Man charged with tossing eggs at Moncton Black Lives Matter march - Action News
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New Brunswick

Man charged with tossing eggs at Moncton Black Lives Matter march

A man accused of throwing eggs at a Black Lives Matter march this spring in Moncton will have the charge withdrawn if he completes an alternative measures program.

Crown agreed Scott Beattie can be referred to alternative measures program

Scott Beattie of Weldon Street faces a charge of mischief by interfering with the use of property by throwing eggs. (Shane Magee/CBC)

A man accused of throwing eggs at a Black Lives Matter march this spring in Moncton will have the charge withdrawn if he completes an alternative measures program.

Scott Beattie of Weldon Street faces a charge ofmischief byinterferingwith the use of property by tossing eggs at a sidewalk and street.

Beattie was arrestedJune 1 after a Black Lives Matter march involvinghundreds of people that went from Victoria Park along Weldon Street and ended at city hall.

A video posted online of the march as it passes the intersection of Weldon and Gordon Street captured a man screaming racist statements and profanities at the march, though it doesn't show the man.

Codiac Regional RCMP Staff Sgt. Patricia Levesque said in June that police were called about a resident along the march route shouting racist slurs and throwing objects from a balcony.

At the time, police said the 47-year-old would facecharges of assault related to throwing eggs at protesters and inciting hate.

However, the charge approved by the Crown prosecutor is the mischief charge.In New Brunswick, the Crown must approve all charges before they are laid in court.

Beattie said little during a short appearance in Moncton provincial court Wednesday beforeJudgeBrigitte Volp.

Volpwas told the Crown had agreed to send the case throughalternative measures.

RCMP vehicles at the intersection of Gordon and Weldon street on Monday where a 47-year-old man was arrested after someone threw eggs and yelled profanity at a Black Lives Matter march. (Submitted/Wade Perry)

That program, also called diversion, means the accused must be willing to accept responsibility for the chargeand meet certain terms by a certain date to successfully complete it.

The terms Beattie will have to meet weren't mentioned in court.

Beattiewill return to court Feb. 17 and if he hassuccessfully completed the program, the charge will be withdrawn. If he doesn't complete it, the case can still be prosecuted.

Outside court, Beattie declined comment beyond offering a profanity toward a reporter, while raising his middle finger on one hand and clutching a very large coffeecup in the other.