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Canadians see Dziekanski at airport not Dudley Do-Right as RCMP image, say experts

Victoria, B.C. (Canadian Press) – It used to be the image of Dudley Do-Right, the squeaky-clean Mountie, that was etched into the minds of Canadians when they considered the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

But what’s more likely to come to mind now are the chilling last screams of Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski as he lay dying on the floor of Vancouver’s airport.

He had been Tasered twice by four RCMP officers who confronted him in the international arrivals area.

Canadians see Grey Cup parades, musical rides and colourful uniforms when they think of the RCMP, but those images are blurred as the names of Ian Bush, Maher Arar and Dziekanski creep like nightmares into the national consciousness.

Even RCMP brass admit to image issues and the need for a top-to-bottom overhaul.

A government-ordered report by Toronto lawyer Peter Brown recently concluded that the 133-year-old force requires massive structural changes that include blowing up its fortress mentality by moving towards greater civilian oversight, independent criticism and giving the force the authority to manage its own staff and budget.

But that may not be enough to save the RCMP as Canadians are troubled by doubts about a once-treasured icon, say police experts and critics who believe the Mounties have become outsiders in their own towns and strangers in their country.

“A reconstituted RCMP would probably be a good way of going,” said Prof. Robert Gordon, director of the School of Criminology at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C.

A name change may also in order, he said.

“Whether you continue to call it the RCMP or not, that remains to be seen,” he said. “I think that (the name) is a source of puzzlement to some because they don’t seem to be riding horses anymore.”

The hierarchical, almost paramilitary structure of the RCMP is at odds with modern policing in urban environments and the Mounties need to get with the times, Gordon said.

“They still are focused more on the need to have polished boots than they are to have polished brains,” he said.

“They are an anachronism. But they are a very powerful Canadian icon and disengaging them from things that they should no longer be doing is going to be tough.”

Simon Fraser University is planning a major policing forum in the new year that will examine calls for a metro police force in the Vancouver area to take over the duties of the RCMP in many suburban communities, Gordon said.

The forum comes as B.C.’s Solicitor General John Les plans to meet with local politicians to discuss joint policing initiatives as gang warfare grips Vancouver with shootings and beatings.

Les was essentially dragged kicking and screaming into a meeting on the subject with Vancouver-area politicians.

He had consistently rejected the need for joint policing, and at one point, berated a police chief who suggested joint policing was needed to fight gang murders in the Vancouver area.

Gordon and others say they are looking to governments to lead the charge to bring about change for the Mounties in the next year.

Gordon said he would like to see the RCMP become a truly federal police force – like the FBI in the United States – which means getting out of the provinces and starting to look after federal issues like national security, organized crime and protection of the treasury.

“It’s obvious that the image has taken a bit of a beating over the last year,” he said. “I would imagine that it’s a little tarnished at the moment and I would suspect that this is high priority for the new commissioner.”

William Elliott, appointed this summer, is the first civilian to be appointed RCMP commissioner.

Gordon wonders if he was given a mandate for change and will deliver those changes in the coming months.

The RCMP said Elliott was not available to be interviewed and Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day could not be reached for comment.

Halifax-area author Paul Palango is convinced the Dziekanski Taser incident last October and others has primed the federal government to make changes.

The bad press dogging the RCMP this year included the death of Bush, who was shot in the back of the head by an RCMP officer in Houston, B.C. The police complaints commissioner cleared the officer, though recommended some changes to police protocol.

Palango, who has written books critical of the RCMP, said he believes Prime Minister Stephen Harper leans toward dropping the RCMP from provincial policing in favour of a federal police force.

He pointed to a 2001 letter to former Alberta premier Ralph Klein that called for an Alberta provincial police.

The so-called Alberta firewall letter called on the province to let its contract with the RCMP run out in 2012, and then replace the Mounties with an Alberta police force.

Harper was president of the National Citizens’ Coalition when he signed the letter.

“I still think that Harper has an agenda, and I think his agenda basically is to squeeze the RCMP out of provincial policing,” Palango said.

“All that has happened has worked to his beliefs. All that has happened has basically supported him. He hasn’t had to say a thing. People have been able to come to that conclusion on their own without Harper initiating anything.”

Harper now is in the position where he can say his government is moving toward change within the RCMP because the public mood demands it, he said.

“It looks like he’s responsive to what people want,” said Palango.

