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Kyle Tait inquest starts Monday
August 22, 2008

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Kyle Tait (1989-2005)

After a three year wait, Kyle Tait's family will finally have an opportunity to seek answers to their questions when the coroner's inquest into his death begins Monday in Burnaby. Sixteen year old Kyle was fatally shot by New Westminster police constable Todd Sweet on August 23, 2005 following a short police pursuit. Kyle was one of four teenagers, two boys and two girls, riding as passengers in a stolen SUV driven by Ian Campbell, 18, when Cst. Sweet fired three bullets into the vehicle. Campbell was struck in the hand and Kyle died at the scene. Fortunately, the bullets missed the two 14 year old girls and the 15 year old boy riding in the back seat.

On June 19, 2005, some two months before Kyle's fatal shooting, Cst. Sweet had assaulted a car theft suspect in a "cowardly act suggesting perhaps an act of unlawful street justice", according to Judge Weitzel's reasons on sentencing. The judge noted that neither Sweet nor the other officers on the scene initially reported the assault and ordered Sweet to receive anger management counselling as part of his sentence for the criminal conviction of assault causing bodily harm.

Three months before that, in March, 2005, Sweet reportedly assaulted a 70 year old widow, who later sued for damages.

When asked why Cst. Sweet was still on active duty following the June, 2005 incident, New Westminster Chief Constable Lorne Zapotichny reportedly told The Vancouver Sun that he "did not have anough evidence to support the complaint [of excessive force]". Kyle Tait's family plans to pursue this issue, among others, at the inquest.

Read Judge Weitzel's Reasons for Sentence in R. v. Sweet here: upload

Read The Vancouver Sun, February 7, 2007 article here: upload

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Chief Constable Lorne Zapotichny

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Constable Todd Sweet

The coroner's inquest is now scheduled to commence Monday, August 25, 2008 at 9:30 a.m. at Coroner's Court, Metrotower II, Burnaby, BC.

Note: In British Columbia, legal aid is not available to the family of the deceased. If they wish to be represented by counsel, they must pay a lawyer or find one who will work for free. Typically, all of the other participants are paid by public funds. This case is no different. Almost everyone who enters the room at the coroner's inquest into Kyle Tait will be receiving taxpayer dollars to attend. That includes, the coroner, the coroner's lawyer, the sheriff, the coroner's staff, the lawyer for the City of New Westminster, the lawyer for Todd Sweet and the police officers who are required to attend as witnesses.

Any suggestion that the coroner's counsel can represent the interests of the deceased is, in these police-involved cases at least, open to serious question.

The requirement that the family of the deceased must use their own money to pay for legal representation is, in my opinion, an unfair extra burden on them since they have usually suffered enough by the time an inquest is finally convened. The law needs to be reformed so that the deceased's next of kin are on an equal footing with the public institutions that are usually involved in these cases.