Ottawa Citizen

COMPLAINT AGAINST COP DISMISSED

No misconduct in cuffing and arrest, independen­t review director rules

- HUGH ADAMI Is something bothering you? Please contact: thepublicc­itizen@ ottawaciti­zen.com

Martha Scott says she was not looking for revenge when she filed a complaint last winter after being arrested and handcuffed for failing to follow the instructio­ns of an Ottawa police constable directing traffic at a Rideau Street intersecti­on.

Scott, 62, says she was only looking for an acknowledg­ment that what happened to her on Dec. 4 was wrong. She was also hoping that Ottawa police would see the need to better train their officers in dealing with the public they are supposed to protect.

Scott maintains the constable was rude and intimidati­ng and did not have grounds to arrest her over her attempts to be allowed to drive straight on Charlotte Street rather than turn right on Rideau. There were traffic arrows on signs and the pavement indicating she could, and she had driven that route frequently during Rideau’s reconstruc­tion.

And having her hands cuffed behind her back was not the kind of “reasonable force” she expects police to exercise on citizens when they are simply trying to get an answer as to why they have to do this and can’t do that. The whole incident, she says, was the result of an “overreacti­on” by an officer who probably was having a bad day.

The Office of the Independen­t Police Review Director doesn’t seem to think so. It dismissed Scott’s complaint against the officer, saying it was “unsubstant­iated.” It determined there was “insufficie­nt evidence to establish on reasonable grounds that misconduct, as defined by the Police Services Act, occurred in the complaint.” Investigat­ors tried to determine if the officer’s actions could, under the act, be deemed “discredita­ble conduct” or “unlawful or unnecessar­y exercise of authority.”

The report from the police review director doesn’t suggest that Scott, her passenger and husband, Brian Murphy, or witness Tessa Marquis, who was standing at the corner of Rideau and Charlotte, exaggerate­d what they said occurred. Nor does it say that the version of events from the officer and her partner was more believable. The report details what Scott, the officer and witnesses told investigat­ors and then summarizes their accounts.

In determinin­g whether discredita­ble conduct took place, the report says the officer “admitted she did elevate her voice when speaking to (Scott as she) was refusing to follow her direction. She also stated that traffic was being impeded as (Scott) was blocking the intersecti­on.” The report also says the constable told Scott why she needed to turn right but “she still refused to do so. All parties involved state no profanity was used. (The officer) was adamant that she acted profession­ally throughout the interactio­n.”

In regards to whether the officer committed unlawful arrest, the report says (Scott) “admitted she failed to comply with (the officer’s) direction because she wanted an explanatio­n” of why she had to do so. Both Scott and the officer told investigat­ors that Scott was told three times to turn right onto Rideau but refused.

“(The officer) arrested the complainan­t for obstruct police and utilized discretion and released the complainan­t with a warning.”

Scott and Murphy admit they are not surprised by the decision. Scott says she was told by lawyers to expect as much. She says that at no time did she want the officer fired or suspended. But her husband says the decision by the Office of the Independen­t Police Review Director to clear the officer is “a missed opportunit­y” to work on the force’s image. “Nobody protects the public peace by screaming at people.”

Ottawa police Insp. Chris Rhéaume says that although the officer was cleared, the issue would still have been addressed with her, likely through her union, the Ottawa Police Associatio­n.

Scott’s brief arrest — she was issued a warning for disobeying police directing traffic — is similar to that of 69-year-old Janis King, who ran into trouble with a police officer directing traffic on Montreal Road last month. She, too, was arrested and placed in handcuffs, though she dropped an “F-bomb” at one point and refused to get back into her car as the officer was writing her a $110 ticket for disobeying police directing traffic. She is going to court on July 24 to fight the ticket. She, too, has filed a complaint against Ottawa police.

 ?? JULIE OLIVER/ OTTAWA CITIZEN ?? Martha Scott, 62, with her husband, Brian Murphy, says she was only looking for an acknowledg­ment that what happened to her on Dec. 4 was wrong and that Ottawa police would see the need to better train officers in dealing with the citizens they are...
JULIE OLIVER/ OTTAWA CITIZEN Martha Scott, 62, with her husband, Brian Murphy, says she was only looking for an acknowledg­ment that what happened to her on Dec. 4 was wrong and that Ottawa police would see the need to better train officers in dealing with the citizens they are...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada