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High Ranking Police Folk Allegedly Behaving Badly

As far as restraint goes, looks like chemical is popular,

26 Apr. 2024

Medics should not be in the business of lawful restraint.

Police should not be in the business of administering or ordering medications.

Unless emergency doctors are going to start doing ridealongs, this should stop. This isn’t a thing in Canada.
 

Medics should not be in the business of lawful restraint.

Only restrain a patient if,

i. directed by a physician or police officer,
ii. an unescorted patient becomes violent en route, or
iii. use of restraints is required to provide emergency treatment as per the Patient Refusal/Emergency Treatment Standard,

This isn’t a thing in Canada.

Only familiar with our little corner of it.

Combative Patient Medical Directive

Indications Combative OR violent or agitated behavior that requires sedation for patient safety.

Suspected excited delirium / severe violent psychosis

Ketamine

Age ≥ 18 years


 
i. directed by a physician or police officer,
ii. an unescorted patient becomes violent en route, or
iii. use of restraints is required to provide emergency treatment as per the Patient Refusal/Emergency Treatment Standard,



Only familiar with our little corner of it.







Ketamine

Age ≥ 18 years
Sorry, I should clarify I mean in the context of paramedics using restraint basically to assist police with a police led intervention. If there's a valid medical need and it fits within existing lawful paramedic protocols, that's outside my arcs, and fair enough. My reply was in the context of this being a policing thread.
 
This character had been mentioned before in this thread, when he had been suspended. Now, the Northamptonshire Police Chief Constable has been sacked.


Not only did he wear medals that he wasn't entitled to, but he "exaggerated" his experience when he applied for the Chief's job.

Mr Adderley claimed on his CV and his application form when applying to become chief constable of Northamptonshire Police in 2018 that he had been in the Royal Navy for 10 years when he had served for only two. He had apparently included his service with the Sea Cadets from the age of 10 in that calculation.

He also lied about attending the prestigious Britannia Royal Naval College for four years, despite having his application to the college rejected.

Only an able seaman
Mr Adderley said he had seen active service during his naval career, had been a military negotiator in Haiti, despite never visiting the country, and had been a “commander or a lieutenant”, even though he only achieved the rank of able seaman.

And in a related story;

A Falklands war veteran has called for a change in the law after a disgraced chief constable was found to have worn a medal from the campaign to which he was not entitled.
Tom Herring, the chairman of the South Atlantic Medal Association, has described the actions of former Northamptonshire chief constable Nick Adderley as "despicable".
Mr Herring fought in the Battle for Mount Longdon during the Falklands War in 1982, which left 23 British soldiers dead.
He said the UK should look at introducing laws similar to other countries where wearing a medal without the right to do so can be a criminal offence.
. . .
 
Not always high-ranking cops involved in shenanigans ....

Summary according to one of the media reports linked above
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Not a police officer, but . . .

Correctional officer who performed oral surgery on inmate granted absolute discharge
Ron McDonald, 47, 'already suffered' enough for assault charge, judge says


Posted: Aug 09, 2024

A correctional officer who extracted a central Newfoundland inmate's tooth during oral surgery in October 2020 has been granted an absolute discharge.

Ron McDonald had escorted an inmate to Louis Bourget's dental clinic in Gander for a procedure. While the inmate was sedated, Bourget explained the procedure to McDonald and another officer, and then suggested they perform the extraction of the four teeth.

McDonald took him up on the offer. He was later charged with aggravated assault and assault with a weapon; the former charge was dropped, while the latter was downgraded to a single count of assault, to which McDonald pleaded guilty.

At his sentencing in Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court in Gander on Friday, Justice Melanie Del Rizzo granted McDonald an absolute discharge on his conviction.

He was also ordered to pay a $200 victim surcharge within 30 days.

In her decision, Del Rizzo noted McDonald did not ask to remove the teeth of inmate Blair Harris but was offered that opportunity by the surgeon.

She went over several items in Harris's victim impact statement, which said he has suffered extreme social anxiety since the assault, has had to seek counselling and is unable to work.

He was under heavy sedation at the time of the incident.

McDonald, 47, had been a corrections officer for 10 years. He was fired as a result of the charge and now works in the fishery and as a truck driver.

He had no prior criminal record and was deemed low risk to reoffend, said the judge.

The Crown asked for a 30-day sentence with no probation, but the bench sided with McDonald's counsel, who asked for the absolute discharge.

Del Rizzo acknowledged McDonald had been in a position of trust and had been given the responsibility of protecting the inmate in his position as a correctional officer.

She also noted McDonald had statements of support as to his good character and has shown remorse for the incident, with no previous convictions. She also acknowledged the high visibility of the case in the media was taken into account in her decision.

She said McDonald has "already suffered extreme repercussions" and therefore will not have a criminal record and is not on probation.

During his own sentencing hearing, Bourget said he "got caught up in a teaching moment" but regretted the decision to offer McDonald the chance to extract teeth after the procedure.

