Winnipeg police officer charged under Traffic Act after crash that left man with broken back - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg police officer charged under Traffic Act after crash that left man with broken back

A Winnipeg police officer is beingcharged for driving "imprudently," after a motor vehicle collisionthat left a man with a broken pelvis and broken back last December,saidManitoba's main police oversight body in a news release Wednesday.

Officer will appear in court on charge under Highway Traffic Act this month: police watchdog

A member of the Winnipeg Police Service was charged with breaching a section of the provincial Highway Traffic Act after being involved in a motor vehicle collision last December. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

A Winnipeg police officer has been charged under Manitoba's Highway Traffic Act aftera motor vehicle collisionthat left a man with a broken pelvis and broken back last December,the province's mainpolice oversight body says.

In a December news release, the Independent Investigation Unit of Manitoba said the officer, who was driving a police cruiser, was involved in collision atthe intersection of PembinaHighway and Dalhousie Drive, in south Winnipeg, on Dec. 20, 2020.

The officer and a civilian driver, a 52-year-old man, were both sent to Winnipeg's Health Sciences Centre. The officer hadminor injuriesand was treated and released, but the other driversustained a broken pelvis and broken back, the December release said.

Under its mandate to investigate all serious incidents involving Manitoba police, the Independent Investigation Unit began an investigation.

On Wednesday, the police watchdog said that investigation has concluded. The unit's civilian director, Zane Tessler, found there are reasonable grounds to believe there was an offence under Section 95(2) of the provincial Highway Traffic Act, which relates to the "duty to keep reasonable and prudent speed."

That section sayseven if driving under the speed limit, a person may be guilty of an offenceif they drivein a way that "is not reasonable and prudent" given the circumstances, or "constitutes or may constitute a danger to any person on or near the highway."

The officer has been issued a summons to appear in provincial court in Winnipeg on June 22, the release says.

The investigative unit will not comment further on the case as it is now before the courts, it adds.

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