Police watchdog clears officers accused of hurting man who filmed them - Action News
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Manitoba

Police watchdog clears officers accused of hurting man who filmed them

A pair of Winnipeg police officers will not face charges in a 2016 incident in which a man complained his arm was twisted and injured after he started recording police with his cellphone, the Independent Investigation Unit of Manitoba says.

'No reasonable likelihood' of conviction, prosecutors say

The man alleges a plainclothes officer tackled him after he started recording police. (Lyzaville Sale/CBC)

A pair of Winnipeg police officers will not face charges in a 2016 incident in which a man complained his arm was twisted and injured after he started recording police with his cellphone, the Independent Investigation Unit of Manitoba says.

The incident happened on Feb. 7, 2016, when officers were called to a restaurant in the West End at around 3:30 a.m.

Police arrested the man after he refused to leave the premises, and placed him in a cruiser car, says theIIU's report on the incident.

He was issued a provincial offence notice for refusingto leave apremise and then released, the report says.

The man then started filming the officers with his phone, at which point a plainclothes officer approached himand allegedly tackled him.

The man alleged that he was handcuffed again, and his left arm was twisted and possibly fractured, the report says.

The man reported the injury to the Winnipeg Police Service professional standards unit, indicating he wanted to pursue a criminal complaint.

When the unit found that the man's arm had, in fact, been fractured, the investigation was handed over to the Independent Investigation Unit in October 2016, as it then reached the threshold for an investigation by the police watchdog, said the IIU news release.

Both officers declined to be interviewed during the investigation, but did supply their notes and use of force reports.

After concluding its investigation, the IIU consulted with Manitoba Prosecution Services. Lawyers said they did not believe the charging standard was met andthere was "no reasonable likelihood" that either officer would be convicted if the case went to court, a news release from the IIU said.