York cop's acquittal in death devastates pedestrian's family
By
Jenny Yuen, Toronto Sun
First posted: Thursday, September 22, 2016 08:40 PM EDT | Updated: Thursday, September 22, 2016 11:28 PM EDT
TORONTO - As Guillermo Abogado sat in the courtroom Wednesday night, he still had hope.
But less than 24 hours later sitting in his Scarborough backyard, not far from where his daughter was killed, he wonders how he can ever find closure.
On Feb. 12, 2014, Natasha Carla Abogado stepped off a TTC bus at Warden and St. Clair Aves. and while jaywalking was struck and killed by an undercover cop driving a Ford F-150 truck 115 km/h in a 60 km/h zone without his emergency lights or sirens on.
The family has been grieving for more than two years over two painful trials for York Regional Police Det.-Const. Remo Romano, who was charged with dangerous driving causing death. The first trial resulted in a hung jury. On Wednesday night, the jury in his second trial found Romano, 44, not guilty.
“My whole family was very upset, we were expecting a guilty verdict,” Abogado said Thursday, poring over pages of Google Maps he printed out of the area, still trying to make sense of how the senseless mishap could have happened.
“From Day 1 until now, it’s very hard for us. The jury are allowing the police officers to use 115 km/h on a busy street, near a hospital and subway station. I hope they have a conscience because it may happen again now. They’ve set a precedent.
“They’re allowing every police officer to do it again.”
Abogado’s biggest concern is trying to prevent a similar tragedy.
“We’re fighting a police officer, they have lots of support,” he said. “I felt it was scripted. He faced the jury and was crying to get the sympathy of the jury. Maybe they felt it worked last time, so they’ll do it again.”
Paula Abogado, Carla’s 16-year-old sister, described her older sibling as always trying to keep their family close to each other. Carla was returning home from a shift at Victoria’s Secret at Markville Mall the night she was killed. She hoped to enrol in health studies the following year at York University.
“She’d always put us before her,” Paula said. “It’s been so long, it’s hard to remember everything that’s happened. With this, we were trying to find a little bit of closure, but now what are we going to get out of this? Every time there’s a trial we always get a reminder and it just brings us back to this place where we have no time to heal.”
William MacKenzie, Romano’s lawyer, maintains the crash was a tragic accident and his client was “acting in good faith.”
“(He) made the decision in the lawful performance of his duties to speed up in an effort to catch up to his surveillance team,” MacKenzie said Thursday. “Ms. Abogado made a fateful decision to try to beat the traffic at night while dressed in dark clothing. Unfortunately, one cannot avoid what one cannot see.
“Const. Romano expressed his condolences to the family at the end of the preliminary inquiry. He is very much relieved to put the ordeal of two very stressful trials behind him.”
The Abogado family is suing York Regional Police in an ongoing civil suit for $2.2 million.
It’s unclear whether the Crown will appeal Wednesday’s verdict.
“This matter is currently within the appeal period, it would be inappropriate to comment further,” said Heather Visser, spokesman for the Ministry of the Attorney General.
York Regional Police Association president Todd Sepkowski hoped all parties can move forward.
“Twelve members of the community have stepped forward and found him not guilty and so the association is asking we move beyond this,” he said.
jyuen@postmedia.com
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