Bob Cooper (Vancouver Province) – The harassment and subsequent firing of Sgt. Al Dalstrom at the former Organized Crime Agency of B.C. (OCABC) has finally come to light, thanks to two former members of the agency, Peter Ditchfield and Andy Richards.
All three are also highly respected former VPD members, and Peter was the best partner I ever had.
The story also exposed the turf wars and petty jealousies that have long plagued the relationship between the RCMP and city police forces in B.C.
For decades, this was one of law enforcement’s dirty little secrets that we grumbled about over drinks, but didn’t mention in polite company.
Police bosses and politicians touted “integration” as a better alternative (meaning cheaper) to a regional or provincial police force, and we all toed the line.
In my 32 years with the Vancouver police, I spent over eight of them in integrated “joint forces” squads with the RCMP. During that time, I met some great individual Mounties who were excellent police officers, some of whom I remain friends with to this day.
The organization, however, has always viewed any other agency operating in the same sphere as a threat that must be controlled, absorbed, or eliminated.
A classic example was the fighting between the RCMP and the newly-formed CSIS (formerly the RCMP Security Service) that caused so many problems in the Air India case.
From their first day at Depot, RCMP recruits are taught that they have just joined the finest police force in the world. And this is all right, to a point.
Pride and esprit de corps are extremely important in building morale and cohesiveness in any unit that operates in a paramilitary structure. The RCMP have a rich history and a list of accomplishments nothing short of legendary, and teaching this to recruits instils pride and a sense of purpose.
Unfortunately some really gulp the Kool-Aid and develop an attitude of superiority that leads them to regard all other cops as sub-standard and unworthy of their respect. It’s rather like Toronto views the rest of Canada.
Sgt. Dalstrom was the lead investigator in Project Phoenix in which OCABC was making a major drug case against the Hells Angels by using one of their disgruntled underlings.
Things were going very well until members of the RCMP assigned to Phoenix began making allegations against Dalstrom. These included mishandling of evidence, harassment and embellishing wiretap applications.
The fact that Dalstrom was cleared of all charges didn’t matter because he was also suspected of committing the capital sin of badmouthing the RCMP to journalist Julian Sher who was writing a book on the Hells Angels. Sher later denied the quote in question came from Dalstrom, but by that time the die was cast.
As a recent summary of disciplinary cases in the National Post demonstrates, you can get away with just about anything in the RCMP except criticizing it.
Some years ago, the RCMP were telling the public that the Pickton case was having no effect on turnaround times for DNA analysis at the RCMP Laboratories, and all was well. In fact, we were waiting up to two years, in some cases, for DNA analysis in murder investigations and serious sexual attacks.
In any case, by that time the plug had been pulled on Project Phoenix and Dalstrom was told to go home, as there was no work for him at OCABC. After sitting at home for several months, Dalstrom was summarily dismissed without any sort of severance package.
Had they simply done that, they might have succeeded in keeping this sorry mess secret, but they think they can bully people. And they just don’t get it.
Labour law aside, every clandestine agency in the world knows that taking someone who’s had access to the deepest secrets and tossing him out on the sidewalk with nothing is never a good idea, no matter what you suspect him of.
Project Phoenix was never prosecuted, despite the money and man-hours spent on it. The Department of Justice apparently didn’t want the RCMP’s dirty laundry aired in a courtroom. Frankly, I can’t imagine the DOJ being that concerned, and suspect there may have been a little nudge from other quarters.
In the meantime, Dalstrom hired a lawyer and sued OCABC for wrongful dismissal. The case wound up being settled on the courthouse steps for roughly $2 million.
When the story was aired, the best defences that could be mustered were retired RCMP Commissioner Bev Busson characterizing the settlement as a “retirement package” and Supt. Pat Fogarty trying to deflect criticism of the RCMP by pointing out that three municipal chiefs on the board of OCABC (chaired by Busson), went along with Dalstrom’s dismissal.
They’d have been better off saying nothing.
One of the most troubling aspects of all of this is the imposition of a non-disclosure clause.
This involved public funds paid out at the eleventh hour, and the clause was added for no other purpose than to ensure that vindictive, dishonest, disgraceful behaviour by senior police officers was hushed up.
The fact that it falls just short of the legal definition of bribery or extortion is nothing to be proud of.
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