British Columbia

Michael Williams convicted of Spencer Chandra Herbert office attack

The man who walked into the office of Vancouver MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert and punched his assistant last February has been found guilty of assault.

Michael Melvin Williams convicted of assault in February 2014 incident in MLA's office

B.C. MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert told reporters the intoxicated man was angry about a rainbow flag that hangs in the front window of his constituency office, and a similar flag that hangs in a window of the West End Community Centre. (Kirk Williams/CBC)

The man who walked into the office of Vancouver MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert and punched his assistant Murray Bilida last February has been found guilty of assault.

A man punched a door in MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert's constituency office hard enough to leave this hole. (Kirk Williams/CBC)

Michael Melvin Williams, who was 53 at the time, was convicted of assault in connection to the incident on Thursday, according to a statement released by Chandra Herbert.

He was given a non-conditional suspended sentence and one year’s probation, a member of Chandra Herbert's team confirmed with CBC News.

At the time of the incident, police said the intoxicated man walked into the MLA's constituency office uttering homophobic slurs. When he was asked to leave, he damaged a door inside the office and punched the employee in the face.

MLA Spencer Chandra Herbert says the man who assaulted his office assistant was apparently upset over a rainbow flag that hangs in the front window of his constituency office, and a similar flag that hangs in the window of the West End Community Centre. (CBC)

Chandra Herbert said the man was apparently angry about a rainbow flag hanging in the front window of his office, and about another rainbow flag that is displayed in a window at the West End Community Centre.

In a statement released on Friday, Herbert said the flags are still flying.

"The Pride flag will remain in our office, on the West End Library and Community Centre, and in our community and province as an enduring symbol of inclusiveness and love for all people," said Herbert.