November 15, 2002
Rookie officer transferred
after questionable patrol
Rolled KRPF truck sends
three girls to hospital
ODILE
NELSON
A Kativik Regional Police
rookie two months into his job faces possible dismissal after an early-morning
patrol ended with a rolled police truck and three female passengers being sent
to hospital.
The incident took place
in Umiujaq at 2 a.m. on Oct. 17.
The detachment had just
received a new police truck, and 20-year-old Ian Cloutier and his partner, Tony
Paquette, had taken the vehicle out on a tour of the villages airport.
The patrol was routine.
Officers often tour the airport to ensure any airplanes staying overnight are
secure.
But what was not routine
was the presence of a reported four young women in the police vehicle. Or the
fact that Cloutier lost control of the vehicle, flipping the truck and sending
three of the passengers to hospital with minor injuries.
One of the passengers was
also medivaced to the hospital in Puvirnituq the next day after she complained
of back pain.
Two investigations have
ensued from the event one into the accident itself and the other into
dangerous driving and the reasons why four female teenagers were in the police
truck.
Two of the teens are reportedly
underage.
"From what I understand
they were at the airport driving. They went to check to see if a helicopter
there was secure. Apparently a few girls went along for the ride but that isnt
procedure," Larry Hubert, the captain in charge of the Hudson Bay coast
police services, said in an interview this week.
"He said he was driving
the girls home. It was snowy and slippery and he flipped the truck over."
The accident popped the
trucks windows and the vehicle is still not in service. Huberts
investigation into the accident has been settled with no charges laid.
The KRPF has sent the second
investigation on to Rouyn-Noranda. The regional crown prosecutor there will
decide if criminal charges should be laid.
In the meantime, Hubert
has transferred Cloutier, who had only worked two months in his first posting
in Umiujaq, to Puvirnituq.
If the crown does lay charges
and Cloutier is found guilty, he will be dismissed from the police force, Hubert
said.
The father of one girl,
who refused to be named to protect his daughters identity, said the incident
has made him question police integrity.
"Im not very
happy about it. It seems police are over here abusing their power or power-tripping,"
the man said. "Apparently the cops just received the cop car and they took
three or four girls out joy riding. Its not right."
But the mother of the same
girl was less condemning.
"I think they [the
officers] were just having fun. But theyre not supposed to ask girls to
get in there," she said. "I guess they were just trying to show off
the truck."
The girls mother
said her daughter told her there were four teenage girls between the ages of
14 and 19 in the truck.
Hubert said the incident
seemed out of character for Cloutier. He is hopeful charges will not be laid
against him.
"I had to move him
due to the circumstances. I was worried he may have lost the communitys
trust," Hubert said. "But as a matter of fact when this happened the
community didnt want us to move him. He is a very good police officer."
Hubert expects the crown
to make a decision about criminal charges in the next few weeks.
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