Former Montreal officer cleared in Nicholas Gibbs killing suing ethics commissioner
MONTREAL — A former Montreal police officer who was cleared of wrongdoing after killing a Black man during a 2018 intervention is suing the police ethics commissioner for about $1.2 million, alleging a five-year delay in rendering a decision caused permanent psychological harm.
In a statement of claim filed at the Montreal courthouse June 2, Philippe Bertrand says he developed post-traumatic stress and was “destroyed by the agony of having to wait far too long to find out what will become of him as a police officer.”
Bertrand shot 23-year-old Nicholas Gibbs five times in August 2018 after police responded to a call about a fight between two men on the street.
Quebec’s independent police watchdog investigated the shooting and the police ethics commissioner received a complaint accusing Bertrand of using excessive force.


