This would be funny if it didn’t affect the constable’s life so much. His 
salary would have been at a minimum of a hundred thousand dollars per year.

From torontocitynews.ca

A Toronto police officer who stole and ate a marijuana-laced chocolate bar 
seized during a pot-shop raid was a “complete idiot” for tampering with 
evidence, a judge said Friday as the man pleaded guilty in the case.
Vittorio Dominelli, a 36-year-old constable who resigned from the force this 
week, pleaded guilty to attempting to obstruct justice in connection with the 
January incident.
Justice Mary Misener, who presided over the case, said Dominelli’s actions were 
on the low end of the spectrum when it came to evidence tampering, but were 
nonetheless significant.
“From the point of view of public interest, the impact is profound,” she said. 
“The conduct here you cannot describe as anything other than stupid.”
Misener added that the fact that Dominelli had taken a marijuana-infused item 
was not the issue.
“He might have taken cough syrup or a pair of woolly comfortable socks that he 
wanted to try on his feet,” she said. “It’s interfering with evidence.”
Dominelli, the son of a longtime Toronto officer and a father of three, was 
part of a team that raided an illegal marijuana dispensary around 5 p.m. on 
Jan. 27, according to an agreed statement of facts read out in court by Crown 
attorney Philip Perlmutter.
The officer, armed and dressed in plainclothes, agreed to go get pizza for the 
squad as they were going through the pot shop, court heard. While walking out 
of the store, Dominelli saw several cannabis-oil-infused chocolate bars, which 
he pocketed.
He and his partner, Const. Jamie Young, went to a nearby pizza place where 
Dominelli began to have second thoughts about taking the chocolate bars, 
Perlmutter said.
Dominelli told Young about his reservations and wanted to leave the bars at the 
pizza place but his partner disagreed with his idea, court heard.
After the raid was concluded around 11 p.m., Dominelli and Young were 
re-assigned to conduct surveillance on an after-hours bar, court heard. 
Dominelli then spoke about the then-looming legalization of recreational 
marijuana and the pair chatted about how neither had tried cannabis, court 
heard.
“He assumed it would be a minor mellow feeling,” Perlmutter said, reading from 
the agreed statement of facts. “He did not think consuming a small amount would 
impair each officer.”
The pair consumed all eight squares of one chocolate bar while on their 
surveillance mission and became “seriously intoxicated,” court heard.
Young has been charged with attempting to obstruct justice and breach of trust 
in connection with the incident, but the allegations against her have not been 
proven in court.
Dominelli said he initially didn’t feel anything but after about 20 minutes, 
the effects of the cannabis-infused chocolate hit him “like a ton of bricks,” 
court heard.
“He was sweating heavily and believed he was going to pass out,” Perlmutter 
told court.
Dominelli thought he was going to die, court heard. He asked his partner to 
radio for help, but she refused.
The officer eventually grabbed the radio from his partner, ran up the street 
and called for help.
“Send an ambulance,” a breathless Dominelli tells the dispatcher on the call, 
which was played in court.
When questioned by the dispatcher, Dominelli is heard saying he’s going to pass 
out.
“Are you injured? Did anything happen?” the dispatcher asks.
“I’m just lightheaded,” Dominelli says.
When other officers rushed to the scene one of them slipped on ice and suffered 
a severe head injury, court heard. That officer still has “significant 
difficulties with speech and vision,” and remains off work 10 months later.
Court also heard that seven people were charged in the pot-shop raids, but 
those charges were dropped due to Dominelli’s actions.
Peter Brauti, Dominelli’s lawyer, told court his client is remorseful and 
ashamed.
“I would say it was an act of utter stupidity, quite frankly,” Brauti said. “He 
has done everything he can to show remorse and make reparation for what he’s 
done.”
Dominelli offered to resign within weeks of the incident, the lawyer said. He 
is also depressed, shakes when he speaks and cries when talking about the 
incident, Brauti said.
Dominelli apologized to the court, the police and his family.
“To my wife and children, I turned our lives upside down,” he wrote in 
documents filed with court. “I messed up, I really did.”
The Crown is proposing a conditional sentence for Dominelli to be served in the 
community while the defence is arguing for a conditional discharge. A charge of 
breach of trust was withdrawn.
The judge will decide Dominelli’s sentence at a later date.

Roland
Toronto.

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