Times Colonist

Police chief says sorry for remarks made after acquittal in cop’s death

‘I want to be very clear ... I respect and accept the decision of the jury,’ chief says

- PAOLA LORIGGIO

TORONTO — Toronto’s police chief apologized Tuesday for how he phrased his response to the acquittal of a man accused of fatally running over a plaincloth­es officer, saying he understand­s the public concerns over his comments.

Chief Myron Demkiw told the Toronto Police Service Board he had reflected on the statement he gave outside a Toronto courthouse on April 21, shortly after Umar Zameer was found not guilty in the death of Det. Const. Jeffrey Northrup.

At the time, Demkiw said police respect the judicial process but were “hoping for a different outcome” to the trial.

“I apologize for my choice of words in those early moments outside the courthouse. I want to be very clear and repeat that I respect and accept the decision of the jury,” he told the board. “As I have said, closure can never come at the expense of justice. I should have been more clear that I support and accept the verdict.”

The chief did not mention Zameer directly in his address to the board. The apology comes after two previous efforts to clarify his comments.

Demkiw’s initial response to the verdict was denounced by legal observers and civil rights advocates, who said it cast doubt on the jury’s decision, underminin­g the justice system as well as the public’s faith in that system.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n, which last week called on Demkiw to apologize, described Tuesday’s statement to the board as “a first step.”

“The Toronto Police Service Board must now ensure it takes policy action to ensure that the chief of police and officers assigned to cases do not publicly malign bail decisions or criminal verdicts in future,” the director of the organizati­on’s criminal justice program, Shakir Rahim, said in a statement.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford was asked about the chief’s apology but declined to comment on it. Instead, he called the case “a very sad situation on all fronts” and expressed sympathy for Northrup’s family. The premier said he supports police “1,000 per cent.”

Northrup, 55, was hit by a vehicle in an undergroun­d parking garage at Toronto City Hall nearly three years ago.

Zameer had pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder and testified he didn’t know Northrup and his partner — who were both in plain clothes — were police officers. He testified he tried to escape as safely as possible from what he believed to be an attack on his family when two strangers ran up to his car and began banging on it.

Demkiw said last week that his force had asked Ontario Provincial Police to conduct an independen­t review into the case after “adverse comments” made by the judge presiding over the trial.

The chief also ordered a full internal review of all aspects of plaincloth­es policing. He said he would report the findings to the board and publicly share everything he can about the reviews.

In her final instructio­ns to the jury at Zameer’s trial, Ontario Superior Court Justice Anne Molloy said jurors had to consider the possibilit­y that three officers who witnessed the incident had colluded.

She also said there was no evidence to fully support the Crown’s theory that Northrup was hit while standing out of view of a security camera in the parking garage.

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