Toronto police officer gets 6 years jail sentence for shooting Sammy Yatim
A Toronto police officer has been sentenced to six years in prison for gunning down a troubled teen on an empty streetcar in 2013.
Const. James Forcillo was convicted of attempted murder in the death of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim, which was captured on a cellphone video that went viral and spurred public outrage in Toronto.
Murmurs rippled through the courtroom as Justice Edward Then delivered his sentence and the disgraced police officer, wearing a dark suit, stood straight and stone-faced as he was handcuffed. Yatim’s parents looked at Forcillo, then turned to one another in silence.
In handing down the sentence, Then said the cellphone video was “powerful evidence” that what Forcillo said occurred on the streetcar that July night three years ago did not actually happen.
The judge spent almost 90 minutes dissecting the evidence that came to light during the trial, delivering a series of stinging rebukes to Forcillo’s conduct.
Forcillo’s behaviour “constitutes a fundamental failure to understand his duty to preserve all life, not just his own,” Then said.
Outside the courtroom, Forcillo’s lawyer, Peter Brauti, said an appeal has already been filed on the conviction and sentencing. Forcillo’s lawyers were to seek bail for their client from the Ontario Court of Appeal later Thursday afternoon.
“It wasn’t how we saw the nature of offence,” Brauti said.
Mike McCormack, president of the Toronto police union, called the entire case tragic.
“We go out there and do our professional job each and every day, and this decision is under appeal,” he said. “This is a tragic day for the Forcillo family, the Yatim family — there will never be any good outcome from this, it’s tragic all around.”
The outrage over Yatim’s death prompted the city’s police chief to launch a review of officers’ use of force and their response to emotionally disturbed people.
Forcillo’s lawyers, who had argued for house arrest instead of a prison sentence, filed a constitutional appeal, arguing the mandatory minimum was never intended to apply to peace officers who legitimately carry a gun at the behest of the state in order to protect society.
Prosecutors argued the mandatory minimum is meant to apply to everyone and that police officers shouldn’t get special treatment. They also argued that Forcillo’s case appears to be “among the most egregious examples of unjustified violence by a police officer in Canada.”
Yatim’s mother, Sahar Bahadi, told the court she will never forgive Forcillo for killing her child.
“They say to move on, you have to forgive,” she said during her victim impact statement. “But as a mother, I will not forget and I will never forgive. Human life matters. My son, Sammy, matters.”
The Canadian Press
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