
Vancouver police officer admits to discreditable conduct over sexualized messages
BURNABY — The Vancouver Police Department should adopt a “stand alone” sexual harassment policy after a high-ranking veteran officer admitted to sexually harassing multiple women, including students he taught at B.C. universities, the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner says.
A public hearing that began Wednesday in Burnaby, B.C., heard that Vancouver police Sgt. Keiron McConnell admitted to five allegations of discreditable conduct related to sexualized text messages sent to subordinate officers and students in his criminology courses.
The notice of public hearing into complaints against McConnell says that the investigation began after a photo was posted on social media featuring him and two other officers, and comments on the photo said he was a “sexual predator” with a “history of sexually assaulting his students.”
Brian Smith, the lawyer for the commissioner’s office, said the police department doesn’t have a specific sexual harassment policy, and McConnell engaged in a “pattern of inappropriate behaviour with multiple women.”