Dziekanski’s death at Vancouver airport in October and the public’s ability to view much of the incident through a video filmed by a witness appears to have embedded in Canadians the need for change within the RCMP, say Palango and Gordon.

The video shows four RCMP officers approaching Dziekanski, who had been at Vancouver airport for about 10 hours and almost immediately zapping him twice with jolts from their Tasers.

He is heard screaming in fear and pain and dies shortly afterwards.

Dziekanski’s death has resulted in at least eight Canadian investigations. Poland is also investigating and there has been a national debate about policing and the use of Tasers as a police weapon of force.

“It’s the catalyst because it’s allowed people to focus on the problems,” Palango said.

The RCMP recently announced it ordered officers to limit Taser use to people displaying combative behaviours.

Last month, high-ranking RCMP officers in B.C. attended a news conference in Victoria to discuss the arrest of a Vancouver-area man who police Tasered, pepper-sprayed and hit with their batons.

Pacific region deputy commissioner Gary Bass, the top Mountie in British Columbia, said the RCMP wanted to comment publicly about the incident “in light of recent events with respect to the use of conducted energy weapons, commonly referred to as Tasers.”

Bass said the RCMP wants to provide information as quickly as it can about incidents even though an investigation may not be complete. He said he wanted to dispel public concerns the RCMP does not provide information in a “timely fashion.”

Assistant RCMP commander Peter German went even further, offering condolences to the victim’s family and the officers involved in the tough arrest.

“The nature of police work is unpredictable,” he said.

“This incident proves just that. No one ever wishes to see an outcome where someone is injured. Our thoughts are with his family, as well as the responding officers during this difficult time.”

Robert Knipstrom, 36, died several days later.

Palango and Gordon say the RCMP would likely win back the public’s respect if they more often responded quickly and in a forthright manner to incidents, no matter how difficult.

They point to an incident in an aboriginal village on B.C.’s coast near Vancouver last summer that signals the divide between the RCMP and the people they serve.

RCMP officers broke up a community parade to celebrate a village victory at an aboriginal soccer tournament, and six months later people are still angry and still waiting for answers, said band councillor Garry Feschuk.

“I’ve never seen our community so outraged when this happened,” said the former elected chief.

The coach was handcuffed, people became angry, and in the melee, a baby was pepper-sprayed, said Feschuk.

“These are all kids with their parents,” he said.

“I really have a hard time coming to grips with why this happened, especially when they endangered our children by pepper spraying. They never even took into account the safety of our children. Even that baby getting pepper sprayed.”

Victory parades, including putting the winners into the back of pickup trucks, is a community tradition, Feschuk said. But the two RCMP officers on duty that day were not the village’s regular officers and the celebration turned ugly, he said.

“There was even times when the RCMP even led the parade,” Feschuk said. “They were at the front of the parade with their lights on.”

Key dates in 2007 for the RCMP:

June 15: A special investigator’s report into the RCMP pension scandal slams former commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli and concludes the force’s corporate culture and management structure need drastic reform.

July 5: Bureaucrat William Elliott is appointed the new RCMP commissioner, the first outsider to lead the Mounties since the force was created in 1873.

July 6: A coroner’s inquest into the death of Ian Bush, shot at an RCMP detachment in B.C. in 2005, recommends mandatory electronic monitoring in detachments and calls for Mounties not to be left alone with suspects.

Sept. 9: More than 600 Mounties from across Western Canada gathered at Canada’s national RCMP training centre in Regina to remember 218 officers who died in the line of duty since the creation of the North-West Mounted Police.

Oct. 6: RCMP officer Const. Christopher John Worden, 30, is shot and killed in Hay River, N.W.T.

Oct. 14: Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski dies after being stunned with a Taser by RCMP at Vancouver airport.

Nov. 5: RCMP officer Doug Scott, 20, is shot and killed in the Baffin Island hamlet of Kimmirut after responding to an impaired driving complaint.

Nov. 6: A truck driver is found guilty of dangerous driving causing death in Wetaskiwin, Alta., for smashing into the cruiser of an RCMP officer parked on the side of a busy Alberta highway. Const. Jose Agostinho was investigating another traffic accident when he was hit on July 4, 2005.

Nov. 19: B.C. government orders public inquiry into Dziekanski’s death at Vancouver airport.

