Officer testifies senior union rep told him not to write notes after Myles Gray's beating death - Action News
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British Columbia

Officer testifies senior union rep told him not to write notes after Myles Gray's beating death

An officer with the Vancouver Police Department testified on Thursday that a senior union representative told him not to take handwritten notes after the beating that left a man dead more than seven years ago.

Const. Josh Wong said Gray showed 'no signs of pain' during struggle with several officers

A young white man with a red baseball cap and grey and black patterned hoodie is giving a slight smile in front of a white background.
Myles Gray, 33, died in a wooded backyard in Burnaby, B.C., after a confrontationwith as many as nine police officers in August 2015. (Submitted by Margie Gray)

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

An officer with the Vancouver Police Department testified on Thursday that a senior union representative told him not to take handwritten notes after the beating that left a man dead more than seven years ago.

Const. Josh Wong told a coroner's inquest the representative spoke to him as he waited for police watchdog investigators at the department's headquarters after the fight.

"At one point, I had my notebook outand pen in hand, and I was sitting on the seventh floor in a red leather chair, and I was told by a senior [union] member ... not to make any handwritten notes," said Wong, then a junior officer with fewer than 18 months on the force.

"So I did not."

Wong took the stand on the fourthday of a coroner's inquest into the death ofMyles Gray, 33, who died in a wooded backyardin Burnaby, B.C., after a confrontationwith as many as nine police officers in August 2015. Officers were the only witnesses, as the yard was shrouded from public view, and there is no video footage.

In his testimony, Wong said a number of union representatives were on the seventh floor at police headquartersafter the death, andhe could not recall which one talked to him about the notes. He saidit was not Ralph Kaisers, the head of the Vancouver Police Union.

"Itseemed very odd to me," Wongsaid, referring to the representative's actions.

A concrete staircase leads into a forested backyard on a residential street.
A staircase that leads up to the backyard at an address on Joffre Avenue in Burnaby, B.C., where Myles Gray was killed during a conflict with Vancouver police officers in August 2015. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

He said he later typed up a statementin a Word document at home and saved it to a USB stick. The file was uploaded to the police database months later, in 2016.

Wong told the inquestGraywas "actively fighting'' one of three officers already at the scene when he arrived as backup, while another officer had "slurred speech'' and told Wong thatGrayhad punched him in the face.

Wong said he joined the struggle to restrain Gray, kneeing and punching him. At the end, Wong said officersnoticed Gray's skin turning blue,removed the handcuffs, turnedhim on his back and startedchest compressions.

Wong said Gray began "began kicking and flailing and fighting once again" after briefly regaining consciousness.

"He was also screaming somebody's name, a male's nameagain, I'm not sure exactly what it wasbefore he passed away," Wong said.

The officer told the jury he hadn't seen any signsGray was in medical distress before he went blue.

Note-taking issue part of separate disciplinary proceedings

Allegations of improper note-taking have arisen during a separate investigation into the officers'conduct.

The police chiefin charge of the probe said in February six of the seven officers involved in the struggle with Gray might have neglected their duty by failing to take any written notes about what happened the day the mandied.

An executive summary addressed to the Office of the Police Complaints Commissioner (OPCC) also said seven officers, including those who have testified to date, might have abused their authority by using unnecessary forceduring the struggle.

The officers could face discipline as severe as being fired if the allegations are proven, the summary said.

Those hearings have been postponed until after the coroner's inquest.

A close-up of two women with long, curly hair standing in front of a glass window.
Myles Gray's sister Melissa Gray, left, and mother Margie Gray are pictured outside B.C. Coroners Court on Tuesday after the second day of the inquest into Gray's death. (Justine Boulin/CBC)

Multiple officers say Gray exhibited 'superhuman strength'

The inquest has heard from several officers throughout the week who testified that Gray, who was unarmed, was aggressive andthreatening their safety afterpolice responded to aninitial report saying he had sprayed a woman with a garden hose.

Multiple officers who followed Gray intoa backyard on Joffre Avenue near Marine Drive have described their belief Gray wasexhibiting "superhuman strength" under the influence of drugs orperformance-enhancing steroids.

The officers, including Wong, said Gray continued to resist the officers after being pepper-sprayed, punched, kneed,struck with batons and held in a chokehold.

Wong saidhe punched Gray in the face after he found repeatedly kneeingGray in the torso to be "ineffective." He said Gray was soaked in sweat and showed "no signs of pain."

"I was genuinely afraid that he was going to beat me,'' Wong said of the struggle.

During cross-examination, family lawyer Ian Donaldsonsuggested to Wong that he "took part in this beating that led to [Gray's]death.''

Wong replied he "was only thinking of [his]own safety at the time.''

A muscular white man with short-cropped brown hair, wearing a red t-shirt and long black shorts is shown walking along a rocky shoreline. He is looking down at a stone in one of his hands.
Prosecutorsdid not pursue criminal charges against the officers involved in Gray's death in part because of inconsistent and sometimes conflicting testimony around the case. (Margie Gray)

Officers said Graywas later handcuffed and hobbled, meaning his legs were tied together.

He died at the scene, with his injuries including a fractured eye socket, a crushed voice box, brain hemorrhagingand a ruptured testicle. The injuries were so extensive that forensic pathologists could not confirm a cause of death.

Gray'ssister, MelissaGray, said her brotherhad been hospitalized and diagnosed with bipolar disorder as a teenager around 1999. She said she believed her brother's condition was stablebut agreed hecould have potentially been suffering from a manic episode the day he died.

A toxicology expert is expected to testify at the inquest next week.A report from theB.C. Prosecution Service in 2020said toxicology evidence showedGrayhad the drug kratom, aherbal stimulant, in his system.

History of officers' refusal to co-operate

The investigation by B.C.'s independent police watchdog was held up for months as officers disagreed over their duty to co-operate. The Independent Investigations of B.C. petitioned the courts twiceto compel the officers to work with them.

The watchdog ultimately sent a report to Crown counsel,believing there were grounds for criminal charges, including manslaughter. Prosecutorsdid not pursue any charges,in partbecause of inconsistent and sometimes conflicting testimony around the case.

WATCH | Myles Gray's mother says she wants police to express remorse:

Family doubts officers' testimony that force was justified at Myles Gray Inquest

1 year ago
Duration 1:56
Multiple police officers are speaking publicly for the first time in seven years about a fatal confrontation with an unarmed man in B.C. The officers testified he was aggressive, forcing them to use force, but the victims family says they don't believe the testimony.

Two police officers on scenesaidthey had not had any mental health training before Gray's death. Two others said they did have suchtraining and have since gone on to leadership roles within the department:Const. Eric Birznecknow works as a use-of-forcetraining officer, and Det. Nick Thompson works withthe force's mental health emergency team, known asCar 87.

Before the inquest began, Gray's family learned four of the officers were already under investigation at the time of his deathbecause of an incident that left another man with a broken jawsix weeks earlier.In addition, one of thosefour officers is awaiting a criminal trial in September for assault related to another arrest that seriously injured a cyclist in 2017.

Two people had called police after Graywandered into the neighbourhood, swore at a woman and sprayed her with agarden hose as shewateredplants outside her co-op building.

Vancouver police responded to the call because the initial incident on the lawn happened in the southeast corner of the city, though Gray later moved east and crossed the border into Burnaby before going into the backyard.

The inquest is scheduled to conclude on April 28.

With files from The Canadian Press