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Officer convicted of perjury

VANCOUVER - A former Mountie who was involved in Robert Dziekanski’s death and was later held up by the force as an example of a bad apple within its ranks was convicted Friday of perjury for his testimony at a public inquiry.

Former corporal Benjamin (Monty) Robinson was charged along with three other officers for their testimony at hearings that examined what happened when Dziekanski was stunned with a Taser at Vancouver’s airport and died in October 2007.

March 27, 2015  By Corrie Sloot


VANCOUVER – A former Mountie who was involved in Robert Dziekanski’s death and was later held up by the force as an example of a bad apple within its ranks was convicted Friday of perjury for his testimony at a public inquiry.

Former corporal Benjamin (Monty) Robinson was charged along with three other officers for their testimony at hearings that examined what happened when Dziekanski was stunned with a Taser at Vancouver’s airport and died in October 2007.

He is the second of the officers to be convicted of perjury. One officer was acquitted and another is awaiting a verdict.

While each officer faced the same charge,
Robinson’s case had the most notoriety. He
was the senior officer on the scene at the airport and was later convicted of obstruction of justice in an unrelated case involving a fatal vehicle accident.

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The four officers were summoned to Vancouver’s airport in the early morning of Oct. 14, 2007, after Dziekanski, a Polish immigrant who spoke no English, started throwing furniture in the international terminal.
Within seconds of the officers’ arrival, one of them stunned Dziekanski repeatedly with a Taser.

The Crown alleged the four officers colluded on a story to tell homicide investigators and then lied again at the public inquiry.

B.C. Supreme Court Judge Nathan Smith
said the officers all made similar mistakes when their statements are compared with the video, notably their incorrect assertion that Dziekanski had to be wrestled to the ground.

Smith said Robinson had a motive to lie
and must have known what he told homicide
investigators was incorrect.

“I simply do not believe that a police officer of his experience could make such a crucial mistake in these circumstances,’’ Smith said as Robinson listened from the prisoner’s dock.

“I agree with the Crown that he had a direct motive to exaggerate the threat posed by Mr. Dziekanski and to justify the response to that threat.’’

Smith said it’s clear the officers talked about what happened before speaking to homicide investigators, which Robinson denied while on the stand at the inquiry.

Much of the Crown’s case was circumstantial. Prosecutors argued the officers’ statements and notes all contained similar errors when compared with an amateur video of the confrontation, proving they worked together. The Crown did not produce
any evidence that the officers actually collaborated on the night of Dziekanski’s death, such as a witness who might have seen them huddled together at the airport.

The Crown further alleged the officers
met in the Vancouver area in the days or
weeks before testifying at the inquiry in early 2009 to plan their testimony. A witness, whose ex-husband is Bentley’s cousin, told the court the officers met at her home, but the defence presented telephone records, credit card receipts
and other evidence to cast doubt on
her testimony.

The Crown has not explained how the
public should reconcile the differing verdicts, especially since prosecutors’ theory was that all four officers worked together to tell the same lies.

Robinson, who is in his mid-40s, left the
RCMP in 2012. Earlier that year, he was convicted of obstruction of justice in an unrelated case.

Robinson was behind the wheel in October
2008 when his vehicle struck and killed a
21-year-old motorcyclist in Delta, south of Vancouver. He told his trial that immediately after the crash he went home and drank two shots of vodka to “calm his nerves.’’

A judge concluded Robinson had used his
RCMP training in an attempt to fend off accusations of impaired driving. He was given a conditional sentence of 12 months.

Around the time of Robinson’s obstruction
conviction, the RCMP’s top officer in
B.C., Deputy Commissioner Craig Callens,
held up the case as an example of the challenges facing the force when it wants to deal with problem officers. Callens said he was “outraged’’ with Robinson’s conviction and said it demonstrated the need to change the law that governs how Mounties can be disciplined or fired.

Cst. Bill Bentley was acquitted of the
perjury charge in 2013, though the Crown is appealing the verdict. Cst. Kwesi Millington was convicted last month and is awaiting a sentencing hearing. Cst. Gerry Rundel’s trial has finished and he is waiting for a verdict.


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