The Telegram (St. John's)

Ottawa police officer charged after racist meme circulates

- SHAAMINI YOGARETNAM POSTMEDIA NETWORK

OTTAWA — An Ottawa police officer faces misconduct charges following the creation and distributi­on of a racist meme, Chief Peter Sloly announced in a lengthy open letter Monday, which also addressed criticisms of police after a weekend of unrest south of the border.

Police services across Canada and the United States are grappling with public trust after the death of George Floyd, a black Minneapoli­s man who died after a police officer knelt on his neck for several minutes. That officer has since been fired and faces murder and manslaught­er charges.

“The local and internatio­nal events of the last two months have shaken me as a police profession­al and as a person — from the still unfolding impacts of the global COVID-19 pandemic, to the tragic events in Minneapoli­s, to the latest series of internal and public trust issues affecting the Ottawa Police Service,” Sloly’s letter said.

“In these times we need to remain inspired to do our best and help every person and every community in Ottawa,” Sloly said.

Indeed, Ottawa’s top cop acknowledg­ed the particular­ly turbulent time for the local force, which has been racked with public misconduct allegation­s against members, from constables all the way up to a deputy chief. The allegation­s include creating memes of fellow officers; sexual harassment; ties to the criminal underworld; taking money from tow truck operators; and video-taping vulnerable women and mocking them.

“We need to be clear-eyed about the current state of affairs and remain fully committed to leading the organizati­on through this tough and troubling period,” wrote Sloly.

He addressed various conduct allegation­s against officers, saying there are a number of “active and ongoing Profession­al Standards Section investigat­ions and legal proceeding­s into the conduct of our members.”

The investigat­ion into a meme depicting some racialized officers is “now fully concluded,” Sloly said. “We have laid Police Services Act charges against one member relating to the creation and distributi­on of one of the memes.”

The meme, which was created and began circulatin­g in late April, shows a composite photo of 13 current or former officers, the majority of whom are racialized. The words “Ottawa Police Service” appears above the photograph, with “We’re always hiring … anyone” appearing below.

Twelve of the 13 people shown in the meme have either been accused or convicted of some form of misconduct, although the meme doesn’t note this.

It has has previously reported that a drug unit officer, Const. James Ramsay, was suspended in that investigat­ion. Sloly nor the service has publicly named him.

While Sloly had previously called the meme “an overt act of racism,” that language was absent from his update Monday on the status of the investigat­ion.

“We can rarely if ever determine the true intent of a person’s acts but we can see the impacts of those acts,” he wrote.

 ?? ERROL MCGIHON N POSTMEDIA NETWORK ?? Chief of the Ottawa Police Service, Peter Sloly.
ERROL MCGIHON N POSTMEDIA NETWORK Chief of the Ottawa Police Service, Peter Sloly.

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