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Author of the article: Jonny Wakefield
Publishing date: Jun 10, 2021 • 3 hours ago • 2 minute read • EPS Const. Tony Costa and his police service dog Amok. Costa and his police dog arrived in the area and saw several people on bikes headed eastward. The disciplinary decision does not specify which dog Costa was partnered with that night, though the EPS website says he is the handler for PSD Amok, a Belgian Malinois. Photo by Photo supplied
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An Edmonton police officer has been suspended without pay for allowing a police dog to bite a 16-year-old girl during a wrongful arrest.
Const. Antonio Costa was given a 50-hour suspension and ordered to take remedial training for the May 2017 arrest, which left the youth with serious injuries to her arm.
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An Edmonton police officer has been suspended without pay for allowing a police dog to bite a 16-year-old girl during a wrongful arrest.
Const. Antonio Costa was given a 50-hour suspension and ordered to take remedial training for the May 2017 arrest, which left the youth with serious injuries to her arm.
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Costa was a member of the Edmonton police canine unit at the time of the arrest. According to a disciplinary decision released Wednesday, he was asked to assist with an early morning assault call on May 14, 2017, during which two men allegedly entered a house near 112 Avenue and 91 Street and sprayed bear spray at the occupants.
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A former Edmonton police employee who was the victim of an officer’s workplace harassment campaign is relieved after Alberta’s highest court upheld the former constable’s firing.
In a decision released Monday, the Alberta Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal from Fiona Moffat, a ex-Edmonton Police Service constable who was fired following an investigation into bullying and harassment in the department’s emergency communications unit.
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Author of the article: Jonny Wakefield
Publishing date: Apr 01, 2021 • 2 days ago • 2 minute read • Const. Marty Franco, seen during a police training exercise in 2009. Franco pleaded guilty to three counts of misconduct under the Police Act this month related his 2017 arrest of an intoxicated man at Edmonton s City Centre Mall. Photo by Greg Southam Greg Southam /00036047A
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An Edmonton city police officer has been handed a pay cut and 60 hours of community service after admitting to dragging a homeless man along the ground during an arrest at City Centre Mall.
Const. Marty Franco admitted to professional misconduct for his role in the Dec. 10, 2017 arrest at a hearing last month.