Vancouver Police Officers Cst. Jarrod Sidhu is charged w/1 count of assault with a weapon. Cst. Jagpreet Ghuman is charged w/1 count of assault.
The 24-year-old former University of British Columbia football player Jamiel Moore-Williams filed a civil lawsuit months after the arrest, alleging that an officer stopped him for jaywalking in the city's entertainment district, then three other officers "converged" on him, kicking and hitting him.
He says he was jolted seven to 14 times with a stun gun.
None of the allegations in the criminal case or civil lawsuit have been tested in court.
The BC Prosecution Service announced today that charges have been approved against two Vancouver Police Department officers in connection with their involvement in an arrest that occurred in the downtown area of Vancouver on February 11, 2018 #BCPS #VPD pic.twitter.com/wVStfGbeZX
— BCProsecutionService (@BCProsecution) December 8, 2020
The City of Vancouver filed a response to the civil lawsuit denying all claims, saying in August 2018 that an RCMP criminal investigation had been launched in the alleged assault.
In a statement of claim, Moore-Williams alleges that the police asked for his identification because of his size and skin colour for an improper purpose contrary to his civil liberties.
"The fact the plaintiff stepped out on the road against the light became a convenient excuse to detain the plaintiff and request his identification," it says.
Moore-Williams works in Vancouver as a personal trainer and his statement of claim said he had a concussion and injuries to his arms, neck and back allegedly as a result of the arrest.
The lawsuit says he was placed in handcuffs and shackles. It asks for damages for humiliation, embarrassment, loss of dignity, pain, permanent injury and mental anguish.
Lawyer Donna Turko says her client's lawsuit is ongoing and he has also filed a complaint with the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal alleging he was treated unfairly because he is Black.
Moore-Williams says he hopes speaking out will lead to changes for others who look like him.
"It's not about me, per se. What hurts is when people in your family call your phone, or your friends … and they’re hurt by what happened to you," he said in an interview on Tuesday.
The Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner said Tuesday the RCMP completed its investigation but didn't refer the matter to the prosecution service for consideration of criminal charges.
The commissioner said in a statement that after reviewing the RCMP investigation, it considered that one or more officers may have committed criminal offences and referred the matter directly to the B.C. Prosecution Service for consideration of charges.
The office says a disciplinary conduct investigation under the Police Act will take place, but it is suspended pending the outcome of the criminal charges.
Both officers are due in court January 14th, 2021. According to the VPD, both police officers charged with assault are still working even though the matter is before the courts. A Go Fund Me page has been set for Moore-Williams. The organizer of the Go Fund Me page says that Moore Williams is a Black man and this could be a case of police brutality.
Photo courtesy of Go Fund Me.