Not surprised in the slightest. Cops lie all the time on the stand but rarely get caught. Nice to see some charges being laid.
By: Jillian Kestler-D’Amours Staff Reporter, Peter Edwards Star Reporter, Published on Thu Jan 28 2016
Four Toronto police officers have been arrested on charges of obstruction of justice and perjury, Chief Mark Saunders told a news conference this morning.
The officers face a total of 17 charges in relation to a 2014 drug bust, Saunders said.
Const. Jeffrey Tout, Det.-Const. Fraser Douglas, Det.-Const. Benjamin Elliott and Sgt. Michael Taylor are scheduled to appear in court on March 11.
Saunders said a team including members of the force’s professional standards unit and the Crown Attorney’s office has been formed to scrutinize other cases involving the officers “to see if there is any other cause of concern.”
“We will get through this and we will do our best to get the public trust back,” he said.
All four officers have been suspended with pay, Saunders said.
“I don’t have an option. Under the Police Services Act, it has to be that way,” he said.
The charges follow a Superior Court judge’s ruling last September that the officers planted heroin in a man’s car and then “obviously colluded” in their testimony in court.
Tout, Douglas, Elliott and Taylor all presented differing versions of what happened during a traffic stop in January 2014 when Nguyen Son Tran was pulled over for allegedly running a red light near Gerrard St. and Broadview Ave.
The officers said Tran had a pile of loose heroin powder on his dashboard, which led to a search of the car and the discovery of 11 more grams of heroin.
But police could not explain why Tran had loose heroin in the car, or why he didn’t wipe it away when he was pulled over, Justice Edward Morgan wrote in a ruling that threw out the drugs as evidence and stayed the drug charges against Tran.
“There is too much falsehood, and too many unexplained and otherwise unexplainable elements in the police testimony,” Morgan wrote. “I conclude from all this that the loose heroin was placed on the console of the Toyota by the police after their search, and was not left there by the defendant prior to the search.”
Morgan noted “this is obvious collusion and its denial is disturbing.”
Tout, 41, a 17-year veteran of the force, is charged with two counts of obstructing justice and two counts of perjury.
Elliott, 32, has nine years’ service with the force. He is charged with three counts of obstructing justice and three counts of perjury.
Taylor, 34, an 11-year veteran, is charged with two counts of obstructing justice and one count of perjury.
Douglas, 37, has been with the force for 14 years. He is charged with two counts of obstructing justice and two counts of perjury.
Toronto Police Association president Mike McCormack said he was “very troubled and very concerned” by the allegations.
McCormack noted that the allegations are still unproven and the officers are entitled to the presumption of innocence.
“All of our officers take their jobs very seriously. They’re very professional. It does have an impact on the morale and our officers,” McCormack said.
“This has been a very bad week for the members of the Toronto police service,” he added.
Mayor John Tory said he had confidence in Saunders to handle the matter.
“The real measure is how you handle these (issues) and how you deal with these,” Tory told reporters shortly after Saunders’s news conference.
“I have confidence that the men and women still do a great job for us and that he (Saunders) is effectively leading us through these incidents that are difficult.”
http://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2016/01/28/toronto-police-officers-charged-with-obstruction-of-justice-perjury.html