Ottawa Citizen

Pot-eating cop gets six months of house arrest

Public in danger after officer got high on chocolate taken during raid, judge says

- NICOLE THOMPSON

A Toronto police officer who stole and ate a pot-laced chocolate bar seized during a raid on an illegal dispensary will have to spend six months under house arrest as part of a sentence to be served in the community, a judge ruled Monday, saying his actions could not go unpunished.

Vittorio Dominelli, who pleaded guilty this month to attempting to obstruct justice, will spend the rest of his nine-month conditiona­l sentence under supervisio­n and will also have to perform 60 hours of community service.

Justice Mary Misener said the 36-year-old acted recklessly to satisfy his curiosity about marijuana, putting others at risk.

“His decision to take the cannabis was both impetuous and immature,” she said. “He was wandering outside in a haze ... the danger to the public is obvious.” Misener noted, however, that Dominelli was not a corrupt officer and “did not act for nefarious purposes.”

Dominelli, who served as a police officer for 13 years before resigning from the force this month, was part of a team that raided the pot shop on Jan. 27. He pocketed several cannabis-oil-infused chocolate bars on his way out of the store.

Court heard that Dominelli and another officer shared some of the chocolate hours later while conducting surveillan­ce outside an after-hours bar and got extremely high. Dominelli thought he was going to die, and radioed for help, court heard.

When other officers hurried to the scene, one slipped on ice and suffered a severe head injury, court heard. That officer still has not been able to return to work.

While the Crown pushed for a conditiona­l sentence, Dominelli’s lawyer had argued that his client should be discharged given that he had already given up his career and been subject to considerab­le scrutiny.

Misener acknowledg­ed that the officer had suffered as a result of his actions.

“Mr. Dominelli has lost his career and been humiliated,” Misener said. “The unforgivin­g nature of the internet means he will bear the shame of his actions for the rest of his life.”

But still, his actions endangered others and degraded trust in the justice system, she said.

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