Mountie who alleged unrelenting harassment loses final bid to sue RCMP
TORONTO — An RCMP officer who accused his superiors of waging an unrelenting campaign to ruin his career lost his 12-year battle to sue the force for harassment and intentional infliction of distress when the Supreme Court of Canada on Thursday refused to hear the case.
Sgt. Peter Merrifield, who said he could be facing a legal bill in excess of $1 million, had wanted the country’s top court to weigh in after Ontario’s Court of Appeal eviscerated an earlier ruling in his favour.
Merrifield, 53, joined the RCMP in 1998. His suit, launched in 2007, claimed his superiors began a seven-year campaign to damage his reputation after he took part in a federal Conservative party nomination meeting in Barrie, Ont., in 2005. Their measures, he alleged, included punitive transfers and unfounded accusations he had committed criminal acts.
The lawsuit named the RCMP, Insp. James Jagoe and Supt. Marc Proulx. Among other things, Merrifield claimed his superiors had secretly investigated him, audited his expenses, blocked him from taking part in sensitive investigations, bad-mouthed him to confidential informants, and bullied him based on their accusations he had used the police force to advance his political career.