‘Belligerent’ MP locked himself in truck
Officer testifies Goldring refused to provide breathalyzer sample
A police officer has testified that an Alberta MP locked himself in his truck and refused to co-operate the night he was pulled over for suspected drunk driving.
Sgt. Conrad Moschansky told court he arrived at an Edmonton parking lot last December after an officer asked for help with Peter Goldring’s arrest following a riding Christmas party.
“He (the officer) informed me we had a member of Parliament under arrest and he was being belligerent,” Moschansky said Friday under questioning from Goldring’s lawyer, Dino Bottos, at a pre-trial hearing in provincial court.
Bottos read aloud one of Moschansky’s cellphone messages from the scene and the sergeant confirmed it was accurate. “(I) spoke with (arresting officer) Const. Shelrud and he mentioned driver had locked himself in car and would not co-operate and would not open door,” read the email.
However, Goldring acknowledged within seconds of the sergeant’s arrival that he was there, Moschansky said. “The window came down four inches and we engaged in conversation.”
Soon after, Goldring was charged on one count of failing to provide a breathalyzer sample and released.
The 68-year-old MP for Edmonton-East is to go to trial Jan. 16. He has represented the riding since he was elected under the Reform banner in 1997. He was elected most recently as a Conservative but has sat as an Independent since shortly after his arrest.
He has suggested his defence will include the assertion that police unfairly targeted him and his vehicle to be pulled over during a Checkstop crackdown.
Bottos is in court to try to get access to police electronic messages and phone records in the hour prior to Goldring’s arrest shortly after midnight on Dec. 4, 2011.
Judge Larry Anderson is to make a decision Thursday.
Moschansky said everything was done by the book. “The investigation was not different from any other investigation that was completed.”
Under questioning from Crown lawyer Laura Marr, the police officer said he was directing a Checkstop team in the area that night. He said he told his officers to travel around and pull over any “vehicles directing attention to themselves.”
Moschansky told Marr he didn’t tell his officers to patrol in any specific area or target any specific make or model.
Marr asked if he had received or relayed any information on Goldring prior to his arrest that night. “No,” said Moschansky.
Goldring declined to speak on the record to reporters but said that the evidence presented so far has not been challenged by his lawyer and that there is a lot more to the story. If found guilty, he faces a minimum $1,000 fine, up to five years in jail and a driving prohibition.