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To: pocotrader who wrote (1453349)4/22/2024 4:46:05 PM
From: longz  Respond to of 1571282
 
taco poco Why are you here? You don't contribute SFA... constantly repeating yourself is a sign of dementia, seek help



To: pocotrader who wrote (1453349)4/22/2024 4:48:54 PM
From: longz1 Recommendation

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  Respond to of 1571282
 
taco poco nothing butt SWEET Fk ALL---->>>




To: pocotrader who wrote (1453349)4/22/2024 10:32:20 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Respond to of 1571282
 
Why is Canada turning into the world's largest ghetto shit-hole?

Civic leaders stoked hatred of Umar Zameer after Toronto police officer's death: lawyer

Nader Hasan also questioned TPS chief's comments about 'hoping for a different outcome' from trial



Adam Carter · CBC News · Posted: Apr 22, 2024 1:04 PM CDT | Last Updated: 3 hours ago



Umar Zameer thanks defence lawyer Nader Hasan while speaking to reporters outside the courthouse following his not guilty verdict, in Toronto on Sunday. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

After weeks of evidence in court and several tense days of jury deliberations, Umar Zameer is a free man — and his lawyer isn't mincing words about the politicians who rushed to demonize his client after he initially got bail back in 2021.

Nader Hasan was one of two lawyers who represented Zameer in court after the death of Toronto police officer Det.-Const. Jeffrey Northrup almost three years ago.
Speaking on CBC Radio's Metro Morning on Monday, Hasan lamented the response from politicians like Ontario's premier and Toronto's former mayor who rushed to judgment before any evidence was presented at trial, as well as initial comments from the police chief on Sunday stating he wished for a different outcome in court.

Hasan said that back in 2021 when Zameer was first charged, his office was receiving hate mail, even death threats, for "having the audacity to take on this case.

"That hatred had been stoked by elected officials and by the chief of police himself," Hasan said.

James Ramer, who was chief of Toronto police at the time of Zameer's arrest, initially called Northrup's death an "intentional and deliberate act" — something the jury rejected over the weekend.

WATCH | Zameer's lawyer looks back at emotional trial:



Umar Zameer’s lawyer: 'We knew the truth'

On Sunday, jurors found Umar Zameer not guilty of all criminal charges, including first-degree murder, in the death of Toronto police officer Det.-Const. Jeffrey Northrup nearly three years ago. Metro Morning host David Common spoke with Zameer's lawyer Nader Hasan about the verdict, and how officials handled the case.
In a responding statement from 2021 posted on X, formerly Twitter, Premier Doug Ford called the court's decision to grant Zameer bail "beyond comprehension.

"It's completely unacceptable that the person charged for this heinous crime is now out on bail," Ford said — though his initial statement went even further and called Zameer "the person responsible" for Northrup's death, before walking that back by deleting and reposting with the words "responsible for" swapped for "charged for."

Comments out of line, lawyer says

Former Toronto mayor John Tory, meanwhile, said it was "almost impossible to imagine a circumstance in which an accused in a case of first-degree murder would be granted bail."

Brampton Mayor Patrick Brown also tweeted at the time, saying in part: "This is disgusting. It is very disturbing that the person charged for this heinous crime is now out on bail."



Det.-Const. Jeffrey Northrup died on July 2, 2021 after he was hit by a vehicle driven by Umar Zameer in an underground parking garage at Toronto City Hall. Zameer was found not guilty of murder on Sunday. (@TPS52Div/Twitter)

Hasan said Monday that those comments were ignorant, and came from people who should know better.

"The presumption of innocence is one of the pillars of our criminal justice system," he said. "And for politicians to spout off and sentence a man and condemn a man who is presumed innocent without knowing any true details of the case — it is reckless, it is irresponsible.

"Canadians deserve and expect more from their elected officials."

Michael Kempa, associate professor of criminology at the University of Ottawa, offered a similar sentiment, saying it would be a "charitable interpretation" to see this as a situation where elected officials spoke out of turn before they had all the facts.

"A more cynical interpretation would be that it is a willful manipulation ... a misrepresentation of how bail works for the public audience — in other words, politicizing this issue," Kempa said, also speaking on Metro Morning.

"We only hold people on bail if there's some reason to believe that they're a flight risk, or they pose further risk to the community."


