Vancouver city police are recommending criminal charges against two of three off-duty officers from other Lower Mainland departments accused in a sidewalk attack on a newspaper deliveryman last week.
Chief Jim Chu told a crowded news conference Monday that an investigation by six members of the Vancouver Police Department concluded the third officer, from Delta, may actually have been trying to “intervene to stop the assault” of Phil Khan, 47, a father of three, last Wednesday morning.
The version of events echoed that of one witness, a city worker who spoke earlier with The Globe and Mail, but contradicted another, a cab driver who told CTV all three men were involved in the attack.
Mr. Khan said Monday night he was not satisfied with the chief's announcement and disputed any assertion that one of the officers was a hero who tried to rein in his associates.
“All three should be charged because they all participated in this thing,” Mr. Khan said from his home where he is recovering from bruises to his head, abdomen and rib area. “If one officer said, ‘I am going to stop the fight, don't beat him, I am going to pull him away, I would say one officer out of three saved me,' but I was getting kicks from all of them.”
He said he was hard pressed to identify the officer who made the “brown people” remark because the native of the Fiji Islands, who moved to Canada in 1982, was on the ground and couldn't see because the hood of his jacket had been pulled over, blindfolding him.
“I couldn't see them. All I could hear is, ‘We don't like brown people.'”
He said one person said, “If you don't behave, we can use our taser gun.”
The father of three girls, aged four months to four years, said he was saved by other night-time workers, including city workers, employees of the Hyatt hotel and nearby Tim Hortons and McDonald's who went out and tried to intervene. “People got very upset and said, ‘Why are you beating this guy up because he's a newspaper delivery guy. We know him.'”
Mr. Khan said he will never be able to return to the delivery work he began doing in 1996, and loved “because I am very traumatized, very afraid.”
Mr. Chu said police are urging the Crown to lay a charge of robbery against a West Vancouver officer and charges of assault and possession of stolen property against an officer from New Westminster. Mr. Khan said he was robbed of $200 and a cellphone after the officers attacked him.
Police have yet to identify the officers involved because charges have not been laid.
Mr. Chu said Monday's announcement was a rebuttal of suggestions from the public – some of which landed in his e-mail inbox – that police might not be enthusiastically pursuing the case against fellow officers.
He said he met the team on the case over the weekend.
“I was satisfied they were trying to do the investigation as quickly as possible, yet at the same time, I didn't want to pressure these investigators into making a mistake or rushing something that could leave, in the end, a defence opening,” he said.
“These things do take time, and when it's before the court process and all the information is shared, I think you will see in an open courtroom the Vancouver police were not dragging our heels on it or taking our time with this case. A lot of people watch TV and know CSI Miami solves it in one hour, and that's not the case with these kinds of crimes.”
