Close X
Sunday, November 10, 2024
ADVT 
National

Crown Calls Toronto Cop Who Killed Teen On Streetcar 'A Hothead And A Bully'

The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 12:19 PM
    TORONTO — A Toronto police officer was "a hothead and a bully" when he shot down a teen on an empty streetcar, a Crown prosecutor argued Thursday as he tried to convince a jury the man had viable alternatives to lethal force but didn't use them.
     
    Const. James Forcillo has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder and attempted murder in the death of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim — an incident which triggered outrage across the city two and a half years ago.
     
    As the trial draws to a close, Crown prosecutor Milan Rupic told jurors Forcillo wanted to assert his authority over a "mouthy, mocking teenager" without trying to make a connection with a person he knew was in crisis.
     
    "During his standoff with Sammy Yatim the defendant was a hothead and a bully," Rupic said in his closing address. "He wore the uniform of a police officer but he did not act like a police officer."
     
    Forcillo's lawyer has argued in his own closing statement that the Crown is trying to "criminalize a judgement call" made by a first responder.
     
    In calling for Forcillo's acquittal, defence lawyer Peter Brauti has said the officer's actions were justified and carried out in self-defence.
     
    He has also placed blame for the incident squarely on Yatim's shoulders, saying the knife-toting, unco-operative teen "got himself shot."
     
    But Rupic attacked that suggestion head on.
     
    "It is wrong to say Sammy Yatim got himself shot," said Rupic. "It was not necessary and it was not reasonable for the defendant Forcillo to shoot the young man."
     
    The jury has heard that on a night in July 2013, Yatim had taken the drug ecstasy before boarding a streetcar where he exposed himself and pulled out a small knife, sparking a panicked mass exodus after the vehicle came to a stop.
     
    Surveillance video and audio played at the trial have shown that Forcillo arrived on scene and screamed repeatedly at Yatim, who remained on the streetcar, to "drop the knife."
     
    Yatim refused and hurled expletives at Forcillo and an increasing amount of other officers. The confrontation escalated when the teen took a few steps back from his position at the top of the streetcar's front steps.
     
    Forcillo warned the teen he'd shoot if the youth took another step forward. He has testified he then saw Yatim flick his knife towards him before moving back towards the spot he had been in before.
     
    Forcillo then fires nine bullets at Yatim in two separate volleys. The teen collapses immediately. The entire standoff lasted about 50 seconds.
     
     
    "The defendant shot Sammy Yatim not because he posed any real threat to anyone, but rather because Yatim simply moved 50 centimetres and failed to obey the ultimatum," said Rupic, noting that the teen had not lunged or charged towards Forcillo.
     
    Rupic reminded the jury that Forcillo testified he had been "trained to win the situation," and suggested the officer's thinking was wrong.
     
    "I don't know where the defendant got his idea of winning from but in Canada police officers are not authorized to adhere to the folklore of the police locker-room," Rupic said, calling Forcillo's phrase a "juvenile, macho slogan."
     
    Forcillo didn't follow his police training, contrary to what he has told the court, because he didn't engage in sufficient de-escalation, nor did he properly consider other use-of-force alternatives, Rupic said.
     
    Forcillo also did not make use of his most valuable asset — time, Rupic said.
     
    Yatim's behaviour that night was "appalling," Rupic conceded, but the youth had not been in a frenzy and did not exhibit signs he wanted to "fight to the end," as Forcillo suggested.
     
    "It was the defendant who turned up the temperature on the scene," Rupic said, reminding the jury that Forcillo used profanity in his commands.
     
    "The defendant was motivated not by his training, but by a bad feeling against Sammy Yatim that resulted from Yatim's mocking and contemptuous challenge to his authority."
     
    Rupic also accused Forcillo's lawyer of attempt to "distract" the jury by calling emotional testimony from a woman on the streetcar who was sitting near Yatim when he swiped his knife towards her.
     
    "The defendant simply did not know anything about what happened at the rear of the streetcar, and it therefore did not affect his decision to shoot."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Fighter Jets In The Middle East Kept Busy At The Start Of 2016

    Canadian Fighter Jets In The Middle East Kept Busy At The Start Of 2016
    The Canadian Forces says two CF-18 Hornets took to the skies on New Year's Day to attack ISIL fighting positions in Ramadi in support of Iraqi security forces.

    Canadian Fighter Jets In The Middle East Kept Busy At The Start Of 2016

    Climate Change Affecting Vital Winter Roads For First Nations: Leaders

    Climate Change Affecting Vital Winter Roads For First Nations: Leaders
    Isadore Day, the Ontario regional chief for the Assembly of First Nations, said the reliability of the northern winter road network is in jeopardy in his province.

    Climate Change Affecting Vital Winter Roads For First Nations: Leaders

    Australian Tourist Dies In Whistler After Snowmobile Hits Tree

    Australian Tourist Dies In Whistler After Snowmobile Hits Tree
    Canadian Wilderness Adventures has issued a statement saying the 65-year-old man was going down Blackcomb Mountain on a tour when he hit a tree around 11 p.m. Friday.

    Australian Tourist Dies In Whistler After Snowmobile Hits Tree

    PVC Pipes To Digging, Heroin Smuggling Continues Across India-Pakistan Border

    PVC Pipes To Digging, Heroin Smuggling Continues Across India-Pakistan Border
    Using PVC pipes, digging through the earth or just throwing consignments over the barbed wire fence are some of the methods used by smugglers from Pakistan to push heroin consignments into India.

    PVC Pipes To Digging, Heroin Smuggling Continues Across India-Pakistan Border

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift
    A mishap on a chair lift at a Saskatchewan ski hill left a seven-year-old dangling from the restraining bar by her helmet.

    Girl Drops Into Net After Dangling By Helmet From Ski Hill's Chair Lift

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole
    Saad Gaya, now 28, is serving time after pleading guilty to participating in a plot to bomb three Toronto targets, including the Toronto Stock Exchange, in protest of Canada's military involvement in Afghanistan.

    Saad Gaya, Member Of The So-called 'Toronto 18,' Granted Day Parole