- Aug 6, 2012
- 28,126
- 24,913
- 2,405
So many creepy predators find their way into Canadian policing. Why?
You can multiply this number exponentially, as there are SO many more we don't hear of. Especially of the plain clothed variety...
Alleged serial voyeur was hired by three law enforcement agencies
An alleged serial voyeur and sexual predator — who police in two cities say exposed himself to girls, sexually assaulted a woman and secretly filmed others in bathrooms and hotels — was employed by three different law enforcement agencies during the span of his alleged crimes, this newspaper has learned.
Const. Andrew Seangio, 35, was first identified as a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer serving in Richmond, B.C., after criminal charges laid against him by Vancouver police led to his suspension in March of this year. This newspaper has since identified him as a suspended reservist in the Canadian Armed Forces, too.
At the time of the allegations that led to separate criminal charges in Ottawa, he was working as a bylaw officer in this city.
Seangio “was an employee of By-law and Regulatory Services for approximately nine years and resigned in 2016,” Tania McCumber, acting director of BLRS, said in a statement.
You can multiply this number exponentially, as there are SO many more we don't hear of. Especially of the plain clothed variety...
Alleged serial voyeur was hired by three law enforcement agencies
An alleged serial voyeur and sexual predator — who police in two cities say exposed himself to girls, sexually assaulted a woman and secretly filmed others in bathrooms and hotels — was employed by three different law enforcement agencies during the span of his alleged crimes, this newspaper has learned.
Const. Andrew Seangio, 35, was first identified as a Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer serving in Richmond, B.C., after criminal charges laid against him by Vancouver police led to his suspension in March of this year. This newspaper has since identified him as a suspended reservist in the Canadian Armed Forces, too.
At the time of the allegations that led to separate criminal charges in Ottawa, he was working as a bylaw officer in this city.
Seangio “was an employee of By-law and Regulatory Services for approximately nine years and resigned in 2016,” Tania McCumber, acting director of BLRS, said in a statement.