Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Judge Sentences Two Men Who Attacked RCMP Officer To House Arrest

The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2017 09:26 PM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — Two men who attacked a Mountie during a traffic stop and left him unconscious on the side of a rural road near Pritchard, B.C., won't be going to jail.
     
    Despite calling Leon Leclerc and Jerry Lamar "cowardly bullies flexing their muscles as back-alley thugs," B.C. Supreme Court Justice Dev Dley placed both men on house arrest Friday.
     
    A vehicle being driven by Lamar, 52, was stopped by RCMP Const. Paul Koester on July 5, 2014.
     
    Court heard Koester suspected Lamar had been drinking and launched an impaired driving investigation.
     
    Dash-cam footage of their exchange was played in court and it showed Lamar becoming increasingly aggressive.
     
    Leclerc, 47, was a passenger in Lamar's truck and could be seen in the video menacing Koester from a distance.
     
     
    Lamar eventually tried to leave, at which point Koester deployed pepper spray and the two men began fighting on the ground.
     
    Leclerc jumped into the altercation and stomped on Koester's head, causing the officer to lose consciousness.
     
    Lamar and Leclerc drove off and about 20 seconds later, Koester began moaning. Eventually a passerby stopped and tended to the injured Mountie.
     
    The Crown had been seeking jail terms of up to 18 months.
     
    The judge instead placed the men on restrictive house arrest terms, 18 months for Leclerc and 15 months for Lamar.
     
    Lamar and Leclerc will also be barred from drinking or entering bars or liquor stores for four years, and both will be required to provide a sample of their DNA to a national criminal database.
     
    Court heard Lamar, who lives in Pritchard, owns and operates a Kamloops masonry company while Leclerc owns two businesses and lives in a rural area near Falkland.
     
    In 2005, Koester shot and killed Ian Bush in an RCMP detachment after arresting the 22-year-old outside a hockey rink in Houston, B.C.
     
    Later inquiries cleared Koester and determined he was entitled to use lethal force given the circumstances of the situation.
     
    Koester was in court on Friday for the sentencing hearing, flanked by four other RCMP officers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Foreign Investor Selected As Business Newsmaker Of The Year

    Foreign Investor Selected As Business Newsmaker Of The Year
    A nameless, faceless figure at the heart of the controversy surrounding soaring real estate prices has been named The Canadian Press business newsmaker of the year.

    Foreign Investor Selected As Business Newsmaker Of The Year

    Red Light Texting Still A Problem In Canada, Says CAA

    Red Light Texting Still A Problem In Canada, Says CAA
    OTTAWA — Some 33 per cent of Canadians who participated in a recent poll conducted by the Canadian Automobile Association admit they have texted while stopped at a red light in the last month.

    Red Light Texting Still A Problem In Canada, Says CAA

    'Rainbow Lobster' Leads Social Media Contest For Craziest Crustacean

    'Rainbow Lobster' Leads Social Media Contest For Craziest Crustacean
    Social media users are casting their "likes" for photos of exotic lobsters in an online contest that has a multitude of multicoloured, oversized and extra-limbed critters clawing to be crowned the craziest crustacean.

    'Rainbow Lobster' Leads Social Media Contest For Craziest Crustacean

    Rich Coleman Says Tent Cities Need Faster Shut Down Responses To Prevent Growth

    Rich Coleman Says Tent Cities Need Faster Shut Down Responses To Prevent Growth
    VICTORIA — B.C. Housing Minister Rich Coleman says he learned valuable lessons from the government's handling of a homeless camp on the lawn at Victoria's courthouse, and one of those lessons is acting more quickly to provide housing for people who are looking for it. 

    Rich Coleman Says Tent Cities Need Faster Shut Down Responses To Prevent Growth

    'It Just Shocks Me:' Calgary Police Chief Wants Action On Opioid Crisis

    'It Just Shocks Me:' Calgary Police Chief Wants Action On Opioid Crisis
    Calgary's police chief says the Alberta government has to take more aggressive action on fentanyl if it wants to help addicts and families who are being destroyed.

    'It Just Shocks Me:' Calgary Police Chief Wants Action On Opioid Crisis

    Prescription Opioid Use Grew In B.C. Ahead Of Overdose Crisis: Study

    The number of people using prescription opioids long-term in British Columbia was growing at a "silent but steady" rate for years before the current overdose crisis erupted, a new study has found.

    Prescription Opioid Use Grew In B.C. Ahead Of Overdose Crisis: Study