Hamilton police officer who assaulted Indigenous man in 'disturbing' act to be demoted for 1 year
CBC
WARNING: This story contains distressing details.
A Hamilton police officer will stay on the force after he violently assaulted an Indigenous man, kicking him in the head during his arrest.
Brian Wren will be demoted in rank from first to second-class constable for one year and then will be reinstated to his current position, said Greg Walton, a retired Ontario Provincial Police Officer who chaired Wren's disciplinary hearing last week. As a result, Wren will earn around $14,000 less per year.
Walton's decision was released Monday.
"I do not find Constable Wren has nullified his usefulness to the Hamilton Police Service," Walton said. "I find the argument that he is a strong candidate for rehabilitation compelling."
He also called Wren's behaviour during the assault "disturbing."
Wren pleaded guilty to assaulting Patrick Tomchuk last year and was sentenced to 18 months of probation.
Tomchuk was already laying on the ground "unresisting and possibly unconscious," with several other officers involved, when Wren kicked him in the head and face multiple times, said Ontario Court Justice Bruce Puglsey during Wren's sentencing. Crown attorney Richard Garwood-Jones then described Wren's actions as "grotesque violence."
Tomchuk previously said he felt "disgusted" Wren wouldn't face jail time.
In response to the assault, the Hamilton Regional Indian Centre developed recommendations to help address the "harm done by law enforcement agencies" against Indigenous peoples, such as creating an Indigenous liaison role and consultant position within the police force.
The organization also said there was a need for an Indigenous-specific seat on the police services board and improvements to Indigenous training for police. They also recommended body cameras for officers, which the police service is looking at now, and urged police to charge Wren with a hate crime.
"I just want to have it where this police officer doesn't do it anymore," Tomchuck's mother Olga told reporters in August 2022.
At the police disciplinary hearing, Wren apologized.
"My behaviour was not acceptable and I regret my actions wholeheartedly," he said.