Pubdate: Thu, 28 Jul 2011
Source: Abbotsford News (CN BC)
Copyright: 2011 Abbotsford News
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/BkAJKrUD
Website: http://www.abbynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1155
Author: Vikki Hopes, Abbotsford News

OFFICER CLEARED OF FORCE ALLEGATION

A public hearing has cleared an Abbotsford Police officer of any
wrongdoing during an incident three years ago when he accidentally
broke the finger of a man while taking away his camera.

The Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner (OPCC) held the
hearing to determine whether Const. Alex Wood used unnecessary force
or abused his authority when dealing with Jonathan Peters on April 8,
2008.

Wood was among officers involved in the execution of a search warrant
at a suspected drug house on Crescent Way on that date, and was
assigned to help contain the front of the property.

Peters was a tenant in a residence on the street. When he saw officers
appear on scene, he grabbed his camera and ran outside to take
pictures of the raid.

His intention was to post the pictures in the neighbourhood to
discourage grow-ops and to try to sell the photos to local newspapers,
according to the written "reasons for decision" from the hearing.

When Peters appeared on the scene, Wood and another officer asked him
to stop taking pictures and to leave the area for his own safety.
Peters complied and moved to a different property, where he continued
to snap photos as a man and a woman came out of the house and were
arrested.

Wood again asked Peters to leave and said if he didn't, he would be
arrested for obstruction.

"Jonathan Peters replied that his was a free country, he had the right
to take pictures as he was then on private property and he had the
permission of the owner ... to be there," the hearing documents state.

Wood then approached Peters and asked him to hand over his camera.
Peters clutched the camera with both hands to his chest, and Wood then
pried it away from him. Peters' pinky finger was broken in the process.

Peters filed a complaint with the Abbotsford Police Department on
September of that year. Chief Bob Rich reviewed the findings of an
investigation into the matter and concluded in March 2009 that the
allegations against Wood were unsubstantiated.

The OPCC asked him to review his decision, and Rich came to the same
conclusion.

The OPCC determined in February 2010 that a public hearing on the
issue was necessary in the public interest.

Adjudicator Timothy Singh, a retired justice of the Supreme Court,
concluded that Wood had the "necessary lawful authority" to ask Peters
to leave the area, and the force he used to seize the camera was
"commensurate with the resistance offered by Jonathan Peters."

He said he took into consideration that Peters had told police he
would withdraw the complaint if they paid him $2,000, which he later
raised to $5,000. The police refused to pay him.

The Abbotsford Police recommended an obstruction charge against
Peters, but it was not approved by Crown counsel. 
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