Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

British Columbia

Partial win at court for suspended Victoria police chief

A judge says the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner did not have the authority to launch an external investigation into certain allegations against Frank Elsner.

A separate disciplinary hearing will still proceed

A white man wearing a police uniform.
Suspended Victoria Police Chief Frank Elsner has been the subject of an internal investigation and two external investigations into his conduct. (CHEK News)

A B.C. Supreme Court Judge says the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioneroverstepped its jurisdiction when it ordered an external investigation into Frank Elsner's conduct.

Suspended Victoria Police ChiefFrank Elsner had asked a judge to quash one of two police complaint commissioner investigations into allegations against him.

In a judgement Wednesday, Chief Justice Hinkson granted Elsner's request in part.

Hinkson ruled the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner, a provincial watchdog for municipal forces across the province, did not have the authority to investigate two allegations against the suspended chief.

Reprimand on file

Elsneris alleged to have committed discreditable conduct by exchanging messages with the spouse of a member under his command. He is also accused ofhavingusedVictoria Police Department property or devices to exchange the messages.

Elsner had already been subject to an internal investigation over those two allegations. That investigation concluded in December 2015 and a letter of reprimand was placed on his personnel file.

Hinkson's decision saysthe complaint commissioner'sofficewas within its jurisdiction to investigate three related allegations against Elsner. Those include whether he provided misleading information to a subordinate or to the independent investigator. The discipline authority has already decided not to proceed with the third.

Rollie Woods,deputy police complaint commissioner, saidhis office is reviewing the judgement with a legal team.

Faceshearing

"So we'll have to look at them and determine whether there's any legal grounds to go to the court of appeal and ask them to review it," Woods said.

The police complaint commissioner'sinvestigation has resulted in aplanned disciplinary proceedings for Elsner.

Wednesday's judgement doesn't affect separate allegations regarding Elsner's conduct with female staff members.

Elsner's lawyer, Janet Winteringham, saidneither she nor Elsner will comment until the ongoing disciplinary hearings have wrapped up.

Woods saidthe judgementdoes not change the police complaint commissioner'sdecision to deny requests from the Victoria Police Board for the external investigation's final report.