Mounties in Dziekanski Taser case charged with perjury - Action News
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British Columbia

Mounties in Dziekanski Taser case charged with perjury

Perjury charges have been laid against the four Mounties who confronted Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver's airport and repeatedly stunned him with a Taser in 2007.
The B.C. Criminal Justice Branch has announced perjury charges against (clockwise from top left) Const. Gerry Rundel, Const. Bill Bentley, Cpl. Monty Robinson and Const. Kwesi Millington in connection with their testimony at the Braidwood Inquiry. (CBC)

Perjury charges have now been laid against the four Mounties who confronted Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver's airport and repeatedly stunned him with a Taser in October 2007.

The officers Const. Bill Bentley, Const. Kwesi Millington, Const. Gerry Rundell and Cpl. Benjamin Robinson are accused of lying during the testimony they gave during a public inquiry into Dziekanski's death.

Dziekanskiwas en route from Poland to join his mother in Kamloops, B.C., where he hoped to begin a new life.

Immediately after the incident, the RCMP said Dziekanski was violent and refused to co-operate with the Mounties, but a bystander's video appeared to contradict that version of events.

The head of the inquiry into the circumstances surroundingDziekanski's death, Thomas Braidwood, concluded in his 2010report that the four RCMP officers deliberately misrepresented their actions during investigations into the incident and at the inquiry.

An agitated Robert Dziekanski appeared ready to throw furniture in an airport lounge when RCMP arrived. ((Paul Pritchard))
The perjury charges were recommended by special prosecutor Richard Peck in a report released May 6, although he didn't recommend any charges relating to the death itself.

The B.C. Criminal Justice Branch said in a statement Thursday that the charges were filed Wednesday by direct indictment, meaning there will be no preliminary hearing.

Lawyers for two of the accused said their clients will plead not guilty and vigorously defend themselves.

The officers will make their first appearance in court on June 29.