Daniel Brown, a defence lawyer and former president of the Criminal Lawyers' Association, said the charge appeared to be a "political prosecution," with comments from civil leaders creating "a false narrative about what happened.

"The premier of Ontario was putting his thumb on the scales of justice and infecting the public's views about how they should view this man," Brown told The Canadian Press.

Andrew Kennedy, spokesperson for the Attorney General, said in an email Monday afternoon that "prosecution decisions made by the Crown are made without political input."

Tory says he's learned a lessonCBC Toronto reached out to Ford, Brown and Tory about their previous comments. As of Monday night, Ford hadn't responded.

Brown responded with a statement Monday that did not mention Zameer at all, nor the Brampton mayor's previous comments about his bail.

Tory, for his part, said in a statement Monday evening that "there are many learnings in this case.

"The first for me would be, despite pressure from the media and the public to comment on these kinds of matters, one should wait until significantly important information is available including judicial reasons," Tory said.

The former Toronto mayor also said he respects the outcome of the trial.

"The jury heard all of the evidence and found Mr. Zameer innocent. The jury was in the best position to make that decision and I completely respect it," he said.

Police chief's comments questioned

Zameer had pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder after he ran over Northrup with his car in an underground parking garage beneath Toronto City Hall on July 2, 2021. Both Northrup and his partner were in plain clothes, investigating a stabbing that night.

After the verdict was read out Sunday, Ontario Superior Court Justice Anne Molloy addressed Zameer briefly before exiting the courtroom, telling him he was free to go and offering "my deepest apologies for what you've been through."



Toronto Police Chief Myron Demkiw said Sunday that he shares 'the feelings of our members who were hoping for a different outcome' in the trial. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

Outside court, however, Toronto Police Chief Myron Demkiw struck a different tone.

"While we respect the judicial process and appreciate the work of everyone involved in this difficult case, we were hoping for a different outcome," he said.

Kempa said he understood the chief's reaction as an emotional one in the face of a tragic event for everyone involved — but he also said questioning or expressing disappointment in a jury's verdict is troublesome, and can harm public perception of police impartiality.

"I don't feel that it is the role of a chief of police or an elected person to basically say that a jury is wrong or that court erred in its legal interpretation of the situation," he said.

Hasan agreed, saying there was a lengthy trial in this case, and jurors heard the evidence and deliberated carefully.

"They determined that Mr. Zameer was not guilty because he's not guilty," he said. "It is somewhat frustrating and embarrassing that we have a chief of police who cannot accept this reality."

In a second statement issued Monday evening, Demkiw said that he respects the judicial process and accepts the jury's decision.

"Perhaps closure in a tragic event of this magnitude will come with time," he said. "As Chief, I was acknowledging the emotions many of us were feeling, while struggling with the death of a fellow officer, but of course, closure can never come at the expense of justice."

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To: pocotrader who wrote (1453349)4/22/2024 10:35:28 PM
From: Maple MAGA 2 Recommendations

Recommended By
longz
Mick Mørmøny

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1571282
 
Can you answer one simple question honestly or has Trump cut your tongue?

Why was Umar Zameer tried for murder?

Observers raise questions about prosecution



Umar Zameer found not guilty in T.O. officer death


Umar Zameer is found not guilty on all charges after being accused of running over and killing a Toronto officer in 2021.

Zameer’s lawyer speaks about his client’s acquittal


All charges have been dropped against man accused of intentionally striking and killing a Toronto police officer.

Paola Loriggio,
Monday, April 22, 2024 4:34PM EDT
Legal observers are questioning the decision to charge and prosecute a man for murder in the death of a Toronto police officer when the evidence did not support it, saying the case raises concerns about fair process in the justice system.

Umar Zameer was found not guilty Sunday in the death of Det. Const. Jeffrey Northrup, who died on July 2, 2021, after he was hit by a vehicle in an underground parking garage at Toronto City Hall. Zameer had pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.

Alison Craig, a defence lawyer based in Toronto, said that while it was likely not the sole decision of the trial prosecutors to pursue a murder charge, the case would "likely have proceeded very differently" had the deceased not been a police officer.

RELATED STORIESPHOTOS



Umar Zameer reacts beside lawyer Alexandra Heine during a press conference following his not-guilty verdict, in Toronto, Sunday, April 21, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov

"I'm sure there was a whole lot of pressure in light of the fact that he was a police officer. It shouldn't have been treated any differently, I don't think, but I think it quite obviously was," she said. That raises concerns of a two-tier justice system, she said.

There should be an inquiry to investigate why the case was prosecuted as a murder when the evidence from the Crown's own expert contradicted that narrative, she said.

"The question has to be asked why Mr. Zameer was put through this for years, why the deceased officer's family was put through this for years," she said.

"Obviously it's tragic and horrendous for them to live through this, and if (Northrup's family) had been told the truth about what the evidence showed happened, they could have started grieving years ago."

After the verdict Sunday, Crown prosecutor Michael Cantlon issued a written statement, saying the events surrounding Northrup's death "warranted a trial to determine accountability."

The Crown has to believe there's a reasonable prospect of conviction before putting someone on trial, but "they might as well have conceded that they never went through that process of determining whether there was a reasonable prospect of conviction," said Reid Rusonik, a Toronto defence lawyer.

Rusonik said he was worried police couldn't "get past the notion that somebody has to pay for an officer losing his life," and chose to make it an antagonistic situation rather than a learning experience and a collective expression of grief.

"It could have literally happened to anyone. It's just a tragedy. It was an accident ... We could have all been in that underground parking garage that night, any one of us, and the exact same thing would have happened to us," he said.

Daniel Brown, a defence lawyer and former president of the Criminal Lawyers' Association, said no one disputes that deliberately killing a police officer should carry more significant consequences, "but this is a case where they're trying to squeeze a square peg into a round hole."

Prosecutors had the evidence for years and were aware of its limitations, he said.

"They're trying to turn something that isn't a murder into a murder,” he said.

The case appeared to be a "political prosecution," he added, noting several politicians – including Ontario Premier Doug Ford – publicly condemned Zameer before the case even went to trial.

"It created a false narrative about what happened in this case," Brown said. "The premier of Ontario was putting his thumb on the scales of justice and infecting the public's views about how they should view this man."

When Zameer was released on bail in the fall of 2021, Ford expressed his disapproval on X, formerly known as Twitter, calling the decision "completely unacceptable." He initially described Zameer as "the person responsible for this heinous crime," but later changed it to "the person charged."

Then-Toronto mayor John Tory and Brampton's mayor also denounced the decision.

At the time, the reasons for the ruling could not be publicly disclosed due to a publication ban, but the ban has lifted now that the trial is complete. In her decision, the bail judge found, among other things, that the Crown had a "weak" case for murder.

Ford's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday. Ontario's attorney general's office also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Brown said the fact that the trial judge, Ontario Superior Court Justice Anne Molloy, apologized to Zameer after the jury delivered its verdict Sunday is "unusual" and significant.

"It’s highly rare and it felt that she was expressing the public’s collective feeling about this case," Brown said.

During trial, prosecutors alleged Zameer chose to drive dangerously even though Northrup and his partner – both plainclothes officers – were nearby, and intentionally ran down Northrup.

Defence lawyers argued Zameer didn't know they were police officers and feared his family was under attack from robbers or a gang. They argued Zameer had no reason to want to flee police, and tried to escape as safely as he could.

Zameer testified he looked back when reversing and to the front while driving forward, and did not see anything in the car's path.

Three officers who witnessed the incident testified Northrup was standing in the laneway of the garage with his hands outstretched when he was run over. But security footage showed Northrup was not standing in the laneway. Instead, an object believed to be his body appeared on the ground in the car's path at one point.

Two crash reconstruction experts, one of them called by the Crown, told the court they concluded Northrup fell after being side swiped by the car reversing, and was already on the ground when he was run over by the car moving forward. The expert called by the defence also testified Northrup would not have been visible on the ground because he was in the car's blind zone.

Prosecutors argued the witness officers were wrong about Northrup's location but correct that he was standing. They alleged the impact happened behind a pillar blocking the view of the camera.

Molloy told jurors before they began deliberating that it was her opinion there was no evidence to fully support the Crown's theory, but that the defence's theory aligned with the video, the experts, and the testimony of Zameer and his wife.

She also instructed jurors to consider the possibility of collusion between the witness officers, noting all three had the same incorrect memory of what happened.