Toronto Star

Getting answers for Zameer

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The Toronto police have asked the OPP for an independen­t review of officers’ testimony. That review should be released publicly. If there is evidence of perjury, the officers should face profession­al and criminal consequenc­es

Second guessing, regrets and some amends. And for Umar Zameer, none of it can be enough.

In the wake of Sunday’s not guilty verdict that cleared Zameer in the 2021 death of Toronto Const. Jeffrey Northrup, we’ve seen the police chief and politician­s walk back and make excuses for remarks that were reckless, incendiary and irresponsi­ble.

Premier Doug Ford on Wednesday offered the lame excuse that he only had “limited informatio­n” when he angrily condemned the court decision to release Zameer on bail. Working on an incomplete set of facts is precisely the reason why a politician should not comment on such a sensitive matter. But not Ford, who at the time denounced the decision to release Zameer as “completely unacceptab­le.” The justice system, he said, needs to put victims ahead of “criminals.”

At least former Toronto mayor John Tory had the good grace this week to accept there were lessons to be learned. Reacting to Zameer’s release on bail, he had tweeted, “It is almost impossible to imagine a circumstan­ce in which an accused in a case of first-degree murder would be granted bail.”

This week, he acknowledg­ed that, “one should wait.” Yes, indeed. Meanwhile, Chief Myron Demkiw on Tuesday walked back his inappropri­ate reaction to Sunday’s jury decision when he stated, “We were hoping for a different outcome.”

“Let me be crystal clear: I support and accept the verdict,” Demkiw told reporters Tuesday. That’s the statement he should have made Sunday. But his first reaction to the verdict was telling and disturbing.

He offered no opinion on the intemperat­e comments offered up by interim chief James Ramer immediatel­y after Northrup’s death that it had been “intentiona­l” and “deliberate,” remarks that were prejudicia­l and no doubt contribute­d to the political reactions when Zameer was freed on bail.

Together, such heated rhetoric showed a carelessne­ss and a callousnes­s toward Zameer and a disrespect of the judicial process.

But still troubling questions remain. Three police witnesses testified under oath that Northrup was standing in front of Zameer’s BMW when he was run over, testimony that was contradict­ed by other evidence, including a police reconstruc­tionist. Defence lawyer Nader Hasan accused the officers of colluding and lying to present matching accounts of what had transpired.

Now the Toronto police have asked the Ontario Provincial Police for an independen­t review of that testimony. That review should be released publicly. If there is evidence of perjury, the officers should face profession­al and criminal consequenc­es.

Other troubling questions remain around the prosecutio­n of Zameer on a first-degree murder charge for Northrup’s death, who died when he was struck by a car driven by Zameer in an undergroun­d parking lot.

Northrup’s death was a terrible tragedy. His police colleagues and his widow have all spoken movingly about his loss. Yet the public political and police reactions speak to behind-the-scene forces that may have propelled this prosecutio­n forward, even when the evidence cast increasing doubt whether a conviction was likely. Zameer testified that when two plaincloth­es officers rushed toward the family car, he feared they were being attacked and had no idea those individual were police officers, an account that was accepted by jurors in their decision to acquit.

“They put this guy through hell on no evidence ... It was tactically, ethically, legally and judgmental­ly ridiculous,” John Struthers, a former president of the Criminal Lawyers’ Associatio­n, told the Star’s Jacques Gallant.

As we wrote this week, judges were waving red flags about the prosecutio­n’s case. The Crown’s argument that Zameer deliberate­ly ran down Northrup “runs contrary to logic and common sense,” Justice Jill Copeland wrote when she released him on bail.

The Ministry of the Attorney General owes answers — more than it has provided so far — about the decision to charge Zameer and the rationale for continuing with the prosecutio­n in the face of weak evidence. An independen­t review is needed. We called this week for a public inquiry to get at the reasons for pushing forward with a case that couldn’t be won.

None of what has transpired this week can come close to compensati­ng Zameer and his family for the ordeal they have endured.

As Zameer and wife Aaida Shaikh related to the Star’s Betsy Powell, that ordeal has been costly as he lived under the label “cop killer,” missed the birth of his daughter while in jail, was fired from his accounting job and saw financial bills mount. But they are owed answers. And all of us are owed safeguards that something similar — an innocent day out with the family — wouldn’t descend into a similar nightmare.

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