Pubdate: Fri, 06 Jun 2003 Source: London Free Press (CN ON) Copyright: 2003 The London Free Press a division of Sun Media Corporation. Contact: http://www.fyilondon.com/londonfreepress/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/243 Author: Kelly Pedro Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) OFFICER DEFERS PLEA IN DOG SHOOTING A London police officer charged with misconduct made his first appearance at a hearing under the Police Services Act yesterday for his role in a botched drug raid that killed a pet dog. Det. Const. Lou Lovsin is charged with misconduct for not "promptly and diligently" fulfilling his duty. Lovsin did not enter a plea yesterday, deciding to defer doing so until his lawyer, Mike Epstein, could be present. In April, the Ontario Civilian Commission on Police Services ordered the hearing after concluding that Lovsin may have committed a serious misconduct after using four-month-old information to obtain a search warrant. The warrant was used to enter Marcie Carroll's Oxford Street apartment on Oct. 23, 2002, in a search for drugs. Carroll's pet dog, named Bear, was shot four times during the search operation. It was later revealed that during the four-month delay, the individual being sought by police had moved out and Carroll had moved in. An internal investigation by city police found that some officers -- not those involved in the apartment search -- knew the suspect no longer lived there but had not recorded it. Even after the internal probe, Deputy Chief Tony McGowan concluded that the officers were not guilty of misconduct. "This case is demonstrative of the sloppy police work that led to the very serious errors that could have avoided the entire tragedy from occurring," Faisal Joseph, Carroll's lawyer, said yesterday. Lovsin indicated he didn't establish the correct address because he was concerned about tipping off friends of the person being sought. The police officer was emotionless throughout the brief hearing yesterday. He sat next to Dan Axford, administrator for the London Police Association, at police headquarters where the hearing was held. The hearing lasted less than five minutes but was delayed for nearly 30 minutes while Axford, Joseph and Steven Boorne, a Toronto lawyer appointed as prosecuting attorney, met privately. When they emerged, reporters were called into a separate boardroom and told they wouldn't be allowed to photograph inside the boardroom where the hearing was taking place or in a lobby directly outside the room. The hearing has been put over to July 8. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh