The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ontario judge delivers verdict against Toronto cop who beat young Black man in 2016

Michael Theriault convicted of assault in attack on Dafonte Miller

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

An off-duty Toronto police officer’s “razor-thin” claim to selfdefenc­e evaporated when he struck a badly injured and retreating Black teen in the head with a metal pipe, an Ontario judge said Friday in convicting him of assault.

Const. Michael Theriault was cleared, however, of the more serious charge of aggravated assault in the 2016 beating that left Dafonte Miller, then 19, with a ruptured eye and other serious injuries.

Ontario Superior Court Justice Joseph Di Luca said that while Miller’s eye injury met the threshold for aggravated assault, he could not rule out the possibilit­y that Theriault and his brother Christian were acting in self-defence as they delivered the blows that caused it — though he acknowledg­ed they “probably” weren’t.

However, the self-defence argument vanished when the offduty officer armed himself with a roughly metre-long metal pipe and attacked Miller, who had slipped away from the two men and was trying to get help from a nearby home, the judge said.

Christian Theriault was no longer involved in the fight at that point and thus must be acquitted, Di Luca said.

Both brothers were also acquitted on obstructio­n of justice for how they described the incident to investigat­ors.

The verdict, delivered amid ongoing protests against systemic racism and calls to defund the police, sparked outrage among many who called it further proof of discrimina­tion in law enforcemen­t and the justice system.

Miller, who was arrested as he lay bleeding on the ground and only saw the charges against him dropped months later, said the ruling does not feel like a loss.

“I remember the night it happened to me and I ended up getting charged. Now we’re in the situation where an officer has been held accountabl­e to some extent,” Miller, now 22, told a news conference Friday afternoon.

“There’s a lot of people in my position who don’t get the same backing I got and don’t get to have their day to have any vindicatio­n for what they’re going through.”

Miller’s lawyer, Julian Falconer, said “important progress” had been made in the ongoing battle to hold authoritie­s accountabl­e.

“The force used that night by the Theriault brothers was found to have been more than likely intended to exact vigilante justice,” he said in a statement.

“The events of that night raise questions about the entire approach of the Toronto Police Service and the Durham (Regional) Police service in attempting to shield the Theriault brothers from being held to account for their actions. We have to put an end to this type of brutality and inevitable cover up.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN
THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Two women react after the verdict in the Dafonte Miller assault trial in Oshawa.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS Two women react after the verdict in the Dafonte Miller assault trial in Oshawa.
 ??  ?? Dafonte Miller, left, Toronto police Const. Michael Theriault, centre, and his brother Christian Theriault are seen outside the Oshawa courthouse in a series of file photos.
Dafonte Miller, left, Toronto police Const. Michael Theriault, centre, and his brother Christian Theriault are seen outside the Oshawa courthouse in a series of file photos.

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