Bourget also received an absolute discharge in April.

McDonald has asked the court if he can speak to the victim directly to offer an apology, something Del Rizzo said she would consider.

But I suppose what was good for the goose was good for the gander.

Oral surgeon who guided prison guard through extraction of inmate's teeth given absolute discharge
Dr. Louis Bourget given lowest level of criminal sentence

Posted: Apr 09, 2024

Dr. Louis Bourget will not have a criminal record.

The oral surgeon was charged with assault after he permitted a correctional officer to extract an inmate's teeth in October 2020. The incident was recorded by another correctional officer on his phone.

Bourget, who operates out of the Gander Family Dental Clinic building, received an absolute discharge on Tuesday at Supreme Court. It's the lowest level of criminal sentence that an adult offender can receive. It's a finding of guilt but no criminal conviction is registered and there is no probation order.

In October 2020, two correctional officers from the Bishop's Falls Correctional Centre — Ron McDonald and Roy Goodyear — accompanied an inmate to the clinic.

According to the agreed statement of facts, when the patient was sedated, Bourget was explaining the procedure to the guards, and he then suggested one of the guards remove four teeth. McDonald took out the teeth while Goodyear recorded the whole thing.

According to the statement of facts, Bourget said he "got caught up in a teaching moment" but regretted the decision after the procedure.

In court on Tuesday, Justice Melanie Del Rizzo said there were several things to consider in delivering her decision, including the pressures of the pandemic, Bourget's financial loss, his guilty plea, his low risk to re-offend and his completion of sensitivity training.

She also acknowledged the victim's psychological harm due to the incident, breaches of his bodily integrity, and that Bourget did not report the incident.

"The sentence must be proportionate to the gravity of the offence," Del Rizzo said.

"A criminal conviction is not in the public's interest."

Bourget would not do an interview following the decision.

However, following the incident he served sanctions from dental boards in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.

Dr. Paul O'Brien, registrar of the Newfoundland and Labrador Dental Board, said the matter likely won't arise again.

"Nothing happens next because unless there's a conviction, the same set of facts were there for the disciplinary action, so nothing's changed," he said outside the courtroom. "We will discuss it with their legal counsel and see what they have to say, but other than that, I have nothing to comment."

Bourget has offices in Gander, northern New Brunswick and the Halifax area.
 
How fucking stupid does one have to be to do that?????

Feeling Dumb Jim Carrey GIF
 
It makes me wonder how either officer or the dentist ever survived this long.....luck I guess.

The stupidity of the act aside, what gets my gitch in a knot is that they (especially the oral surgeon) received an absolute discharge based on "they had already gone through enough". As much as the dentist can say he "got caught up in a teaching moment", what he did was sedate a patient, discuss his treatment with individuals who had no legal right to that information; not only permitted, but encouraged, one of those individuals to physically assault the sedated patient (who was under a duty of care by his assailant); and had another individual film the event. Yes, the dentist did receive sanctions from dental boards of NL and NS that cost him some money but he is back practicing without any restrictions. With the absolute discharge his licensing bodies have no recourse for further sanctions. At the time of receiving professional disciplinary measures (about two years before his criminal trial) it was announced that any further actions would be based on whether he was found guilty of the criminal charges.
 
The stupidity of the act aside, what gets my gitch in a knot is that they (especially the oral surgeon) received an absolute discharge based on "they had already gone through enough". As much as the dentist can say he "got caught up in a teaching moment", what he did was sedate a patient, discuss his treatment with individuals who had no legal right to that information; not only permitted, but encouraged, one of those individuals to physically assault the sedated patient (who was under a duty of care by his assailant); and had another individual film the event. Yes, the dentist did receive sanctions from dental boards of NL and NS that cost him some money but he is back practicing without any restrictions. With the absolute discharge his licensing bodies have no recourse for further sanctions. At the time of receiving professional disciplinary measures (about two years before his criminal trial) it was announced that any further actions would be based on whether he was found guilty of the criminal charges.
I agree. As a general statement (no doubt there are exceptions that I can't think of right now), factors such as notoriety, public embarrassment, humiliation, etc., and even professional implications, should not be mitigating factors when it comes to sentencing.
 
Not always high-ranking cops involved in shenanigans ....

Summary according to one of the media reports linked above
View attachment 86404
The Lethbridge Police Service (formally known as the Lethbridge Regional Police Service - it isn't regional anymore and for good reason) has a lot of shady characters, and this situation barely scratches the surface of some of the stuff their members have done

I've said it before & I'll say it again, the Lethbridge Police Service AND the local crown prosecutors office is the biggest swamp of shady shit I periodically have to dip my toe into


They do have some great police officers, don't get me wrong. And some of their junior crown prosecutors do a great job. I don't want to paint everybody with the same brush.

But holy hell if I don't have a few stories I wish I could share that stem from that service...
 
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