HRC hired disgraced former cop as an investigator

More optical problems for the Canadian Human Rights Commission. A blogsite called “The Doggerel Party” has dug up some interesting information on the lead CHRC investigator in the McLeans/Mark Steyn case. It turns out she’s a woman who left her job as a regular police officer in an Ontario municipal police force under a cloud. Her superiors had actually charged her with discreditable conduct before she quit.
Sandy Kozak used to be a Constable with the Carleton Place Municipal Police Service but she was charged with discreditable conduct when she started a relationship with a known criminal. The police force said that relationship was “likely to bring discredit” to her employer, but she refused to end it.  In the end, she resigned from the police force after reaching a financial settlement; the discreditable conduct charge was dropped.
Ezra Levant weighed in on this yesterday, writing that “I can’t think of any commentary or analysis that is more damning than that naked fact: a discredited, defrocked cop, who couldn’t see that her personal relationship with a criminal was a conflict with her being a police officer, was hired by the CHRC. I bet the CHRC didn’t even see that as a negative — they probably thought that kind of malleable morality was a plus: no nagging conscience to ask ‘are we sure this is ethical?’ when planting evidence on websites, stealing Internet broadband, or corrupting the process of natural justice.”

Public date: April 8th, 2008
Categories: News
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