At a recent virtual appearance before the Toronto police disciplinary tribunal, Const. Michael Kiproff had some trouble turning on his camera. After a few seconds, the veteran officer appeared on screen, and apologized.
It wasn't the first time he'd had trouble with a camera.
Kiproff is now facing 17 charges before the tribunal stemming, according to a tribunal document, from an alleged off-duty "road rage" incident caught in part on a dash cam- and subsequent "intimidating" and "abusive and/or insulting and/or uncivil" exchanges with the motorist's parents, also recorded.
The tribunal document and the recordings themselves detail how an encounter on the QEW started after Kiproff allegedly "chose to suddenly brake" his personal vehicle, forcing another driver to take evasive action.
The officer is accused of then improperly flashing his badge before engaging in what the document called "a clear conflict of interest"allegedly making a series of "false, misleading, or inaccurate" phone calls to threatening an escalating series of criminal charges when it was his duty to hand off the investigation to the OPP, who have jurisdiction over the highway.
That is "not how the law is supposed to be enforced," said lawyer Thoby King, who represents the other driver in the complaint that led to the tribunal proceeding, Kiproff's actions were those of "someone who's trying to bully and intimidate and harass you because he doesn't like the way you communicated with him on the highway," the lawyer said.
And in a rare situation, the incident is not the veteran officer's only case currently before the tribunal. Aside from the "road rage" case, Kiproff was facing another misconduct hearing for allegedly threatening a security manager at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) with arrest for refusing to turn over security footage without a formal request.
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