Toronto Star

Niagara chief blindsided by cop shooting

OPP to run parallel probe to SIU investigat­ion

- GRANT LAFLECHE

He may be the top cop, but Niagara Regional Police Chief Bryan MacCulloch says he doesn’t know any more than the public about why one of his officers shot another last Thursday afternoon in Pelham.

“I understand the frustratio­n of the public, and of our members. I am as anxious as anyone to learn exactly what happened,” MacCulloch said in an interview Monday. “But right now, we are not involved in the investigat­ion.”

The provincial Special Investigat­ions Unit is looking into the shooting of Const. Nathan Parker, who police sources said was shot at least five times during an altercatio­n with another officer while investigat­ing a crash that had taken place two weeks earlier.

The SIU, which investigat­es all incidents of serious injury or death involving police in Ontario, places a virtual blackout on informatio­n when doing an investigat­ion. The service under investigat­ion cannot speak about the incident.

MacCulloch has spoken to both Parker and Det.- Sgt. Shane Donovan, the other officer involved. He said the incident has rattled the entire police service and left both civilian and uniformed members with more questions than answers.

“What I have said to them is, ‘Trust in the investigat­ive process,’ ” MacCulloch said. “At the end of the day, that process will win out.”

That process also involves the Ontario Provincial Police, who MacCulloch asked to run a parallel investigat­ion into the shooting.

He said he asked the OPP to bring a “fresh set of eyes” to the case, because a police service can expand an investigat­ion beyond the more narrow scope of an SIU probe.

In the meantime, MacCulloch said an internal NRP “wellness unit” — which includes an occupation­al health and safety nurse and access to mental health services — is assisting officers and staff impacted by the incident.

“It’s upsetting to the community and it’s upsetting to the members of our service,” the chief said.

Parker, who remains in hospital in stable condition, was shot at the scene of the followup investigat­ion for an impaired driving case.

Donovan is on administra­tive leave during the SIU investigat­ion.

The SIU has said it is questionin­g 12 “witness officers,” but MacCulloch said the term is misleading. A witness officer is not necessaril­y someone who saw the shooting, he said.

“That can be any responding officer who had contact with the subject officers.”

MacCulloch did not immediatel­y know how many officers were assigned to the impaired driving case last Thursday, or what the status of that investigat­ion is. While the public and the police wait for answers about the incident, another question has arisen — why is Parker still a police officer? Parker has a history of disciplina­ry problems with the NRP, often for violence. He was docked nearly 300 hours of pay in total after being found guilty of infraction­s in at least four disciplina­ry hearings.

MacCulloch, who reiterated that he cannot discuss individual officer cases, said he understand­s the public’s frustratio­n when a police officer gets into trouble repeatedly but isn’t fired. However, unlike in the movies, MacCulloch said a police chief cannot just fire an officer. Disciplina­ry actions, including terminatio­n, are decided by the Police Services Act.

“The Police Services Act is a complete code of discipline and we are obligated to follow it,” he said, noting Section 5 of the act frames all disciplina­ry hearings and actions.

MacCulloch said the disciplina­ry process has evolved into a pseudo-courtroom where defence lawyers make the same kinds of arguments they do in a court of law.

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