Pubdate: Mon, 02 Feb 2004 Source: Vancouver Courier (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Vancouver Courier Contact: http://www.vancourier.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/474 Author: Allen Garr Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/stanly+park STANLEY PARK CASE LEAVES TROUBLING QUESTIONS From a public relations point of view, Jamie Graham did a great job with the Stanley Park Six. He was onto the issue as soon as he heard about it. He expressed the right amount of outrage. He commended the whistle-blower, rookie constable Troy Peters. He recommended criminal charges be laid. And, in the history of how chiefs of police tend to deal with matters of internal discipline, he was far more transparent than we have been used to. But the good stuff ends there. The process and the results still leave us with many troubling questions. In the best of all possible worlds, all six cops should have been fired. Based on Peters' testimony in the evidence released by Graham Wednesday, it was obvious the beatings were premeditated. They were not spontaneous acts of frustration, as the cops argued before Judge Herbert Weitzel in December. There is a considerable difference between the "agreed statement of facts"-the negotiated reality between Crown and accused-that Judge Weitzel was limited to, and the shocking truth of the vigilante actions that took place that night in Stanley Park. According to Peters, the cops threatened the three victims with a beating even before they were transported to the park. Once the six cops and their victims arrived at Third Beach, it was as if they were following a well-practised script. The cops first secured the perimeter and searched the bushes in the area, presumably to make sure no witnesses were present. While we heard during the court case that the supervising officer, acting Sgt. James Kenney, played no role in this and simply observed from several yards away, Peters' testimony throws serious doubt on that. It seems Kenney was part of the plot all along. According to Peters, when the third victim was about to be released from the police wagon to be beaten, Kenney approached Peters to suggest he may want to take a walk because the third beating would be "the ugliest of the three." How would he know that unless the beatings were planned in advance? When the beatings were done, Peters recalls one of the cops, Gabriel Kojima, turning to him and saying something like: "This is the kind of shit you signed up for," leading one to believe it was a regular practice at the VPD. Back at police headquarters, it was acting Sgt. Kenny who conducted the meeting where the cover-up was hatched. Graham did fire two of the cops, Kojima and Duncan Gemmell, the most thuggish during the beatings. That leaves four of the vigilantes on the force, two of them with criminal records. Through all of this, of course, the six have received full pay, mostly because the feckless police board couldn't get around to exercising its power to stop the cheques coming. The six also cost taxpayers a small fortune in legal fees. Only the best criminal lawyers in town pick up these gigs. If they were provincial public servants or politicians who had been found guilty of a criminal offence, they would be required to pay their own lawyers' bills. But that's not the case with Vancouver's cops, unless the board gets up the gumption to change the policy. And finally, there is the police policy of breaching, which lets the cops pick up their victims without charging them and haul them off to remote locations. The same policy allowed the cops to dump Frank Joseph Paul's body in an alley five years ago. On Wednesday, Deputy Chief Bob Rich said the cops have no problems with the breaching policy. Police board chair Mayor Larry Campbell promised to review that policy, but quite frankly, the chief has managed to keep the board so far out of the loop on this whole matter, I'm surprised they can do anything more than turn up once a month for their free meal. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin