Hollywood

French Canadians sue, accusing Hollywood police of injuries, wrongful arrest

 

Two snowbirds said an officer cursed at them, punched one in the face and broke a rib of another during a confrontation at a mobile home park in 2007.

Upload and share your own.

You can share related videos and photos.

Submit: Video Pictures Stories

Sun Sentinel

Two French Canadian snowbirds claim in a lawsuit that Hollywood police wrongly arrested them, broke one’s rib and punched the other in the face while the men were handcuffed in an episode fueled by prejudice and nepotism.

The suit was filed against the city and four police officers by Dennis LeFrancois, 52, and Yves Pontbriand, 60, both retired high-ranking Montreal police officers. It detailed an incident on Dec. 21, 2007, at the Orangebrook Mobile Home Park.

According to the suit filed Dec. 6, police arrived at the 55-and-older retirement park soon after LeFrancois and Pontbriand took the bicycles of two trespassing teenage boys who repeatedly had been asked to leave. One of the first officers on the scene, Lauran Reingardt, was the mother of one of the boys.

The suit alleges that LeFrancois suffered a broken rib after an unidentified “heavy set” male officer kneed him in the back while he was handcuffed face down on the ground and Pontbriand was punched in the face while handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser by another unidentified male officer who said: “You f---ing French Canadians.”

Each of the men was charged with one count of felony false imprisonment and one count of misdemeanor battery, and spent a night in jail. Prosecutors eventually dropped the charges.

“There’s still a certain amount of prejudice against French Canadians,” said Louis St. Laurent, attorney for LeFrancois and Pontbriand. “I think it’s a minority of police officers, but I think this is an incident that shows a department, at that stage, out of control.”

Hollywood officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The lawsuit, which asks for damages of more than $15,000 for false arrest, assault and battery and perjury, names the city of Hollywood, officers James Gibbons and Reingardt and the two unidentified officers.

The lawsuit contends that because of Reingardt’s relationship to one of the boys, police relied on the words of the teens, refused to take statements from several eyewitnesses, arrested LeFrancois and Pontbriand “in a shameful and humiliating fashion” and acted “in bad faith with malicious purpose or in a manner exhibiting wanton and willful disregard of human rights.”

According to a police report written by Gibbons, the boys claimed that Pontbriand grabbed one by his shirt and struck him twice in the face while LeFrancois threw the other boy to the ground two times.

Because Reingardt’s son initially lied under oath in his deposition about his mother’s presence and Hollywood police failed to provide the names of all officers at the scene, prosecutors dropped the felony charges in early 2008 and the misdemeanor charges in February 2010, according to documents from the Broward State Attorney’s Office.

LeFrancois, a retired police director of Rosemere in Quebec, now winters in Clearwater. Pontbriand, a retired captain of surveillance for the Regie de Police de la Riviere du-Nord in Quebec, continues to spend his winters at Orangebrook.

dealsaver
The Miami Herald: Subscribe now!

More from
Hollywood

Join the
Discussion

The Miami Herald is pleased to provide this opportunity to share information, experiences and observations about what's in the news. Some of the comments may be reprinted elsewhere in the site or in the newspaper. We encourage lively, open debate on the issues of the day, and ask that you refrain from profanity, hate speech, personal comments and remarks that are off point. Thank you for taking the time to offer your thoughts.

We have introduced a new commenting system called Disqus for our articles. This allows readers the option of signing in using their Facebook, Twitter, Disqus or existing MiamiHerald.com username and password.

Having problems? Read more about the commenting system on MiamiHerald.com.

Hide Comments

This affects comments on all stories.

Cancel OK
0 comments