A Toronto police traffic officer accused of groping a dancer at a strip club and then pointing his firearm at her has been acquitted of all charges.

Justice John Hamilton didn't believe Const. Joseph Green committed the acts during the October 2004 incident.

The complainant had testified that on the night in question, Green, on duty and in full uniform, grabbed the woman's breasts inside For Your Eyes Only.

The woman told police that when she objected to the act, the constable pulled out his firearm, pointed it at her face and said, "What's with the attitude?"

Green testified he never grabbed the woman's breasts. He said he hugged the dancer when he saw her and commented on how big her breasts were.

A few minutes later, he said he noticed that the comment upset her and said, "What's with the attitude?"

The officer said he was holding his police radio in his hand, which could have looked like a handgun inside the dark club.

The judge believed Green's version of events, and said there were too many inconsistencies in the testimony of other club workers who said they saw the officer draw a gun.

"No one saw the gun being drawn or re-holstered because the gun was never out," the judge said. "I can't even find that the event probably happened, because it didn't happen."

Green, an eight-year veteran, was found not guilty of sexual assault, pointing a firearm and careless use of a firearm.

"I was suspecting the truth would come out and it did," Green told reporters outside the University Avenue courthouse.

"(I will) go back to doing what I love doing -- being a police officer."

His lawyer, Gary Clewley, called the judge's verdict a "home run."

"I'm not sure which fence it went over but I know the ball didn't come back into the infield," he said.

Clewley accused the dancer of lying about the incident because she was hoping for a quick cash settlement. The complainant had filed a $250,000 lawsuit against the officer and the police force.

After the ruling, the woman, who cannot be identified because of a publication ban, left the courtroom in tears.

"I'm very disappointed in the justice system," she said outside court.

Green also said he would "never" enter a strip club again. During the trial, court heard he regularly visited For Your Eyes Only during his shift to ensure the safety of those inside and deter drinking and driving.

With a report from CTV's Chris Eby