No jail time for Hamilton police officer who sexually assaulted woman he was mentoring, judge rules

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No jail time for Hamilton police officer who sexually assaulted woman he was mentoring, judge rules | CBC News Loaded

Hamilton

Michael LaCombe, 54, will instead serve 12 months of house arrest followed by 12 months of probation. He resigned from the Hamilton Police Service after a judge found him guilty of two counts of sexual assault against a woman who he was mentoring to become a police officer.

Michael LaCombe resigned after being found guilty of 2 counts of sexual assault

Samantha Beattie · CBC News

· Posted: May 06, 2024 2:24 PM EDT | Last Updated: 1 hour ago

The side of a Hamilton police officer's uniform.

Michael LaCombe resigned from the Hamilton Police Service after he was found guilty of two counts of sexual assault. He was sentenced on Monday. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

WARNING: This article contains details of sexual assault and may affect those who have experienced​ ​​​it or know someone affected by it. 

A former Hamilton police officer will not go to jail for sexually assaulting the woman he was mentoring as she pursued her own career in policing.

Michael LaCombe, 54, will instead serve 12 months of house arrest followed by 12 months of probation after Justice Cameron Watson found him guilty of two counts of sexual assault in January, following a trial.

Watson sentenced LaCombe on Monday at the Ontario Court of Justice in St. Catharines, Ont., describing his crimes and the aftermath as "a spectacular and cataclysmic fall from grace" in his written decision.

"His life has taken an irreparable downward spiral. He is no longer the man he once was," Watson wrote.

Watson also described how LaCombe's conduct "devastated" the victim, who has felt isolated and suffers from panic attacks, among other impacts, in recent years.

His decision was in line with what LaCombe's defence had requested, while the Crown had pushed for two years in custody plus two years probation, arguing his crimes were "serious and significant." 

Watson did not read his decision aloud to the court, as is the common practice, and LaCombe appeared calm as he briefly stood before the justice.

Man wearing police badge stands in front of bike

LaCombe appeared in a police video about bicycle theft in 2012. (Hamilton Police Service/Youtube)

Watson had also previously informed LaCombe he wouldn't spend any time in jail at a sentencing hearing last month — before Watson had decided on the length of the sentence.

It was a "slightly unorthodox" move, Watson said at the April 22 hearing.

Justices generally wait until after the hearing to consider the arguments of both sides before making a decision on sentencing. But LaCombe's "immense amount of emotional strain" compelled Watson to put the former cop's mind at ease no jail time was necessary, he said. 

"I understand and have no doubt this has destroyed his life and he's suffering a form of exquisite agony and to keep the sword hanging over his head — not knowing what's going to happen — in my opinion, as a fellow human being, is unnecessary," Watson said.

Held 'significant degree of power' over victim: Crown

LaCombe and the victim had known each other for years leading up to the assaults in January 2010, said assistant Crown attorney Ian Bulmer, at the April sentencing hearing. 

LaCombe was the victim's instructor when she was a teenager in the Air Cadets, and then when she was an adult, her mentor. He promised to write her a reference letter for when she applied to the Hamilton Police Service — a job she "desperately wanted," said Bulmer. 

"That was a significant degree of power held over her" Bulmer said.

During the first incident, LaCombe drove her home in his police cruiser and in uniform, and then kissed her. The victim made up "excuses" to end the assault and got out of the car, said defence lawyer Dean Paquette, also at the sentencing hearing. 

Later that month, LaCombe "contrived another opportunity to meet" and picked the victim up in his own car, without initially telling her where they were going, and brought her to a hotel, Paquette said. 

In the room, he handed her a dress he bought from Value Village and she went into the washroom, but didn't change into it, said the defence. When she emerged, LaCombe picked her up without her consent, pulled her on top of him, took her top and bra off and kissed her. 

The victim then made it clear she wasn't consenting and he stopped and drove her home, said Paquette. 

He argued at sentencing that these assaults were LaCombe, who is married, attempting to have an affair. LaCombe should've been "more attuned to her feelings," Paquette said.

LaCombe later wrote the victim a reference letter and she got a job in the service, but the assaults weighed on her for years until she reported it to the Special Investigations Unit (SIU), Ontario's police watchdog, Watson wrote in his decision.

Victim 'devastated' by assaults

LaCombe's conduct "devastated" the victim, whose identity is protected under a public ban, wrote Watson. She's also been unable to enjoy a normal life since reporting the crime to the SIU in 2021, and has been in hiding, Watson wrote.

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