Nov. 29: The independent RCMP public complaints commissioner clears a Mountie in the death of Ian Bush, but Paul Kennedy launches his own probe into how Mounties across the country handle such cases because he said he’s concerned about the “corrosive” rising public perception about police investigating themselves.

Dec. 19: The RCMP approves a new backup policy requiring that at least two officers respond to dangerous calls in remote areas.

Categories: Excessive use of Force, RCMP, Robert Dziekanski, Taser.

Comment Feed

6 Responses

  1. It seems the world is pretty short sighted most times. I agree with the suggestion that the RCMP was more of a community involved organization before now. Just because they have a large contingent of people assigned to a specialized part of the RCMP called community policing does not mean they are doing it. In my view community policing would be more akin to all police officers engaged in such activities. A long time ago before all the present rhetoric, the officers were always coaching hockey, baseball, and other sports in the communities that they lived. Everybody knew them and their families as they interacted just like everyone else. They have been having police officers in schools giving talks even when I was a kid. Now there is a special unit that does it and nobody else. Its all spin these days.

    I agree that a union would have to have strict measures for non performers and slackards. Write it into the collective agreement. I also agree on changing the hiring practices. Some of the posts here would indicate that even the much vaunted training has devolved into a disaster. Garbage in garbage out.

    Its a big ship and it is going to take quite a while to turn it around especially with the political mandarins at the wheel.

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    GetReal2007.12.23 @ 16:09
  2. I just want to take a moment to examine these two statements.

    “police experts and critics who believe the Mounties have become outsiders in their own towns and strangers in their country.”

    “They still are focused more on the need to have polished boots than they are to have polished brains,” he said.

    This is the part I don’t get. Years ago top level managers believed that community policing would not be implemented until all the 20 year guys were gone. However, if you look at the first statement the force has seemed to get worse in the last few years. Like a member of the old guard told me, “we were the ones who knew everyone by name, we were the ones who were involved in the community, involved in minor hockey.” Today’s members don’t often live in the communities they even police. Despite all this feel good politically correct liberal rhetoric on community policing the force’s ability at it is at an all time low. Too many members are great at making all the right grunts and noises, but never put anything into practice.

    I also disagree with the second statement. When have members in large numbers ever had polished boots? Military discipline and community policing is not a dichotomy. The RCMP was much more a community police force in the 50’s and 60’s than today. Though members back then didn’t spew community police rhetoric, the difference was members actually got out of their cars back then and rattled door knobs. A disciplined RCMP and community policing has and can exist.

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    speaking_my_mind2007.12.22 @ 11:02
  3. Get Real is right about the Union thing. However, before such a thing is put in place, the force has to commit to new hiring practices.
    The RCMP has to start hiring on merit again. The last thing it needs is a system that gives extra union protection to the lazy, the useless or the troublemakers. Get rid of them first.

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    speaking_my_mind2007.12.22 @ 10:08
  4. What the officers of the RCMP need is a union. They have no union and they are not allowed to form one. Pure rubbish. There would be minimum staffing levels, standardized grievance procedures and standard discipline proceedings. A collective agreement would be in place to protect them from management and scurrilous accusations. Instead of cap in hand to government for budgets and wages, negotiations for them would ensure they did not have to short staff to pay bills and obtain necessary equipment.

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    GetReal2007.12.22 @ 05:39
  5. I have been reading some of these reports and it seems like the Airport authorities have jumped to the occasion to make change and have moved right away to implement the necessary changes while the government of Canada is still talking, talking, talking and calling for reports, reports, reports, and waiting for inquiries, inquiries, inquiries regarding the safety and security of people within Canada.

    I’d be shocked if they ever do anything about these issues I’m reading about here.

    I’m grieved as I think about the good police officers being silenced and having to work in that kind of environment when they are called to lay their lives for the good of all people to Serve and to Protect.

    To those officers – MERRY CHRISTMAS

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    Mauvais2007.12.21 @ 14:31
  6. This article is a joke.

    The Lower Mainland municipalities are unlikely to switch from the RCMP to a municipal force. The contract gets renewed in 2012 and any such change would take years of planning before implementation. It’s just not feasible and the city councils aren’t even looking in that direction. The suggestion is merely speculation from uninformed parties.

    The Brown Report, which is excellent, has to do with managerial and organizational issues and is not linked with the “image” of the RCMP. However, the recent media generated public outcry on some high profile incidents have generated the political will to action the recommendations.

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    Simon2007.12.21 @ 02:32