‘Troubled’ counsel for OPCC resigns from Myles Gray hearing over obscenity
VANCOUVER — A long-awaited public hearing into the 2015 police-involved death of Myles Gray that finally got underway in Vancouver last week could be delayed by up to another year after the counsel for the proceeding resigned on Monday with “almost unbearable regret” over an extreme obscenity caught on a hot microphone.
Both the adjudicator hearing the case and the lawyer representing the family said they hoped the hearing, which is scheduled to last 10 weeks, will be able to proceed without more delays, more than a decade after Gray was beaten by Vancouver police officers and died in what a coroner concluded was a homicide.
Richard Neary, the lawyer for Brad Hickford, read a statement by his client saying he was “bewildered and troubled” by the recording of the obscenity that was captured on an audio stream of the hearing in Vancouver last Wednesday.
His statement said derailing the public hearing was “inevitable” and that Hickford felt “duty-bound” to protect the integrity of the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner, which called the hearing.


