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Don Cherry poses in front of his old 1997 Yukon on March 14, 2013. Mr. Cherry is speaking out on Twitter about a court verdict that will send a man who killed a Toronto police officer with a snowplow to a psychiatric hospital instead of prison.Peter Power/The Globe and Mail

Controversial hockey commentator Don Cherry is speaking out on Twitter about a court verdict that will send a man who killed a Toronto police officer with a snowplow to a psychiatric hospital instead of prison.

In posts to his official Twitter account on Friday, the outspoken broadcaster says he can't believe Richard Kachkar was found not criminally responsible in the death of Sergeant Ryan Russell.

The tweets say that in Mr. Cherry's view it seems if you kill someone and "act mentally disturbed" then you can be set free.

However, the verdict means Mr. Kachkar will be assessed and treated at a psychiatric facility – and will only be released when a review board decides he is not a significant threat to public safety.

The tweets take aim at what Mr. Cherry calls an "unelected left-wing judge," a lawyer he says whittled the jury down to feeling sympathy for Mr. Kachkar and the "left-wing media."

The verdict delivered Wednesday means the jury believed Mr. Kachkar could not appreciate what he was doing when he drove a snowplow at Sgt. Russell, knocking him down and killing him in January, 2011.

Mr. Kachkar was assessed for the trial by three prominent forensic psychiatrists, including one who was chosen by the Crown, each of whom found that the drifter from St. Catharines, Ont., was psychotic when he killed Sgt. Russell.

But Mr. Cherry, known to speak his mind on political topics, took issue with the result of the trial.

"I just can't get over how Sergeant Ryan Russell's wife and parents must feel today," one of Mr. Cherry's postings says.

"I know the verdict won't bring back Sgt. Russell, but it's got to hurt to see the guy go scot-free."

"I read in the paper, the police must do a better job in recognizing the mentally challenged. But I must say it's going to be tough to recognize when a snowplow is coming at you [at] 50 miles an hour," the tweets say.

Mr. Cherry isn't a stranger to generating controversy with his social-media musings.

In January, a series of tweets on his account took umbrage with Canadian foreign aid to Haiti.

A spokesman for the CBC said Mr. Cherry's tweets were his own and he wasn't speaking on behalf of the public broadcaster.

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