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Sentencing delayed for RCMP officer

EDMONTON — Sentencing has been delayed for an Alberta RCMP officer who admitted he beat a prisoner but said he was stressed out over the fatal shooting of four Mounties.

EDMONTON — Sentencing has been delayed for an Alberta RCMP officer who admitted he beat a prisoner but said he was stressed out over the fatal shooting of four Mounties.

Desmond Sandboe pleaded guilty last month to assault but asked for a conditional discharge.

His lawyer told court in Edmonton on Monday that his client was unavailable, but offered no further explanation.

Sandboe’s sentencing was put over to April 13.

He was caught on a cellblock video camera beating a prisoner at the RCMP detachment in Lac La Biche, in September 2009.

That was more than four years after the Mounties were gunned down near Mayerthorpe by James Roszko.

Defence lawyer Rod Gregory told court during a sentencing hearing last month that Sandboe suffered from acute stress disorder because he was one of the officers called out at the time of the shootings.

Gregory suggested the beating was not premeditated and Sandboe incorrectly thought his victim, Andrew Clyburn, 33, might attack him.

The Crown argued a discharge wouldn’t be appropriate, because it was “a sustained beating over the course of 40 seconds.”

Clyburn had been taken to police cells after becoming unruly during a bar fight in which he was injured.

Sandboe has been suspended without pay.