Solicitor general says Ontario policing law should be enacte

If the drift of Canada towards a police state has not yet affected you directly, you would do well to recall the words of Pastor Martin Niemoller, writing in Germany before his arrest in the 1930s: "The Nazis came for the Communists, and I didn't speak up because I was not a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I was not a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists, and I didn't speak up because I was not a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics and I was a Protestant, so I didn't speak up....by that time there was nobody left to speak up for anyone."

Solicitor general says Ontario policing law should be enacte

Postby Thomas » Sat Apr 08, 2023 7:56 am

Solicitor general says Ontario policing law should be enacted 'as soon as possible'

Law would allow chief to suspend an officer without pay if they're charged with a serious offence

Ontario's solicitor general says he is trying to complete consultations on a four-year-old policing law that hasn't been enacted "as soon as possible" so it can be put into force.

Michael Kerzner was asked in question period Monday about the police services overhaul that has been sitting on the books since 2019 in light of news reports about an Ontario Provincial Police officer suspended for years with pay.

CBC reported Saturday that Leeds County OPP Const. Jason Redmond has been on paid leave since 2015, stemming from a drug trafficking investigation.

Redmond was convicted of drug trafficking in 2018 but received only one year of probation and no jail time.

Then, on Feb. 16, Redmond was found guilty of a sexual assault that took place in December 2017.

The Brockville Recorder & Times was first to report this latest decision.

According to a court transcript obtained by CBC News, the judge on the trial heard Crown witness testimonies saying Redmond had raped the victim because he was "proving a point" that she had a drinking problem, and "he made the video to show that anybody could rape her."

Redmond has collected his OPP salary throughout these events, since his original charge in 2015.

His name was included on the 2021 Ontario Sunshine List, which is published annually by the province and publicly discloses the names of all public sector employees who earned $100,000 or more.

According to the list, Redmond made $121,047.96 that year.

Kerzner said no one convicted of such disturbing crimes should be receiving a taxpayer-funded salary and that's why his government brought in the Community Safety and Policing Act, which allows a police chief to suspend an officer without pay if they're charged with a serious offence.

But the law, despite being passed in 2019, is not yet in force because the government has not drawn up all of the associated regulations, and Kerzner said he has directed the deputy minister to complete discussions about those regulations with police services and unions "as soon as possible."

Currently, suspended officers have to be paid even when convicted of an offence, unless they are sentenced to prison.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/s ... -1.6799958
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Ontario to finally enact law tightening up paid leave for su

Postby Thomas » Sat Apr 08, 2023 7:58 am

Ontario to finally enact law tightening up paid leave for suspended cops

After a provincial police officer who had been on paid leave for almost a decade was convicted of sexual assault, Premier Doug Ford’s government says it's now aiming to enact a law it passed more than four years ago to prevent similar cases.

Less than a year after coming into power in Ontario, the Progressive Conservative government introduced and passed its Comprehensive Ontario Police Services Act, which made sweeping changes to policing law in the province. Parts of the 2019 legislation tabled by then-solicitor general Sylvia Jones have remained unimplemented, including the Community Safety and Policing Act, which will replace the Police Services Act — Ontario’s main policing law — once it's implemented.

One significant change will be allowing police chiefs to suspend officers who are convicted of serious offences.

The previous Liberal government sought to make the same change as part of a larger suite of police reforms in the Safer Ontario Act passed in 2018, but the Progressive Conservatives rolled it back, with Jones calling it "the most anti-police legislation in Canadian history."

“The (solicitor general) ministry’s target is to bring the CSPA into force between fall 2023 to early 2024,” Hunter Kell, a spokesperson for Solicitor General Michael Kerzner, said in a statement sent by email last week.

Kerzner also said in question period on Monday that he’s directed the deputy solicitor general to complete consultations with police services “as soon as possible” so the government can implement the new law quickly.

Ontario’s existing law means that in most cases, police can only be placed on paid leave when they’re charged with a crime. An officer can be suspended without pay once they’re sentenced to jail time.

Last week, Ontario Provincial Police Const. Jason Redmond was found guilty of sexual assault. In 2017, he filmed himself raping an unconscious woman, Ontario Court Justice Janet O’Brien found. He was charged with sexual assault in October 2021, according to the OPP.

Redmond also faces 17 more “serious criminal charges, including assault, aggravated assault, assault with a weapon and others in connection with multiple victims,” the OPP said in a lengthy statement on Thursday.

Redmond has been on paid leave from the OPP since 2015, when he was involved in a drug trafficking operation. He was convicted of drug trafficking and forgery in 2018, but received probation and no jail time.

Redmond’s taxpayer-funded salary paid him $121,047.96 in 2021, Ontario’s Sunshine List shows.

“No one convicted of serious and disturbing crimes like these should be receiving a taxpayer-funded salary,” Kerzner said in question period on Monday, referring to Redmond’s case.

Commissioner Thomas Carrique issued a statement Thursday saying that, after Redmond's 2018 conviction, the OPP’s professional standards unit laid charges against him and he was convicted.

An adjudicator ordered the OPP to fire Redmond, but he appealed that ruling and has remained on paid leave, Carrique’s statement said. The Ontario Civilian Police Commission plans to hear the appeal in June.

The appeal is now the subject of a hearing scheduled for June 15, 2023 before the Ontario Civilian Police Commission.

“We encourage everyone… to not judge all officers by the actions of this specific individual,” the OPP’s statement said.

The opposition critics on policing issues at Queen’s Park each encouraged the government to implement law changes to prevent a situation like Redmond’s from happening again, in light of his conviction.

“The police have an incredibly hard job, and no one’s discounting that… but there’s always a couple bad apples in every bushel and to maintain the quality and the level of confidence in the overall force, these things need to be dealt with,” NDP MPP John Vanthof said.

Liberal MPP Lucille Collard said in an emailed statement that “police occupy positions of authority in society and, as a result, should be held to a higher standard.”

“Officers who have been convicted of a serious offence should not be permitted to retain their position within the police force or continue receiving a publicly funded salary, except maybe in very specific circumstances,” Collard said.

https://www.thoroldtoday.ca/local-news/ ... ps-6804616

https://www.sudbury.com/beyond-local/fo ... ps-6805211
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