Alberta RCMP officer guilty of assault disciplined, but not dismissed - Action News
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Alberta RCMP officer guilty of assault disciplined, but not dismissed

Conduct board member's discipline decision notes 'startling absence of precedence' for dismissal from RCMP, even in serious cases of 'excessive force.'

RCMP conduct board decision docks officer's pay, annual leave days

A close up picture of an RCMP shoulder badge.
An RCMP officer in Fort Saskatchewan, Alta., faces sanctions after the conclusion of a conduct hearing. (CBC)

An Alberta RCMP officer who used force and injured a woman during a mental health call will be allowed to keep his job after a police disciplinary hearing.

In a decision Friday, RCMP conduct board member Kevin Harrison imposed financial penalties and a reprimand against Fort Saskatchewan RCMPConst. Sean Avery.

The sanctions stop short of directing the officer to resign over the April 2021 assault against a woman who was in a mental-health crisis.Her identity is protected by a publication ban.

Avery was among the officers who responded to the woman's home to apprehend her under the Mental Health Act, at the request of her doctor.

Harrison found thatAvery's four violations of theRCMP code of conduct were established onerelated to use of force and three allegations that he included misinformation in his account of what happened.

Earlier in the hearing, Avery acknowledged the force he used was"more than necessary" in the incident.

He also admitted that he violated the RCMP code of conduct by providing false and misleading information, but contestedsome of the details of the allegations, maintaining it wasn't intentional.

Under the disciplinary measures, Avery will have 12 days of pay deducted at a lesser rate of 10 per cent.He's also required to forfeit six days of annual leave.

Avery was suspended with pay shortly after the assault.

The officer pleaded guilty last year to a criminal assault charge.

Harrison repeatedly referred to the judge's sentencing decision in that case, noting the woman he assaulted was vulnerable and in need of protection when police arrived and instead,she was seriously harmed.

'Startling absence of precedence' for dismissal

Harrison called the assault, which saw Avery slam thehandcuffed woman face-first onto a driveway, "disturbing." The incident was captured on video, and the hearing was toldthe woman needed stitches.

"This decision on conduct measures has been one of my most difficult decisions," Harrison said Friday, adding he was initially prepared to ask Avery to resign.

But Harrison said other conduct decisions in theRCMP K Division, which covers Alberta, haven't resorted to dismissal.

"There is a startling absence of precedence in the RCMP for dismissal as a conduct measure, even in serious cases of excessive use of force."

He pointed to a recent case where Red Deer RCMP Cpl. Kent McDiarmid was convicted of assault for punching an extremely intoxicated man, knocking him unconscious in an RCMP cell block in March 2020.

McDiarmid was handed a 120-day conditional sentence, according to court information.

Harrison said the RCMP conduct hearing in that case happened before the criminal proceedings. In the end, McDiarmid wasn't told to resign.

Harrisonsaidthat's despite the conduct authority finding McDiarmidhad the opportunity to de-escalate the situation, and the assault was unprovoked.

"When I read the Cpl. McDiarmiddecision, Iasked myself how Icould ask Const. Averyto resign from the force when the conduct authority allowed another member to keep his job in similar circumstances, but with significantly more aggravating factors than this case," he said.

"My answer was Icould not ask Const. Avery to resign."

In his decision, Harrison said his assessment of Avery's actionsfound significantaggravating factors.

But the officer's demonstration of remorse and willingness to accept responsibility for his actions "weighed heavily in his favour."

He said more than a dozen letters of support for Avery, and an absence of any other discipline on his record, suggest the assault is an isolated incident.