A high-ranking Toronto police officer pleaded not guilty to misconduct charges at a disciplinary hearing Monday after allowing her nephew to leave the scene of a crash in 2022, in turn allegedly contravening the force’s conflict of interest policy and removing an investigator’s ability to determine if alcohol was a factor in the collision.
Insp. Joyce Schertzer appeared before a tribunal in Toronto and pleaded not guilty to three misconduct charges under the Police Services Act.
The charges stem from an incident that happened shortly before noon on May 1, 2022, just outside The Boulevard Club at 1491 Lake Shore Boulevard W., in the city’s west end.
Schertzer was working at 11 Division that day when she got a call from her daughter — who is a constable with Toronto police — telling her Schertzer’s nephew had been in a “bad accident,” the tribunal heard.
Hearing participants also heard Monday that after she was told about the crash, Schertzer arranged for an officer from her division to be dispatched to 14 Division, where the collision happened. Typically, the tribunal heard, officers respond to calls within their respective divisions.
“In calling for a unit from your division, you circumvented the priority system to the benefit of your family,” according to tribunal documents outlining the charges. “While on scene, you were the first to speak to your nephew. You gathered information about the collision and became actively involved in the investigation. You then had a private conversation with the investigating officer and your nephew was advised he could leave the scene.”
Truck slams into pole
Videos played during the hearing show Schertzer’s nephew, who was only referred to as “Calvin,” driving a white pickup truck and trying to turn left on Lake Shore Boulevard from the country club’s parking lot. Cones were also set up in the area as part of a road race, and a private security employee was at the edge of the club’s driveway, directing traffic.
In the video, the truck can be seen making a left onto the busy roadway, before narrowly missing a car that was heading east. The truck then proceeds into the grassy median to the north, before slamming into a pole.
The tribunal heard testimony and saw body camera footage from Const. Braden Doherty, who was the officer from Schertzer’s division who was dispatched to the scene at Schertzer’s request for an officer to attend.
The body camera footage shows Doherty arriving at the scene and speaking with Schertzer, before proceeding to talk with her nephew.
In the video, Calvin states the security guard waved him into traffic, and he sped up to avoid hitting an oncoming car, before losing control because of slick road conditions and driving into the pole. Video footage shows the truck’s front end crumpled against the concrete pole, with the airbag deployed inside.
When asked if he is OK, Calvin says he is “just shaken up,” but doesn’t feel any neck or chest pain.
“I think I’m OK, I’m just rattled,” he said.
Body camera turned off
There is also a moment in the video in which Doherty asks Schertzer if he can turn his camera off. She says yes, and he does so.
When the camera is turned back on, Doherty says he has determined “no criminality” has taken place and he thinks it’s OK if Calvin leaves the scene, and Schertzer agrees.
When asked by prosecutor Scott Hutchison why he turned off the camera, Doherty said “in hindsight” he wished he hadn’t, as “there was nothing nefarious discussed.”
Doherty also said he didn’t speak to any witnesses at the scene and didn’t think that Calvin had been under the influence of alcohol based on the conversation he had with him.
Doherty also testified that considering the “unorthodox request” being made of him here, before initially heading to the scene he called the officer in charge of his division and told him that he was being asked to go to a collision involving a family member of an officer outside his division. Doherty said he was told to “attend and act appropriately.”
The hearing continues Monday afternoon.