Tuesday, November 25, 2025 - A former Canadian police sergeant has pleaded guilty to using a law enforcement database to pursue intimate relationships with around 30 women, including several victims of domestic violence.
53-year-old Robert Eric Semenchuck, a 22-year veteran of the
Regina Police Service in Saskatchewan, Canada, pleaded guilty to one charge of
breach of trust and one charge of unauthorized use of a computer on Friday,
Nov. 21.
The police service claimed in March, when
Semenchuck was charged, that the former sergeant had accessed protected
information to find, contact and pursue relationships with women, some of whom
had no idea he was a police officer.
According to women interviewed about the incident,
Semenchuck allegedly would use an alias, including the names “Jay Lewis” or
“Steve Perkins,” and send a text messages to the women saying that he was a
contractor or project manager. The conversation would then turn into constant
messaging over a lengthy period, sometimes years.
One woman identified as only "K" said she
first received an unusual message while she was staying in a women's shelter
and was recovering from domestic abuse.
She said that the text felt like a "lifeline" at a low moment, and
they continued texting for four years, before she eventually began questioning
him in 2023.
“I was like, ‘Do I really know this guy?’ ” she
told The Globe and Mail.
She added that she ran a photo he had sent her through
facial-recognition software, and it returned an image of Semenchuck with police
gear.
“I can’t describe the feeling, everything that went through
my head in that moment,” she said. “One of the first things that hit me was
fear. Fear of this person, his power and what he could do.”
K then contacted police, which triggered an internal
investigation that lasted for two years, according to the outlet.
Another woman, identified as simply "C" said that
she received a message from a man calling himself "Steve" and they
began a relationship that lasted for more than one year.
“I was 18 years trying to find someone, and I didn’t know
how to go about it,” she told the outlet, recalling how "Steve"
eventually became controlling and demanding in their conversations.
“He was s£x-crazed,” she said, describing how he
consistently pressured her to send him explicit photos.
“How did he know who I was? Why did he choose me?” she
questioned.
Semenchuck, who had been honored with policing awards over
the course of his two-decade career, was charged in March 2025. At the time,
then-Police Chief Farooq Sheikh said that he had resigned from the force
effective April 21.
“We acknowledge that a police officer being charged can
negatively impact trust and confidence, and I’m hoping that the community also
recognizes our accountability and transparency here today,” Sheikh previously
said.
Regina police has since announced new policies to ensure
incidents like this can't happen again. The policies now include an auditing
process, additional training and a message that reminds anyone accessing the
database that the information is only for investigative purposes.
A judge set Semenchuck's sentencing date for Jan. 23.
As many as 20 victim impact statements are expected during
the hearing.

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