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Manitoba

U of Manitoba changes course, asks police to investigate after law society finds former dean misspent $500K

The University of Manitoba is asking police to investigate a former law schooldean after a regulatory body ruled he committed professional misconduct and misused about half a million dollars of university funds.

Law society panel's ruling that former dean's actions 'amounted to fraud' influenced decision, U of M says

A middle aged man with blonde hair who is wearing a black suit and tie poses for a photo.
Jonathan Black-Branch left his position as dean of the University of Manitoba's law faculty suddenly in 2020. A disciplinary panel of the Law Society of Manitoba ruled this month that Black-Branch committed professional misconduct through actions that amounted to fraud. (University of Manitoba)

The University of Manitoba is asking police to investigate a former law schooldean after a regulatory body ruled he committed professional misconduct and misused about half a million dollars of university funds.

The announcementmarks a shift, as the U of M has previously said it declined to seek civil or criminal charges against Jonathan Black-Branch, afterallegations surfaced in 2020 that he inappropriately spent about $500,000 of university money.

A U of M spokesperson told CBC News on Friday that it made the request to Winnipeg police on Thursday, on the heels of a decision from a Law Society of Manitoba disciplinary panel.

The regulatory body's panel found Black-Branch breached his integrityduring his tenure as adean, from 2016 until 2020, when he left suddenly and without public explanation.

In a 28-page written decision dated Dec. 15, the panel suggested proof of professional misconduct presented at Black-Branch's hearing was strongenough "that even if the standard had been the criminal standard of beyond a reasonable doubt, the panel would have been satisfied that proof was sufficient."

When askedwhyadministration has decided now to ask for a police investigation, the U of M pointed to that specificpassage in the ruling, which the university received on Monday.

"Our legal team reviewed the decision and yesterday we asked the WPS to investigate," a U of M spokesperson said in an email on Friday.

The University of Manitobasaid a day earlier that it welcomedthe law society's findings andwas"engaging with the Winnipeg Police Service."While that Thursday statement said "that process is ongoing," it did not say the university had asked police to investigate.

That statement came after five professors in the U of M faculty of law sent a letter to the Winnipeg Police Service earlieron Thursday, encouraging apolice investigation following the law society's ruling.

It suggested the university "may have documentation and/or additional information that may be relevant to a potential criminal investigation" into Black-Branch's actions.

Police confirmed to CBC News on Friday that they had received the professors' letter. A spokesperson did not say whether it has received U of M's request to investigate Black-Branch.

The U of M had previously said it declined to pursue civil or criminal action against Black-Branch, and instead opted to raise its concerns in a complaint to the law society in 2020, a decision that drewcriticism.

The law society decision came just shy of a month after the conclusion of Black-Branch's misconduct hearing. He was not present for the hearing and did not put forward a defence.

The law society panel decision says Black-Branch "devised a scheme" to skirt oversight and wrongfully benefit himself financially, usinghundreds of thousands of dollars from an endowment fund for students to pay for his own training at Ivy League schools.

The panel also found he charged the U of M for thousands more in "false claims of entertaining guests at Winnipeg restaurants [that] amounted to fraud."

"This egregious behaviour does not reflectwell on UM, the profession and on the administration of justice," reads a passage of the law society panel decision.

The law society panel has yet to set a hearing date to determine how Black-Branch will be disciplined. He could be suspended, reprimanded or barred from practising law in Manitoba.