The water level kept getting higher; it was up to our knees," Nickolas Dorazio told a reporter and camera operator with another news station as he posed as a stranded GO Train passenger rescued after hours trapped at the Bayview extension last week..
"I'm just glad that one of the officers there — he actually picked me up," Dorazio said in the interview. "I couldn't believe it."
But what shouldn't be believed, as it turns out, is Dorazio's claims that he was rescued in the first place during a record rainfall on July 8 that wrecked homes, left thousands in the dark for days and stranded some 1,400 GO Train commuters.
CBC News has learned that Dorazio was actually a plainclothes police constable with the prominent Major Crimes Unit. Since the interview, he has been disciplined, removed from the unit and placed on patrol duty.
The water level kept getting higher; it was up to our knees," Nickolas Dorazio told a reporter and camera operator with another news station as he posed as a stranded GO Train passenger rescued after hours trapped at the Bayview extension last week..
"I'm just glad that one of the officers there — he actually picked me up," Dorazio said in the interview. "I couldn't believe it."
But what shouldn't be believed, as it turns out, is Dorazio's claims that he was rescued in the first place during a record rainfall on July 8 that wrecked homes, left thousands in the dark for days and stranded some 1,400 GO Train commuters.
CBC News has learned that Dorazio was actually a plainclothes police constable with the prominent Major Crimes Unit. Since the interview, he has been disciplined, removed from the unit and placed on patrol duty.
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