Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
National

Harjit Sajjan Defends Delay In Completion Of Inquiry Into Military College Suicides

The Canadian Press, 05 Jun, 2018 11:25 AM
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan is speaking up for his department in the face of angry complaints from family members who want to see the results of an internal inquiry into the deaths of three Royal Military College students.
     
     
    Sajjan says that while he understands their frustration, defence officials want to make sure they do a thorough job on the inquiry into the deaths of Harrison Kelertas, Brett Cameron and Matthew Sullivan.
     
     
    The three young men are believed to have taken their own lives in separate incidents in 2016, though officials have yet to confirm any official cause of death.
     
     
    Formal hearings wrapped up early last year, but military lawyers have spent the past year reviewing the final report, prompting concerns that the Defence Department is whitewashing the results.
     
     
    The Royal Military College inquiry is one of 15 involving suspected suicides by military personnel that are currently under review, according to the Department of National Defence.
     
     
    While most were launched in 2016 or after, one dates back to 2011.
     
     
    Officials won't say much about that inquiry except that the board responsible for investigating the case was reconvened in 2015 to address unanswered questions, and that the final report is awaiting approval.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Federal Government Spending $4.5B To Buy Trans Mountain Pipeline, BC Terminal

    Federal Government Spending $4.5B To Buy Trans Mountain Pipeline, BC Terminal
    In return, Kinder Morgan will go ahead with its original plan to twin the pipeline this summer while the sale is finalized, which likely won't happen until August, Morneau told a news conference in Ottawa.

    Federal Government Spending $4.5B To Buy Trans Mountain Pipeline, BC Terminal

    VIDEOS: Jagmeet Singh Jokes About Personal Absence From Ottawa, Teaches Audience Bhangra

    VIDEOS: Jagmeet Singh Jokes About Personal Absence From Ottawa, Teaches Audience Bhangra
    Federal party leaders got a few digs in at one another and at themselves at the parliamentary press gallery dinner Saturday night.

    VIDEOS: Jagmeet Singh Jokes About Personal Absence From Ottawa, Teaches Audience Bhangra

    Authorities Investigate Death At Rail Crossing That Reports Say Involved Scooter

    Authorities Investigate Death At Rail Crossing That Reports Say Involved Scooter
    CHILLIWACK, B.C. — A death at a British Columbia railway crossing is under investigation after reports say a scooter got stuck on the tracks late Saturday afternoon.

    Authorities Investigate Death At Rail Crossing That Reports Say Involved Scooter

    First-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against 18-Year-Old In Reading Room Death

    First-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against 18-Year-Old In Reading Room Death
    An 18-year-old man has been charged with first-degree murder in the death of a woman who was attacked last week while working at the downtown Christian Science Reading Centre.

    First-Degree Murder Charge Laid Against 18-Year-Old In Reading Room Death

    Justin Trudeau Mum On Pipeline Front Even As May 31 Deadline Looms

    Justin Trudeau Mum On Pipeline Front Even As May 31 Deadline Looms
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists his government is going to get the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion built, but still has nothing to say about how, even as Kinder Morgan's deadline clock ticks ever closer to the end.

    Justin Trudeau Mum On Pipeline Front Even As May 31 Deadline Looms

    Central Alberta Zoo Gets $500 In Fines After Ice Cream Eating Bear Video

    Central Alberta Zoo Gets $500 In Fines After Ice Cream Eating Bear Video
    RED DEER, Alta. — A central Alberta zoo must pay $500 in fines after taking a bear for ice cream at a drive-thru.

    Central Alberta Zoo Gets $500 In Fines After Ice Cream Eating Bear Video