2 Bathurst constables involved in shooting death get new dates for arbitration - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 20, 2024, 02:30 AM | Calgary | -9.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

2 Bathurst constables involved in shooting death get new dates for arbitration

New dates have been set for the arbitration hearing forBathurst police constables Mathieu Boudreau and Patrick Bulger, who were involved in the shooting death of businessman Michel Vienneau in January 2015.

Hearing will be held over eight days in October

The arbitration hearing for Bathurst Police Force constables Patrick Bulger (left) and Mathieu Boudreau has been rescheduled for eight days in October. (Gabrielle Fahmy/CBC)

New dates have been set for the arbitration hearing forBathurst police constables Mathieu Boudreau and Patrick Bulger, who were involved in the shooting death of businessman Michel Vienneau in January 2015.

The hearing to deal with the recommended dismissals of the two officers will be held over eight days in October at a city hotel. The dates are Oct. 16 to Oct. 18 and Oct. 21 to Oct. 25.

The constables'arbitration hearing was adjourned earlier this month because of arequest by the Bathurst Police Association. The hearing had been set to begin March 18.

BathurstMayorPaolo Fongemiesaid in a statement that the city iscommitted to seeing that the community, the families affected by the shooting, and the members of the Bathurst Police Force have an independent arbitrator hear all witnesses and make a ruling according to evidence.

"We are confident that the hearing will finally provide long-sought answers to what has been a terrible tragedy," Fongemiesaid.

No settlement reached

Vienneau, 51, was killed on Jan. 12, 2015, when police tried to arrest him in a Via Rail parking lot.

Michel Vienneau, 51, of Tracadie, had come off a Via Rail train from Montreal and was in his car when he was shot and killed by police. (Submitted by Nicolas Vienneau)

The officers were acting on a false Crime Stoppers tip that Vienneau was carrying "a load of drugs."

In its release, the city said the events led to "disciplinary measures deemed appropriate by the Bathurst police chief."

The city described what happened at the stationas "so fundamentally troubling that the public trust and the community's interests deserve no less than the matter being fully aired in a public forum in front of an arbitrator."

The hearing was scheduled after neither side could reach an agreement at a settlement conference held June 20, 2018.

Suspended with pay

At the time, Chief Ernie Boudreausaid he found sufficient evidence ofcode of conduct breachesbyBulger and Boudreau when he reviewed the results of aNew Brunswick Police Act investigation into the shooting ofVienneau.

That investigation found each officer had breached five counts of the New Brunswick Police Act: they didn't properly use and carry a firearm, they abused authority, neglected their duty and acted in a discreditable manner.

The officers could face disciplinary sanctions ranging from a simple reprimand to outright dismissal.

Criminal charges against Bulger and Boudreau were dropped in February 2017 after Judge Anne Dugas-Horsman ruled the Crown had not presented enough evidence to proceed to trial.

Court of Queen's Bench Justice Tracey DeWare dismissed the Crown's application to toss out Dugas-Horsman's decision in October 2017.

BothBulgerandBoudreauwere suspended with pay from the police force after the charges were laid.They returned to work in February 2018 but were suspended again with pay after the June 2018 settlement conference.

With files from Sarah Petz, Gabrielle Fahmy