Mountie says he crossed the line into vulgarity, went much too far on group chats
A British Columbia RCMP officer says his use of inappropriate and discriminatory language in group chats and on police data terminals wasn’t meant to be malicious, and had “no connection” to the way he conducted himself professionally while on the job.
But Const. Philip Dick testified at a code-of-conduct hearing on Tuesday that he is ashamed of some of the messages, that included comments so angry he barely recognized them as his own.
Dick and fellow Coquitlam RCMP constables Ian Solven and Mersad Mesbah face possible dismissal over allegedly racist, sexist and other derogatory messages made in group chats between officers.
“I feel ashamed of myself,” Dick said. “It’s about four years to almost five years to think about it every single day and it was really difficult knowing that this is kind of what I’m known for now in Coquitlam. And, you know, I like to believe that the people that know me and have worked with me know that that’s not the reality of who I am, but you know it’s obviously how I’ll be remembered in Coquitlam.”
