Court to hear request to speed hearing on OPP commissioner case
TORONTO — An Ontario Provincial Police deputy commissioner is asking a court to urgently consider ordering the provincial ombudsman to investigate the appointment of a friend of the premier’s to the job of top cop.
Brad Blair has applied to Ontario’s Divisional Court in an attempt to force an investigation into the hiring of Toronto police Supt. Ron Taverner as the new OPP commissioner, raising concerns about potential political interference.
Blair asked the ombudsman last month to probe the hiring process that saw 72-year-old Taverner get the job.
But Paul Dube declined the request, saying cabinet deliberations are outside the office’s jurisdiction.
A few days after Blair asked the courts to consider the case, the province’s integrity commissioner launched an investigation and Taverner delayed his appointment pending the outcome of the probe.
Premier Doug Ford has indicated that Taverner’s appointment will go ahead whenever the integrity review is finished, and Blair’s lawyer argues in documents filed to the court that could be complete in a matter of weeks.
That leaves a narrow window for the court case, argues Julian Falconer.
“The underlying matters require an expedited resolution in order to address the perceived political interference in the OPP and to enable a timely return to the normal administration of the OPP,” he writes.
The court is set to hear Falconer’s motion for an expedited hearing on Monday.