Author of the article: Jonny Wakefield
Publishing date: Apr 05, 2021 • April 5, 2021 • 3 minute read • Nasser El Hallak claims he was beaten and called racial slurs by Const. Nathan Downing in 2015. A former police superintendent ruled March 22, 2021 that the charges against Downing had not been proven. Photo by David Bloom Supplied /David Bloom/Postmedia
Article content
A recent disciplinary decision involving two Edmonton city police officers highlights problems with Alberta’s system for holding law enforcement accountable, a local lawyer says.
Kate Engel represents Nasser El Hallak, who claims he was beaten and called racial slurs by Const. Nathan Downing during an arrest in 2015.
Author of the article: Jonny Wakefield
Publishing date: Mar 31, 2021 • 6 days ago • 4 minute read • Nasser El Hallak claims he was a victim of excessive force during a 2015 arrest by EPS Const. Nathan Downing. Downing was acquitted of the charge as well as allegations that he uttered racial slurs at El Hallak in a decision issued March 22, 2021. Supplied
Article content
An Edmonton police officer accused of using racial slurs against a man during a violent arrest has been cleared of professional misconduct.
Earlier this month, retired police Supt. Thomas Grue issued a sprawling, 131-page decision in the case of Edmonton Police Service constables Nathan Downing and Nicholas Talvio, who were involved in the March 25, 2015, arrest of Nasser El Hallak.
Posted: Mar 31, 2021 4:10 PM MT | Last Updated: April 1
Const. Nathan Downing was exonerated of all charges in relation to an violent arrest of Nasser El Hallak in 2015.(Edmonton Police Commission/Submitted by Nasser El Hallak)
An Edmonton police officer has been found not guilty of using excessive force during an arrest six years ago that left the suspect with facial fractures.
Const. Nathan Downing was accused of repeatedly punching Nasser El Hallak in the head and shouting racial slurs during a traffic stop in 2015. But Downing said he delivered one blow to the side of El Hallak s head to stop him from fleeing.
AWS Marketplace Adds Nvidia’s GPU-Accelerated NGC Software For AI
This makes AWS the first cloud service provider to support NGC, which will give customers and partners the ability to more easily spin up GPU-accelerated AI applications on AWS instances running Nvidia GPUs, like the A100-based EC2 P4d instance. By Dylan Martin December 18, 2020, 09:00 AM EST
Amazon Web Services is making it easier for customers and partners to build GPU-accelerated AI applications, thanks to the addition of Nvidia’s NGC catalog of software to the AWS Marketplace.
AWS Marketplace is adding 21 software resources from Nvidia’s NGC hub, which consists of machine learning frameworks and software development kits for a variety of use cases that are optimized to run on Nvidia GPUs, the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company announced Friday.