Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum has been charged with one count of public mischief related to a police complaint he made in September, claiming that his foot had been run over in a grocery store parking lot in the south of the city.
In a release, the B.C. Prosecution Service (BCPS) said special prosecutor Richard Fowler had approved the charge.
McCallum went public with the claim on Sept. 4, saying he was verbally assaulted and run over by a vehicle.
At the time of the alleged incident, McCallum was in the vicinity of a group collecting signatures for the “Keep the RCMP in Surrey” campaign at the South Point Save-on-Foods on 152nd Street.
Tensions have been high between McCallum and those opposing his plan to replace the Surrey RCMP with an independent force called the Surrey Police Service.
The BCPS said the B.C. RCMP Major Crime Section took control of the investigation from the Surrey RCMP “to ensure there was no potential for real or perceived conflict of interest or improper influence.”
It said the special prosecutor was brought in “to avoid any potential for real or perceived improper influence in the administration of justice.”
In response to the charge, McCallum released a one-line statement: “We are in the middle of changing from RCMP to the Surrey Police Service and as this matter is before the courts, I will not be making any comment.”
Public mischief involves falsely reporting crimes to a police officer, according to the Criminal Code of Canada.
McCallum has a first appearance scheduled in Surrey Provincial Court on Jan. 25, 2022.
Surrey city councillor Brenda Locke said McCallum must resign as mayor and as chair of the Surrey police board immediately.
“This report is a damning indictment of behaviour that is completely unacceptable for a mayor or any elected official,” she said. “Residents deserve better and to have confidence that their mayor is acting with honesty and integrity.”
Source: CBC
