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Toronto Police Hiring Investigators To Watch Dog Special Investigations Unit

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Officers want their own investigations into incidents

The Toronto police union has hired its own private detectives to carry out

parallel probes of incidents like police shootings to keep an eye on

Ontario's special investigations unit.

The Toronto Police Association has retained about a dozen investigators,

including private eyes and former homicide detectives, said Craig Bromell,

president of the 7,000-member union. Sources say the investigators are

already working on SIU cases, but Bromell wouldn't confirm that.

The move is part of the union's policy of aggressively challenging police

critics, government agencies and the politicians it feels are treating

police unfairly.

Bromell said yesterday that the team of investigators could also be called

into action when an officer is under investigation by the force's internal

affairs unit. For now, the private detectives are being hired on

case-by-case basis, but a permanent, full-time squad could be established,

he said.

The union leader is expecting the plan to be criticized, but he maintains

the police association has a duty and legal right to ensure the SIU and

internal affairs unit carry out fair and complete investigations when

probing the conduct of its members.

"It's totally legal and we will be totally professional about it," Bromell

said. He described the investigators as top-notch detectives and better

than the ex-police officers working for the provincial SIU.

Although Bromell said the union wants to be up front about what it is

doing. He wouldn't say who the association has hired or which SIU cases

they may be looking into. The union leader said the plan officially began

Jan. 1, although sources say some investigators were working in December.

Police attorneys could use reports to defend officers

One concern for the SIU will be whether the union's detectives have access

to "subject" officers, who normally don't give statements to civilian

investigators because they are the focus of a criminal probe.

SIU spokesperson Gail Scala said yesterday that the agency is prepared to

deal with the issues if it arises. "It would be another factor to consider

in the course of our investigation."

The union has no plans to interview subject or even witness officers, but

will gather information from civilian witnesses and other sources it

believes the SIU often misses, Bromell said.

"We won't get in the SIU's way. They won't even notice we are there," he

said, adding the union's investigators will interview civilian witnesses

only after the SIU has finished taking statements.

On Jan. 1, the SIU was given new powers under the Police Services Act to

ensure officers would co-operate with the agency, which probes incidents

in which citizens are seriously injured or killed by police.

Under the regulations, a police chief can carry out his own probe into an

incident involving his officers, but the SIU is, by law, in charge of the

criminal investigation. The primary role of a police chief's investigation

is to determine whether the force's policies need to be addressed.

There are no restrictions or rules under the regulations that govern

police unions. In essence, union investigators could conduct a full,

criminal-type probe and come to a different conclusion than the SIU.

If charges are laid against officers in a SIU case, attorneys for the

police could use the information from union investigators as part of their

defence.

The union could also submit its findings to the attorney-general's office,

which oversees the SIU and gets a report from the agency once it has

completed an investigation.

A spokesperson for the attorney-general's office did not return The Star's

calls yesterday. Toronto police Chief David Boothby was not immediately

available for comment.

The police union has made it known for months that it was gearing up for a

major attack on the SIU and others it deemed were bringing "unnecessary

hardship" on police officers.

In December, the union voted on its final plan, which included the

approval of a multi-million-dollar war chest to hire investigators and pay

for ad campaigns.

Bromell won't say how much the union is paying its detectives, but said it

is looking at hiring more. As well, the union will consider requests from

other police associations that want to carry out parallel probes when the

SIU is involved.

The union is in the process of hiring a civil litigation firm to handle

lawsuits against people and organizations it feels are unfairly condemning

the police.