Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Osoyoos, B.C. Woman Acquitted Of Assaulting RCMP Officer

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Dec, 2015 04:41 PM
    PENTICTON, B.C. — A British Columbia woman who claims she was attacked by a Mountie during a traffic stop was acquitted Wednesday in provincial court of assaulting the same officer.
     
    The trial heard that Fiona Galt Munro, 34, was pulled over after driving away from a pub in Osoyoos, B.C., around 2 a.m. on Sept. 28, 2013.
     
    Const. Ian MacNeil testified Munro was combative and tried to walk away from him, so he grabbed her arms and wrists to put her in handcuffs and during the struggle was punched, kicked and elbowed by her.
     
    Munro testified that she distrusted MacNeil because of past dealings with him and his former partner. She claimed he pulled her by her ankles from her car, then dragged her across the pavement to his cruiser.
     
    She said when she got to her feet the officer slammed her head against the hood of his car three times.
     
    Photos entered as exhibits showed Munro with two black eyes and bruising on her arms, wrists and neck.
     
    Judge Roy Dickey said in his reasons for judgment that the woman's bruising and facial injuries show her story was more consistent with the evidence.
     
    "I do believe that much more occurred here than is acknowledged by the officer," he said.
     
    However, he dismissed Munro's claim she was pulled from her vehicle by her ankles.
     
     
    "This simply makes no sense. For the officer to do this, he would have had to have placed himself at significant risk with Ms. Munro. I do not believe this occurred."
     
    Dickey noted that both Munro and another officer at the scene testified she had asked that night that video footage from MacNeil's cruiser be preserved as evidence, although there wasn't actually a camera in the car.
     
    The judge said her request demonstrated she "clearly believed this camera would assist her in what occurred that evening."
     
    Munro said she was relieved the ordeal was over.
     
    "I feel that justice has been served," the emotional Munro told reporters outside the Penticton courthouse. "I'm just glad, because I don't want this to happen to anybody else."
     
    MacNeil and his former partner, Const. Amit Goyal, were the subjects of numerous complaints several years ago that alleged they mistreated some members of the public. Munro was among those who complained.
     
    She said she believes her recent court battle "has helped quite a bit" to do away with what was a "cowboy culture" among some police in the South Okanagan.
     
     
    "I think they're going to be a lot more careful now how they deal with people," said Munro.
     
    Goyal has since been suspended and faces a code of conduct hearing in an unrelated matter, while MacNeil is still on the job in Osoyoos.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

     An evangelical Christian university under fire across the country for forbidding sexual intimacy outside of heterosexual marriage has secured a decisive legal victory in its effort to open a law school in British Columbia.

    B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison
    Ensaf Haidar tells Amnesty International her husband began it on Tuesday to protest the move.

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples
    PARIS — Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has expressed deep concerns about opposition at the international climate conference to what she called a "critically important" issue — the rights of Aboriginal Peoples.

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1
    RCMP say the truck was travelling westbound in an eastbound lane when it collided head-on with a semi-truck just before midnight on Tuesday.

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1

    Sea Otter That Recovered From Gunshot Wounds Dies At Vancouver Aquarium

    Sea Otter That Recovered From Gunshot Wounds Dies At Vancouver Aquarium
    Walter, also affectionately known as Wally, was rescued from a Tofino, B.C., shoreline on Oct. 19, 2013, after locals reported a sea otter that appeared lethargic.

    Sea Otter That Recovered From Gunshot Wounds Dies At Vancouver Aquarium

    Victoria Police Union Distrusts Chief Frank Elsner's Leadership After Text Messages

    Victoria Police Union Distrusts Chief Frank Elsner's Leadership After Text Messages
    Chief Frank Elsner issued a statement earlier this week saying he was sorry and humiliated for exchanging direct messages with a woman on Twitter.

    Victoria Police Union Distrusts Chief Frank Elsner's Leadership After Text Messages