay away from a person who was in the home.

The officers decided to arrest the complainant on that basis and he resisted, the report said.

He grabbed one of his children and raised her in his arms, the report said. Police officers, with help from another female occupant, were able to take custody of the children.

Two officers attempted to take hold of the complainant's arms, but he pulled away, according to the SUI.

The officers forced the complainant down and handcuffed him, the report said. Then, as he was being helped back up to his feet, he spat in the face of one of the witness officers, who struck the complainant in the abdomen with his knee.

Pepper spray used

The SIU said the complainant continued to struggle as the officers escorted him out of the house, and was again brought to the ground and sprayed with pepper spray.

The complainants legs were also shackled, and he was put in the back seat of one of the police cruisers.

The SIU report said a civilian witness gave a different version of events, saying the complainant was "largely passive" during the arrest.

However, the report said, the witness was significantly intoxicated at the time, and many of the claims made conflict with other evidence.

The day after his arrest, the complainant was taken to hospital, where his fractured wrist was diagnosed.

In its investigation, the SIU interviewed and reviewed the notes of the officer who was the subject of the complaint.

Three witness officers were interviewed, and the notes of a fourth reviewed.

Four civilian witnesses were also interviewed, and investigators also interviewed the complainant and reviewed his medical records.

Police 'acted lawfully'

Surveillance video from the Pikangikum detachment, as well as video of a portion of the arrest captured on an iPhone was also reviewed.

In his decision, SIU director Joseph Martino said the evidence was clear the complainant physically resisted arrest, and the subject officer had minimal physical contact with the complainant during the incident.

The officers involved were justified in forcing the complainant to the ground, and in their use of pepper spray.

As for the witness officer who struck the complainant after being spit on, Martino said the force used "was on the cusp of being excessive given the complainant was handcuffed at the time."

However, the complainant's conduct constituted an assault on the officer, and Martino said he is satisfied the officer was within his rights in using the force he did to defend himself.

"In the result, while it is likely that the complainant broke a hand/wrist in the course of the takedowns and grappling that occurred during this arrest, I am satisfied that the involved officers acted lawfully throughout the encounter," Martino said.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/thunder- ... -1.5699284
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OPP committed no crime in arrest of man who suffered a hand

Postby Thomas » Sat Aug 29, 2020 9:07 am

OPP committed no crime in arrest of man who suffered a hand fracture

PIKANGIKUM FIRST NATION, Ont. — The Special Investigations Unit has absolved Ontario Provincial Police of criminal wrongdoing in their arrest of a man at Pikangikum earlier this year.

The individual was intoxicated, and was under a court order not to have contact with a woman who was in the house where he was arrested.

The 28-year-old was diagnosed with a fractured hand/wrist the day after the Feb. 11, 2020 incident.

According to the SIU's report on the case, four officers responding to a reported domestic dispute found themselves in a prolonged struggle after the suspect resisted arrest.

Three small children were present in the home.

When he realized he was about to be taken into custody, the man grabbed one of them and raised her in his arms.

A civilian assisted the officers in taking custody of the children, allowing police to force the man to the ground and apply handcuffs.

As he was being helped to his feet, he spat in the face of an officer, who reacted by delivering a knee to his abdomen.

After the complainant continued to fight against efforts to escort him from the home, flailing his body and kicking his legs, the officers took him to the ground again, leading to a brief struggle in which the man was pepper-sprayed.

The next day, the man was given a temporary cast around a swollen wrist at the Pikangikum nursing station, before being transferred to hospital in Kenora.

SIU investigators used video recordings from various cameras at the Pikangikum OPP detachment, a short iPhone video clip recorded by a civilian in the house, officers' notes and other material during the investigation.

In the SIU director's written analysis of the case, he noted that the complainant suggested his hand had been broken by an officer who "the overriding weight of the evidence established" was not at any point physically engaged with him.

Three other officers did participate in a struggle with the complainant, but the director said he's unable to conclude that any of them used unjustified force.

"The evidence is clear that the Complainant physically resisted arrest, pulling away from the officers, kicking his legs and flailing his body at various times. In the circumstances, the officers were within their rights in forcing the Complainant to the ground...in meeting the Complainant's resistance by wrestling with him and deploying [pepper] spray to subdue and control him," the report states.

The director observed that the officers who were mostly involved in the arrest didn't strike the man at any time.

He said the force used by the officer who kneed him in the abdomen after being spit on "was on the cusp of being excessive given the Complainant was handcuffed at the time," but added that the man had assaulted the officer, "whose reaction was immediate and singular."

"In the circumstances," the SIU director concluded, "I am satisfied that [the officer] was within his rights in using the force he did to defend himself against a reasonably apprehended attack."

He also pointed to the common law's edict that police officers engaged in volatile situations are not expected to measure their responsive force with precision, and that what is required is "reasonable, not exacting, force".

https://www.tbnewswatch.com/local-news/ ... re-2666550
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