RCMP conduct authority lawyer calls move to replace board ‘desperate’ legal manoeuvre
A lawyer for three British Columbia RCMP members facing dismissal over alleged racist group chats told a police conduct board panel that they should be replaced over “real or perceived” bias against the officers.
Wes Dutcher-Walls, a defence lawyer for Coquitlam RCMP constables Mersad Mesbah, Ian Solven and Philip Dick, said Wednesday that emails between board members and staff referred to his clients as the “three amigos.”
The code of conduct hearing is being held at a hotel in Surrey, B.C., where lawyers for the officers and the RCMP conduct authority are presenting their cases to a three-member board, which has the power to recommend an officer be dismissed or directed to resign if allegations are established.
Dutcher-Walls said the use of the term “amigos,” which means male friends in Spanish, in emails among the board shows a “broader pattern” of dismissiveness and skepticism toward the officers, and he urged the board members to recuse themselves as a matter of fairness.


