Edmonton police guilty in 'sweatbox' case - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:52 PM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Edmonton police guilty in 'sweatbox' case

Two Edmonton police officers were found guilty Friday of insubordination and discreditable conduct in the so-called 'sweatbox' incident, where police rounded up homeless people in a police van to dump them on the other side of the city.

Presiding officer finds constables' actions not racially motivated

Constables Lael Sauter (front) and Patrick Hannas leave a disciplinary hearing Friday. ((CBC))
Two Edmonton police officerswerefound guilty Friday of insubordination and discreditable conduct in the so-called "sweatbox" incident, where policerounded up homeless peoplein a police van to dump themon the other side of the city.

Constables Patrick Hannas andLael Sauter wereconvicted at a disciplinary hearing on three countseach under the Alberta Police Act.

Athird officer, Const. Graham Blackburn, wascleared because he was deemed to be only riding along in the police vehicle at the time.

Const. Patrick Hannas leaves a police disciplinary hearing Friday. ((CBC))
The three officers were accused of picking up ninehomelessaboriginalpeople sixmen and three women on Whyte Avenue in May 2005 andlocking themin a police vanbefore dumping them about 90 minutes later in a parking lot in the north end.

The case received alot of media attention. There werequestions about whetherthe officers' actions were racially motivated.

The presiding officer at the disciplinary hearing, Calgary police Insp. Paul Manuel, vehemently rejected this view. After listening to all the evidence, he saidhe believes the officers had a genuine concern for the well-being of the people they transported that day.

However, Manuel saidthe incident tarnishes thereputation of theEdmonton Police Service.

Homeless vulnerable, lawyer says

Erika Norheim represented some of the complainants.

"These are highly vulnerable people who can easily be taken advantage of in a way that many other members of society could not be," she said after the hearing. "It was clearly wrong."

Chris Robillard and partner Dianne Wood, shown here selling newspapers, say they were among nine homeless people picked up by police in May 2005 and kept for hours in a sweltering van. ((CBC))
Sentencing submissions will be made in three weeks.

Manuel's finding that the constables' actions were not mean-spirited or racially motivated came as a relief to Edmonton police chief Mike Boyd.

"I am very pleased to hear that," he said. "Very pleased to hear that. I think that casts a whole different light on the whole situation with that finding. And I think that's important."

Witnesses told the disciplinary hearingin June that they were picked up on May 20, 2005. They said the van was sweltering and crowded. Somepeople had to sit on the floor because there wasn't enough room on the benches. They were hot and arguing among themselves. One woman had to urinate on the floor.

Police finally stopped the van and let everyone out in the area of 81st Street and 127th Avenue.

The incident wasbrought to light by a story in a newspaper written and sold by Edmonton street people. After a year-long investigation, theRCMP announced in June 2008 that no criminal charges would be laid against the officers involved.

In February 2010, Edmonton police decided three officers would face an internal disciplinary hearing.