Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Delta B.C. Officer Wins Review After Ticketing Drivers For Offences That Didn’t Happen

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jul, 2018 12:41 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Delta, B.C., police officer who ticketed drivers for offences that didn't happen has won a review of the suspension and demotion proposed by the province's police complaint commissioner.
     
     
    Const. Byron Ritchie was seeking a public hearing after a misconduct hearing upheld 11 allegations of deceit committed under the Police Act, in 2016.
     
     
    Ritchie was seconded that year to the Greater Vancouver Integrated Road Safety Unit when a driver complained she had been pulled over while on her cellphone, but had instead been ticketed for not having insurance and not wearing a seatbelt.
     
     
    Documents from the complaint commission investigation show the driver had proper insurance papers and was wearing a seatbelt but Ritchie told her she was "getting a break" because the combined fines for the offences were less than a ticket for distracted driving.
     
     
    An investigation ordered by the complaint commission uncovered 10 similar incidents, but after learning of his demotion and other penalties, Ritchie requested a public hearing, arguing findings of fact made by the commissioner weren't supported by the final investigation report.
     
     
    Complaint commissioner Stan Lowe says a public hearing is not required to restore public confidence in the misconduct probe but retired provincial court judge James Threlfall has been appointed to review the record and make a final decision about any discipline.
     
     
    If Threlfall supports Lowe's decision, Ritchie would face demotion from first class to second class constable for 12 months and would also be suspended without pay for 22 days — two days for each of the 11 offences — and be required to work under close supervision for a year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lions Gate Bridge Closed In Both Directions Due To Police Incident

    Lions Gate Bridge Closed In Both Directions Due To Police Incident
    Drivers and riders are advised to expect significant delays and use other routes until the bridge reopens

    Lions Gate Bridge Closed In Both Directions Due To Police Incident

    Watch: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW With Legendary Sufi Singer SATINDER SARTAAJ

    Watch: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW With Legendary Sufi Singer SATINDER SARTAAJ
    The ace Singer and renowned actor Sufi King Satinder Sartaaj speaks to DARPAN Magazine host Mandeep Patrola-Rai about his upcoming concert in Vancouver and sings a tune from his latest ALBUM Seasons of Sartaaj.

    Watch: EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW With Legendary Sufi Singer SATINDER SARTAAJ

    Extremely Privilege Justin Trudeau Sets The Standards For Others, But Doesn't Follow Them Himself

     "If I knew that you were a reporter of a national newspaper, I wouldn't have been so forward." Sounds like sexual harassment.

    Extremely Privilege Justin Trudeau Sets The Standards For Others, But Doesn't Follow Them Himself

    It Was My Dream To Beat Top Ranking Players: Manika Batra

    It Was My Dream To Beat Top Ranking Players: Manika Batra
    India's star tennis player, Manika Batra's life has changed forever after she defeated world number four, Feng Tianwei as well as Zhou Yihan, in the finals of the Commonwealth Games this year. 

    It Was My Dream To Beat Top Ranking Players: Manika Batra

    Transport Canada To Make Seatbelts Mandatory On New Highway Buses By 2020

    Transport Canada To Make Seatbelts Mandatory On New Highway Buses By 2020
    The federal department says they will make seatbelts mandatory on medium and large highway buses starting Sept. 1, 2020.

    Transport Canada To Make Seatbelts Mandatory On New Highway Buses By 2020

    Justin Trudeau Insists Canada Spending Enough On Defence, As Trump Declares Victory At NATO

    At a news conference wrapping up the two-day NATO summit in Brussels, Trudeau was pressed to provide more details about the U.S. president's sudden insistence that allies have agreed to spend more — and to do it more quickly.

    Justin Trudeau Insists Canada Spending Enough On Defence, As Trump Declares Victory At NATO

    PrevNext