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  3. No system to track, train lying police, lawyer says after another scathing decision

No system to track, train lying police, lawyer says after another scathing decision

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  • H This user is from outside of this forum
    H This user is from outside of this forum
    hellsbelle@sh.itjust.works
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    At 2 a.m. one night in March 2023, two Ottawa police officers pulled into a shopping plaza at the corner of Merivale and Baseline roads to get food at a fast food restaurant when they noticed something strange in the lot: a parked red Subaru, which was running, with someone asleep in the driver’s seat.

    That someone turned out to be a 29-year-old man known to police. And inside the vehicle, Const. Anthony Kiwan and Const. Ali Sabeeh found everything they needed to put him away for a while.

    In plain view on the back seat was a prohibited Glock handgun with a round in the chamber and a prohibited over-capacity magazine capable of holding 30 rounds attached. The officers also found significant quantities of meth, cocaine, crack and Oxycodone pills. And to top it off, on his cellphone were pictures and videos of the man:

    • Posing with 14 handguns, sometimes with multiple guns in the same image, some of which were equipped with prohibited over-capacity magazines.
    • Preparing and packaging what looked like drugs.
    • Flaunting large piles of cash.

    But last month, he walked out of the Ottawa Courthouse a free and innocent man after the trial against him collapsed.

    All the evidence found in the Subaru was excluded because the officers had seriously breached the man’s Charter rights. They’d detained him under the guise of a sham impaired driving investigation, falsified their reports, then continued the lie in court under oath, according to the transcript of a decision read in court last month by Ontario Court Justice Mitch Hoffman.

    Link Preview Image
    No system to track, train lying police, lawyer says after another scathing decision | CBC News

    A man found in a parking lot with drugs and a highly dangerous prohibited handgun and over-capacity magazine has walked free because two Ottawa police officers breached his Charter rights and lied in court about it. His defence lawyer says a system should be created to let officers know when it happens.

    favicon

    CBC (www.cbc.ca)

    H I ikidd@lemmy.worldI 3 Replies Last reply
    10
    • H hellsbelle@sh.itjust.works

      At 2 a.m. one night in March 2023, two Ottawa police officers pulled into a shopping plaza at the corner of Merivale and Baseline roads to get food at a fast food restaurant when they noticed something strange in the lot: a parked red Subaru, which was running, with someone asleep in the driver’s seat.

      That someone turned out to be a 29-year-old man known to police. And inside the vehicle, Const. Anthony Kiwan and Const. Ali Sabeeh found everything they needed to put him away for a while.

      In plain view on the back seat was a prohibited Glock handgun with a round in the chamber and a prohibited over-capacity magazine capable of holding 30 rounds attached. The officers also found significant quantities of meth, cocaine, crack and Oxycodone pills. And to top it off, on his cellphone were pictures and videos of the man:

      • Posing with 14 handguns, sometimes with multiple guns in the same image, some of which were equipped with prohibited over-capacity magazines.
      • Preparing and packaging what looked like drugs.
      • Flaunting large piles of cash.

      But last month, he walked out of the Ottawa Courthouse a free and innocent man after the trial against him collapsed.

      All the evidence found in the Subaru was excluded because the officers had seriously breached the man’s Charter rights. They’d detained him under the guise of a sham impaired driving investigation, falsified their reports, then continued the lie in court under oath, according to the transcript of a decision read in court last month by Ontario Court Justice Mitch Hoffman.

      Link Preview Image
      No system to track, train lying police, lawyer says after another scathing decision | CBC News

      A man found in a parking lot with drugs and a highly dangerous prohibited handgun and over-capacity magazine has walked free because two Ottawa police officers breached his Charter rights and lied in court about it. His defence lawyer says a system should be created to let officers know when it happens.

      favicon

      CBC (www.cbc.ca)

      H This user is from outside of this forum
      H This user is from outside of this forum
      hellsbelle@sh.itjust.works
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      As always, ACAB.

      S 1 Reply Last reply
      6
      • H hellsbelle@sh.itjust.works

        As always, ACAB.

        S This user is from outside of this forum
        S This user is from outside of this forum
        snoons@lemmy.ca
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Or in this case; ACABAAM (All Cops Are Bastards And Absolute Morons).

        Maybe this guy poses a threat to community members (or maybe not, unlikely though), and these dumb-asses decided to arrest him for drunk driving… even though there was a loaded high capacity handgun in the backseat, drugs in plain view and recorded evidence of the guy… fuck he basically handed himself to them on a silver platter and the dumb fucks decided to *bewilderingly checks notes again* …arrest him for drunk driving…

        It’s almost as if they’re so used to fucking people over with bullshit charges they can’t recognize a situation where they don’t have to lie through their piggy teeth to fuck someone over.

