How can Canadians’ trust in the force be restored if these four Mounties are still on the job?
Ian Mulgrew (Vancouver Sun) – The bottom line is you and I still are paying the salaries of the four RCMP officers whose shameful conduct led to the death of Robert Dziekanski.
It’s an outrage.
In his damning 470-page report, former justice Thomas Braidwood swept aside nearly three years of official Mountie obfuscation and outright lies by these individuals.
Braidwood said the Mounties had no justification for Tasering Dziekanski at Vancouver airport on Oct. 14, 2007.
The 40-year-old Polish immigrant was compliant and did not resist — the officers completely over-reacted to the situation and were the authors of this tragedy.
Yet RCMP Commissioner William Elliott still refuses to do the right thing and axe them.
“Mr. Dziekanski in no way brought this on himself,” Braidwood emphasized at his media conference, his voice rising with emotion. “He did not advance on any of the officers.”
That’s why they got together afterwards, discussed events and tried to deliberately mislead Braidwood during his public hearings. No wonder he called for a special prosecutor to be immediately appointed to consider laying criminal charges against the four men.
Braidwood couldn’t talk about why provincial prosecutors swallowed an RCMP investigation that was obviously flawed or why their spokesman at the time, now police complaints commissioner Stan Lowe, all but blamed Dziekanski for causing his own death.
“My mandate didn’t allow me to do that — I couldn’t do that,” Braidwood said.
For the same reason, he also couldn’t say what should happen to the officers.
When he spoke with reporters a few hours later, the RCMP commissioner couldn’t say either.
Elliott said the force would review Braidwood’s findings with the four disgraced officers but they may not face any discipline.
“We will certainly need to look at that,” was the best he offered.
The mantra throughout Friday’s many media conferences was that public confidence must be restored in the RCMP and the process for handling police-involved incidents.
Attorney-General Mike de Jong responded perfectly by immediately announcing the province would have an Ontario-style civilian investigation agency and follow up on all Braidwood’s recommendations.
(Former solicitor-general Kash Heed must be kicking himself — the ex-cop could have brought in this long-needed reform and reaped the kudos that go deservedly to de Jong.)
In response to concerns over the Crown’s December 2008 decision not to prosecute, the AG said that was based on the best information available but the inquiry had brought much new information to light.
“There was misconduct here … and that reflects badly, and that’s why Mr. Braidwood used the language that he did,” said de Jong, who has named Vancouver lawyer Richard Peck as special prosecutor.
Elliott’s initial response, too, was hopeful — “we’ve long acknowledged … the RCMP messed up.”
The iconic force, he explained, has substantially reformed its training and promotional policies and dramatically altered its rules for the use of conducted energy weapons. It has made many changes since this regrettable event that are laudable.
Elliott welcomed the new provincial investigative agency.
But when it came to discipline and dealing with the four …
“We will review the report and determine and take appropriate action,” was the best Elliott offered.
What a ridiculous response! Was he unaware of their performance at the inquiry?
Until Braidwood unveiled his conclusions, I could understand if not support the force standing behind the men even if they were spinning a “patently unbelievable” tale. But in the wake of these staggering findings and their deceit, they should be thrown under the bus.
How can Canadians restore their trust in the force if these four are still on the job, still carrying firearms and still able to exercise the powers of a police officer after being branded no better than lying thugs?
Braidwood said it loud and clear — these officers committed such outrageous misconduct it must be weighed against a criminal standard by a special prosecutor.
Dziekanski’s mum Zofia Cisowski shook her head after hearing the Mounties continued to be employed: “They still have no consequences.”
That these four officers are still drawing public pay is an absolute disgrace.
The question Braidwood used as the title of his report remains — why?
First it is unbelievable that nothing has happened to the four mounties in regard to the YVR death of a totally innocent person. Time and again nothing seems to happen to RCMP members that break the law, it really has become a ongoing joke and a major reason most in the public have lost trust and respect for the RCMP. It does appear too often that members of the RCMP are above the law and now too often they act that way. The complaints are virtually never ending and this is probably due to the lack of proper train they receive at Depot in Regina. The days of tough training are over and I have had that told to me by a retired RCMP officer who basically said training as he saw it on a visit was laughable. Most have no person to person skills unlike the “old days” and have a terrible attitude when they approach you. I feel sad Dziekanski’s mother settled out of court but I do bet the RCMP gave a big sigh of relief. The civil suit would have be damaging beyone belief as in civill court NOTHING is able to be kept out and from the evidence at the inquiry the court case probably would have been even more damaging to the RCMP if that is possible. Time to totally change hiring practices and the people involved in that process or disband the force over a period of years replacing them Provincial Police and a new Federal Police Force.
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The next time a RCMP officer dies at the hands of someone else. That someone should just apologize & move on.
That’s exactly what happened at the Vancouver airport.
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Good luck, don’t you know they are untouchable.
It’s no longer what the people want anymore and they can’t be disciplined because there’s to much riding on all of this for the force and about paying for these guys, I’m suspecting there’s allot more like them.
No one else matters anymore except the elite and what they want. The rest of us are just throw a ways and are insignificant, to be worked and taxed to death.
Unless changes come it’s just going to get worst.
All you see in the media, in inquiries and what is said and not said, it’s just like watching a wrestling match, all it is – is just a show for people to think there’s justice when there’s really none. If those RCMP officers are not dealt with I think the people will finally get it.
When you are above the law, no one else, including the Commissioner, the Governments nor the people matter, just them.
Apologies are cheap, if there is no consequences and its business as usual.
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