Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. police discipline ruling voided because officer overseeing investigation retired

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2024 11:11 AM
  • B.C. police discipline ruling voided because officer overseeing investigation retired

A disciplinary decision against a former Vancouver police sergeant, who was found to have improperly shared degrading messages about a colleague who was sexually assaulted, has been voided after authorities realized the senior officer who oversaw the investigation retired a week before it was issued.

The disciplinary decision must now be reissued, dragging out the victim's pursuit of justice over how she was treated by colleagues in the wake of the 2019 attack.

She called the situation a "screw-up" by the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner, which she said had failed its oversight mission.

Former New Westminster police chief Dave Jansen had been appointed by the office as the discipline authority in the investigation of former sergeant Narinder Dosanjh.

Jansen found Dosanjh committed "discreditable conduct" by sharing "disrespectful" commentary written by someone else about the 2021 court testimony by the woman, whose attacker was fellow Vancouver police officer Jagraj Roger Berar.

While Jansen's finding was issued on Oct. 11, about three weeks before Jansen's retirement on Oct. 31, his separate discipline decision that recommended a written reprimand and additional workplace training was not issued until Nov. 6.

The Canadian Press has obtained a copy of a letter from deputy police complaint commissioner Andrea Spindler dated Nov. 15 that said Jansen's retirement meant it did "not appear that he satisfied the definition of a 'discipline authority'" under the Police Act. 

"As a result, I am of the opinion that Former Chief Constable Jansen had no authority to issue his … decision, and that the decision is a nullity having no legal effect," Spindler's letter says. 

Spindler's letter says there were "good reasons" to extend a deadline to issue a discipline decision "properly." 

The letter says the extension now expires on Dec. 13.

The Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner said in a statement in response to questions about the case that "it would be inaccurate to state that the OPCC nullified any decision."

"In light of the retirement, our office issued an extension in order for the discipline decision to be issued in accordance with the requirements of the Police Act," it said, adding that it would make no further comment on the case.

Berar was convicted of sexual assault in the originating case and sentenced to a year in jail in 2021.

The name of the victim, who was also the complainant in the disciplinary case against Dosanjh, is covered by a publication ban.

She said in an interview that Spindler's letter was a "sad display" of how the commissioner's office runs. 

"The oversight is not this boisterous oversight that the public thinks it is," she said. 

She also said she didn't believe the punishment Jansen originally handed down to Dosanjh was sufficient, and she was now uncertain whether he would be disciplined at all. 

"They have failed as the oversight body for policing. This is their screw-up," she said.

"You would think the people that are enforcing the Police Act rules would have recognized that (Jansen) retired in the middle of all this and now they're providing their own extension for their own mistake in order to figure out what to do, but they don't even have the ability to tell me what it is they're going to do."

Dosanjh was found by Jansen to have improperly shared text messages detailing a "play-by-play" account of court testimony given by the officer who was sexually assaulted by Berar in 2019.

The messages that were originally shared in an unofficial police group chat called the woman a "bad drunk" and said there was "no way" Berar would be convicted.

The woman, who has left the Vancouver Police Department but still works in policing, made a complaint to the commissioner after learning about the texts from a colleague. 

Although her original complaint against a senior Vancouver police officer who she and others believed wrote the texts in the courtroom were not substantiated, Dosanjh was found to have committed discreditable conduct by sharing them. 

Dosanjh told the officer investigating the complaint that he was a "fall guy," and he didn't think the messages were "degrading, humiliating or derogatory."

"I disagree," Jansen wrote in his decision, adding that the running commentary appeared supportive of Berar and reflected "all-too-common myths" about women who make sexual assault allegations.

Jansen found that Dosanjh was a senior officer and aware of the "vulnerability of victims of sexual crimes and of the myths that surround sexual assault victims."

The complainant, along with several other female former municipal police officers, is one of the lead plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit against more than a dozen municipal police forces in British Columbia.

The lawsuit alleges pervasive harassment, bullying and discrimination, including misogynistic comments, unwanted touching and sexual assault. 

The case is in court in Vancouver this week as lawyers for the former officers, the police forces and their respective cities try to map out how the case should proceed since the class of female officers has not been certified. 

Justice Bruce Elwood said in court on Monday that it "might be years from now" before the court deals with certifying the case.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau calls meeting with opposition leaders about Canada-U.S. border plan

Trudeau calls meeting with opposition leaders about Canada-U.S. border plan
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will meet with opposition leaders in his office on Parliament Hill on Tuesday morning to brief them on the government's plan for the Canada-U.S. border.  Trudeau's office said he initiated the meeting after U.S. president-elect Donald Trump threatened punitive tariffs if Canada doesn't do more to stem the passage of people and illegal drugs across the border.

Trudeau calls meeting with opposition leaders about Canada-U.S. border plan

Canada Post strike nears three-week mark amid pressure for government intervention

Canada Post strike nears three-week mark amid pressure for government intervention
The strike by more than 55,000 Canada Post workers entered its 19th day as the Black Friday and Cyber Monday shopping weekend came to a close. Canada Post said Monday it was waiting for the union to respond to a framework it presented over the weekend for reaching negotiated agreements.

Canada Post strike nears three-week mark amid pressure for government intervention

Joly touts 'private' diplomacy as Mexico criticizes Canada's culture, trade

Joly touts 'private' diplomacy as Mexico criticizes Canada's culture, trade
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is not escalating a war of words with Mexico, after the Mexican president criticized Canada's culture and its framing of border issues. The rift between trading partners started with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's declaration that he plans to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all goods from both countries unless they stop the flow of migrants and illegal drugs into the U.S.

Joly touts 'private' diplomacy as Mexico criticizes Canada's culture, trade

Food banks need help, but charity won't end hunger, advocates say

Food banks need help, but charity won't end hunger, advocates say
It's GivingTuesday, and some directors of food banks and anti-poverty groups say the day underlines a conundrum for their organizations. Josh Smee of Food First Newfoundland and Labrador says that on one hand, demand for food banks is surging to historical heights, stretching resources thin and putting these facilities in desperate need of donations.

Food banks need help, but charity won't end hunger, advocates say

Liberal minister says Trump was joking when he suggested Canada become 51st state

Liberal minister says Trump was joking when he suggested Canada become 51st state
President-elect Donald Trump was joking when he suggested Canada become the 51st U.S. state during a dinner with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in Florida on Friday, said a Liberal minister who attended the meeting. Fox News reported on Monday that Trump made the comment in response to the Canadians raising concerns that tariffs would hurt their economy.

Liberal minister says Trump was joking when he suggested Canada become 51st state

Dense fog from high-pressure system creates near-zero visibility in Vancouver area

Dense fog from high-pressure system creates near-zero visibility in Vancouver area
Environment Canada is warning of near-zero visibility in Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley areas of British Columbia as a high-pressure system brings dense fog. The weather agency says the ridge of high pressure over southern parts of the province has created favourable conditions for low clouds and fog.

Dense fog from high-pressure system creates near-zero visibility in Vancouver area

PrevNext