Windsor Star

Ottawa police told to pay woman for wrongful arrest

Judge awards $254,000 to tenant for detention, injuries she suffered

- The Canadian Press

A woman brutalized by Ottawa police during her wrongful trespassin­g arrest and left naked for hours in a holding cell nine years ago has been awarded $254,000 in damages.

The Superior Court award in favour of Roxanne Carr, one of the highest of its kind in Canada, comes after a nine-day trial that ended more than a year ago.

“The police actions broke my heart,” Carr said in a statement through her lawyer Lawrence Greenspon. “Patience is a virtue — sometimes it’s worth the wait because it helps others.”

In making the award, Justice Sylvia Corthorn faulted several officers for the disturbing series of events, but aimed much of her judgment at Const. Michael Adlard, the officer who set off a chain events in August 2008.

Adlard had no grounds to arrest Carr without a warrant for what was, at most, a landlord and tenant dispute, Corthorn found. The officer then used excessive force to detain her, leaving her with injuries that included a bone fracture in her wrist, the judge said.

Court records show Carr, then in her late 20s, was renting part of a home in Ottawa from her boyfriend but he had called police to say he wanted her gone. Carr was sitting and chatting with a friend on the front steps of the house when, to her surprise, Adlard showed up.

Within eight minutes, Adlard had thrown Carr to the ground and arrested her. Corthorn rejected his account that he feared Carr, whose rent was paid up and was entitled to be there, was about to lunge at him.

The situation turned uglier when Carr kicked out the back window of the cruiser and she was taken to the police station.

Video shows officers casually searching Carr, who was lying face down on the floor. Despite the fact she was now completely compliant, Const. Richard Marcil opted to use a restrainin­g device to take her to her cell, apparently breaking her wrist in the process.

“It looks like an animal on a leash. It’s really, really disturbing,” Greenspon said on Monday. “You wouldn’t treat an animal the way she was treated at the station.”

Once in a cell, Marcil and other officers stripped her of her clothing on the pretext that Carr, who by now had two broken bones in her wrist, was suicidal and had tried to tie her shirt around her neck, the judge found. Carr was left for more than two hours naked in the cell.

Officers finally gave her back her clothes and allowed her to leave. The judge accepted that Carr had two fractures in her wrist, and scrapes and bruises on her head, shoulders legs and foot as a result of the force used against her and that the incident had inflicted traumatic stress on her.

Four charges against Carr, including that she had resisted arrest and assaulted an officer, were withdrawn three years later. Corthorn rejected Carr’s negligence claims against the officer who had laid the charges for lack of evidence.

Ottawa police did not respond Monday to a request to discuss the case or the status of the eight officers involved in the incident. None of them ever faced prosecutio­n or misconduct charges.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “The police actions broke my heart,” says Roxanne Carr of her 2008 arrest and detention in Ottawa that resulted in a strip search and two broken bones in her wrist after her boyfriend called police to settle a landlord and tenant dispute.
THE CANADIAN PRESS “The police actions broke my heart,” says Roxanne Carr of her 2008 arrest and detention in Ottawa that resulted in a strip search and two broken bones in her wrist after her boyfriend called police to settle a landlord and tenant dispute.

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