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“The arresting officer observed you to be in a daze and a strong odour of alcohol and vomit was detected,” read the allegations. According to the notice of hearing, the 22 division officer was arrested for impaired driving and taken to an OPP detachment where he gave two breath samples: The first registered 252 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitres of blood and the second was 236 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitres of blood — still almost three times the legal limit more than two hours after he’d been stopped.

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In January, Fielding pleaded guilty to the impaired operation of a motor vehicle.

He’s also charged under the Police Act with having evidence in his vehicle: Arresting officers allegedly found tools used to remove security tags from clothing that had been seized during a search warrant.

Dominelli and Young are also accused of taking evidence — but of a different kind.

The pair was involved in the police raid of the Community Cannabis Clinic on St. Clair Ave. W. in January when according to new details released at their tribunal appearance, they allegedly stole some of the seized chocolate hazelnut bars which were laced with cannabis oil.

“You failed to account for some of this chocolate seized at this search warrant,” read the allegations against Young, who was in charge of seizing and cataloguing the evidence. “The quantity listed on the property tag and submitted did not match the true amount seized.”

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Dominelli, a 13-year veteran and Young, who has two years on the job, were then assigned at about 11 p.m. to surveil an Oakwood Ave. address and it’s during that stake-out that the plainclothes cops are accused of sampling the edibles. Two hours later, Dominelli put out a 10-33 call — officer needs assistance — “as you felt you were going to pass out as you ran up Oakwood Ave.” As he “appeared to be in distress,” he was taken to Sunnybrook.