Court sides with suspended Victoria police chief but investigation continues
VANCOUVER — A spokesman for British Columbia’s police watchdog says a court ruling involving Victoria’s suspended police chief over sexually charged Twitter messages risks undermining the agency’s oversight powers.
Rollie Woods of the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner said the B.C. Supreme Court decision in the case of Chief Const. Frank Elsner could restrict the office from investigating disciplinary matters conducted internally by individual police departments.
“I’m not suggesting they would do this, but if the police decided that they were going to take a matter and put it in an internal-discipline stream and then come to a conclusion and the commissioner disagrees with their decision, there’s nothing he would be able to do about it,” Woods said in an interview Wednesday.
He was commenting after the release of a decision by B.C. Supreme Court Justice Christopher Hinkson, which narrows the scope of the commission’s investigation by quashing two of five allegations against Elsner.


