Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Toronto cop challenges assault conviction

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2020 08:56 PM
  • Toronto cop challenges assault conviction

Lawyers for a Toronto police officer who was found guilty of assault in the beating of a young Black man are asking the court to throw out the conviction.

The legal team representing Const. Michael Theriault has filed an application to vacate the verdict, arguing the conviction for assault was not available to the court.

Theriault and his brother, Christian Theriault, were charged with aggravated assault and obstruction of justice in relation to a December 2016 incident that left Dafonte Miller with a ruptured eye and other serious injuries.

In a ruling delivered in June, Ontario Superior Court Justice Joseph Di Luca said he could not rule out the possibility that self-defence played a role in the early portion of the encounter.

It was during that period that Miller sustained the eye injury that warranted the aggravated assault charge, he said.

However, Di Luca said the self-defence argument collapsed when Theriault later armed himself with a roughly metre-long pipe and hit Miller in the head as the then-19-year-old was retreating.

As a result, Theriault was acquitted of aggravated assault but convicted of the lesser charge of assault.

The officer was also acquitted on the obstruction of justice charge, and his brother was cleared on all counts.

Theriault's lawyers argue in court documents that assault was not listed as an option on the indictment and should not have been available for a guilty verdict.

Theriault was "never on notice" that he was being tried for "assaultive conduct" not connected to the eye injury, the document says.

"Given that there was no jurisdiction on this indictment to find the applicant guilty of an assault that was not charged and was not included in the counts on the indictment, it is appropriate for the court to grant this application and vacate the finding of guilt," the application states.

The Crown is also challenging the verdict, which was delivered amid ongoing protests against systemic racism and calls to defund the police.

In a notice of appeal filed late last month, prosecutors allege Di Luca "erred in his analysis and assessment of the defence of self-defence."

The case sparked multiple demonstrations, and many have denounced the ruling as further proof of anti-Black discrimination in law enforcement and the justice system.

Prosecutors alleged the Theriault brothers chased Miller in the early hours of Dec. 28, 2016, cornered him between two homes in Whitby, Ont., and beat him with a pipe because they wanted to deliver street justice.

The defence argued their clients caught Miller and his friends breaking into the Theriault family truck and wanted to arrest him. They said the two men found themselves fighting for their lives when Miller, who they said was armed with a pipe, attacked.

Di Luca flagged credibility issues with multiple witnesses, including the Theriault brothers and Miller. He found that Miller and his friends were stealing items from cars and that Michael Theriault's initial intention was "likely not to arrest Mr. Miller, but rather to capture him and assault him."

Miller was arrested by Durham regional police officers who arrived at the scene, though the charges against him were later dropped. The brothers were charged in the summer of 2017, months after the incident took place.

Toronto police said Wednesday that Theriault remains suspended with pay, and that any potential disciplinary action would take place once the court case is concluded.

Earlier this month, an independent review of the Toronto force's handling of the incident found its former chief, Mark Saunders, breached the Police Services Act by not reporting the incident to the province's police watchdog.

The report also found, however, that Saunders was kept in the dark about the incident for five months.

The force's interim chief, James Ramer, issued an apology for the department's decision not to immediately notify the Special Investigations Unit.

Miller dismissed the apology as a "public relations exercise," and said in a statement that neither he nor his lawyers were notified of the review's findings until minutes before their release.

MORE National ARTICLES

Stigmatizing Hutterites will deter COVID response: Tam

Stigmatizing Hutterites will deter COVID response: Tam
Canada's chief public health officer says discrimination against Hutterites will not help build trust as some colonies across the Prairies experience outbreaks of COVID-19.

Stigmatizing Hutterites will deter COVID response: Tam

1 life sentence for man who killed Vancouver pair

1 life sentence for man who killed Vancouver pair
A single life sentence of 25 years in prison has been imposed on 27-year-old Rocky Rambo Wei Nam Kam for the murders of a Vancouver couple two years ago.

1 life sentence for man who killed Vancouver pair

HMCS Fredericton returns after six-month mission

HMCS Fredericton returns after six-month mission
Nearly three months after a helicopter crash claimed the lives of six crew members, HMCS Fredericton returned to its home port of Halifax Tuesday.

HMCS Fredericton returns after six-month mission

Probe of student program turns to Kielburgers

Probe of student program turns to Kielburgers
The co-founders of WE Charity argued before a House of Commons committee that the organization wasn't plucked to run a student-volunteer program because of any close ties to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, laying out details about how much the endeavour would likely cost and why the charity used a seemingly complicated structure to manage it all.

Probe of student program turns to Kielburgers

Quebec police watchdog probes woman's death

Quebec police watchdog probes woman's death
A 57-year-old woman died one day after she unsuccessfully sought police help to force her son to undergo mental health treatment, Quebec's police watchdog said as it launched an investigation into the incident.

Quebec police watchdog probes woman's death

WE board told speakers at WE days not paid

WE board told speakers at WE days not paid
The former chair of WE Charity’s board of directors says the board was explicitly told that speakers at the organization's popular youth events known as "WE Days" were not paid for speaking.

WE board told speakers at WE days not paid