        1 Reply Last reply
        6
        • H hellsbelle@sh.itjust.works

          At 2 a.m. one night in March 2023, two Ottawa police officers pulled into a shopping plaza at the corner of Merivale and Baseline roads to get food at a fast food restaurant when they noticed something strange in the lot: a parked red Subaru, which was running, with someone asleep in the driver’s seat.

          That someone turned out to be a 29-year-old man known to police. And inside the vehicle, Const. Anthony Kiwan and Const. Ali Sabeeh found everything they needed to put him away for a while.

          In plain view on the back seat was a prohibited Glock handgun with a round in the chamber and a prohibited over-capacity magazine capable of holding 30 rounds attached. The officers also found significant quantities of meth, cocaine, crack and Oxycodone pills. And to top it off, on his cellphone were pictures and videos of the man:

          • Posing with 14 handguns, sometimes with multiple guns in the same image, some of which were equipped with prohibited over-capacity magazines.
          • Preparing and packaging what looked like drugs.
          • Flaunting large piles of cash.

          But last month, he walked out of the Ottawa Courthouse a free and innocent man after the trial against him collapsed.

          All the evidence found in the Subaru was excluded because the officers had seriously breached the man’s Charter rights. They’d detained him under the guise of a sham impaired driving investigation, falsified their reports, then continued the lie in court under oath, according to the transcript of a decision read in court last month by Ontario Court Justice Mitch Hoffman.

          Link Preview Image
          No system to track, train lying police, lawyer says after another scathing decision | CBC News

          A man found in a parking lot with drugs and a highly dangerous prohibited handgun and over-capacity magazine has walked free because two Ottawa police officers breached his Charter rights and lied in court about it. His defence lawyer says a system should be created to let officers know when it happens.

          favicon

          CBC (www.cbc.ca)

          I This user is from outside of this forum
          I This user is from outside of this forum
          implyingimplications@lemmy.ca
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Honestly, good on the judge for throwing out the case even if the guy was breaking the law. The evidence they collected was done so against the rules and the police officers worked together to lie to the court to hide that fact. Just because officers found evidence of actual crimes doesn’t make it okay to break the rules.

          It was also completely unnecessary. They arrested the guy for impaired driving when they saw he had a gun with an extended mag in the back seat? Why not just arrest him for the gun??

          1 Reply Last reply
          4
          • H hellsbelle@sh.itjust.works

            At 2 a.m. one night in March 2023, two Ottawa police officers pulled into a shopping plaza at the corner of Merivale and Baseline roads to get food at a fast food restaurant when they noticed something strange in the lot: a parked red Subaru, which was running, with someone asleep in the driver’s seat.

            That someone turned out to be a 29-year-old man known to police. And inside the vehicle, Const. Anthony Kiwan and Const. Ali Sabeeh found everything they needed to put him away for a while.

            In plain view on the back seat was a prohibited Glock handgun with a round in the chamber and a prohibited over-capacity magazine capable of holding 30 rounds attached. The officers also found significant quantities of meth, cocaine, crack and Oxycodone pills. And to top it off, on his cellphone were pictures and videos of the man:

            • Posing with 14 handguns, sometimes with multiple guns in the same image, some of which were equipped with prohibited over-capacity magazines.
            • Preparing and packaging what looked like drugs.
            • Flaunting large piles of cash.

            But last month, he walked out of the Ottawa Courthouse a free and innocent man after the trial against him collapsed.

            All the evidence found in the Subaru was excluded because the officers had seriously breached the man’s Charter rights. They’d detained him under the guise of a sham impaired driving investigation, falsified their reports, then continued the lie in court under oath, according to the transcript of a decision read in court last month by Ontario Court Justice Mitch Hoffman.

            Link Preview Image
            No system to track, train lying police, lawyer says after another scathing decision | CBC News

            A man found in a parking lot with drugs and a highly dangerous prohibited handgun and over-capacity magazine has walked free because two Ottawa police officers breached his Charter rights and lied in court about it. His defence lawyer says a system should be created to let officers know when it happens.

            favicon

            CBC (www.cbc.ca)

            ikidd@lemmy.worldI This user is from outside of this forum
            ikidd@lemmy.worldI This user is from outside of this forum
            ikidd@lemmy.world
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            So they lie under oath, it seems like every case that has depended on that in the past with those officers should be tossed out.

            H 1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • ikidd@lemmy.worldI ikidd@lemmy.world

              So they lie under oath, it seems like every case that has depended on that in the past with those officers should be tossed out.

              H This user is from outside of this forum
              H This user is from outside of this forum
              hacksaw@lemmy.ca
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              They should be put away for perjury. Lock them up. Even if we did need cops in our communities, we don’t need cops like THAT!

              ACAB

              1 Reply Last reply
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