Taser Death? Let's Deal With Death in...9 Years?

  • Posted by Jark
  • Filed in City
  • November 20, 2007
20071120_HomelessmanDead01.jpgHere's more dirty filth on our splendid Police Department and their, shall we say, gray and violent history. I've stumbled upon something very troubling yesterday. A few days ago, a retired Judge, a lovely man by many accounts, by the title of Honorable Commissioner William Davies, heard opening statements from 15 lawyers acting for the Vancouver police, ambulance, coroner's service, the criminal-justice branch and four major aboriginal groups, about a very interesting case. This is just as heinous as the Taser death in Vancouver recently, only a tad less attacking, yet equally as shocking. Have you heard of Frank Paul? A man who was found dead in 1998 in the DTES whose death, for all intents and purposes, is only now being investigated. My thinking is, wtf? What's wrong with this picture? Is this simply a typo? Nope. The date is right.

Allegedly, a month after Vancouver police "dumped" the body of Frank Paul in a downtown alley, where he eventually died of hypothermia, it was reported that police told Paul's Mik'maq family in Big Cove, New Brunswick that he'd been killed by a hit-and-run driver. Sure, when someone freezes to death that's the PC thing to say, to avoid all responsibility. And, suffice it to say, that was nothing less than a lie. On December 6, 1998, the body of Frank Joseph Paul was found in an alley in the Downtown East Side (DTES) of Vancouver. He died of hypothermia while "in custody" of the Vancouver Police Department. Read on...

Here are the juicy details, as a lot of information hasn't been released to this date. But, suffice it to say, allegedly Police officers dragged him out of the police station and into a van, even though he was obviously unconscious, and then dumped him in an alley, in the middle of winter. What was done to document this at the time: very little. The Vancouver Police Department imposed a two day suspension on one of the officers involved for discreditable conduct and a one day suspension on the other for neglect of duty, and decided not to lay criminal charges. This is where the paper-trail starts. And this is where I thought, hmmm, I think people would be curious about it. Back in that day, former Police Complaint Commissioner Don Morrison advised the Vancouver Police Department that a Public Hearing would not be appropriate, citing that 'extended delays' and 'other public interest considerations' were more pressing at the time. And today, nine years later, here we go. I'd like to hear what y'all got to say about this. What a wonderful city we're living in...

PICTURE CREDIT: Andersdenkend's photostream

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Surely there are some good people in the police force, yet stories like this are becoming far too common. It goes back to the old saying, "Power corrupts...". So what is the answer? Do we disband all police forces across the country? Then what? Have volunteer police perhaps. If so, would that be better? Perhaps we need an independant, ombudsman type, watching over each and every force?

I would not want to be a cop. Everyone hates you... until they need you.

Posted by: Patrick Deady at November 20, 2007 3:19 PM | Quote Comment

Actually, Patrick, the scariest thing is when you need a police officer and they're not there to help you, instead they use that opportunity to torture you--which is the case with Paul Frank (have you seen the video surveillance of that night?). This isn't about "disbanding" the police force, this is about addressing (a) the systematic failings of the VPD which are well illustrated in the paper trail used to cover up this case for nine years and b) the actual officers who were given a slap on the wrist for knowingly leaving a man to perish in the cold (which is also a systematic form of reward for their inhuman behavior). I'm tired of the argument that no matter what the police do, people are going to complain--we should be complaining about this, we should be angry about this, we should not dumb down what happened that night. To be quite honest, this apologist attitude simply enables the notion that the police are above the law. Should we simply wax poetic about the motto "to serve and protect". Let us never forget that a police force acts at our behest and not the other way around.

Posted by: Nadia at November 24, 2007 10:16 AM | Quote Comment

My apologies, I just realized I inverted Frank Paul's name.

Posted by: Nadia at November 24, 2007 1:07 PM | Quote Comment

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