Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Police Complaint Commissioner Won't Hear Allegations Made By Saanich Mayor Richard Atwell

The Canadian Press, 24 Jun, 2015 12:11 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's police complaint commissioner has decided not to investigate accusations made by a Vancouver Island mayor about the conduct of municipal officers. 
     
    Saanich Mayor Richard Atwell made national headlines in January when he questioned the installation of spyware on his work computer and alleged he was stopped by police four times on suspicion of drunk driving.
     
    Atwell also said he would ask the Office of the Police Complaint Commissioner to investigate how details of a Dec. 11, 2014 domestic dispute became public and were released to a Victoria newspaper.
     
    Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham sided with Atwell in March over the spyware, ruling the municipality violated privacy rights by installing the surveillance software.
     
    Deputy police-complaint commissioner Rollie Woods says his office did not handle Atwell's complaint about the police stops. 
     
    Woods says the office also decided not to investigate the leak to the newspaper because it didn't meet the definition of misconduct under the Police Act.
     
    He says the office considers the issue concluded, although an appeal could be filed with the B.C. Supreme Court asking for a judicial review.
     
    Atwell admitted to an extramarital affair after the Victoria Times Colonist reported on its front page that police responded to a domestic-dispute call where he was present with a woman and her husband.
     
    He was elected last November, defeating the former mayor who had served in office for 18 years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Man Questioned Over 'Irate' Phone Call To Oklahoma Police

    Ontario Man Questioned Over 'Irate' Phone Call To Oklahoma Police
    BRAMPTON, Ont. — An alleged hostile phone call to police in Oklahoma landed an Ontario man in hot water back home after police in the Toronto area were called to investigate.

    Ontario Man Questioned Over 'Irate' Phone Call To Oklahoma Police

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency
    The plan calls for $137 million over five years for the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service and $41 million a year afterward.

    PM Harper Announces More Funding For Canada's Spy Agency

    Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

    OTTAWA — Canadians are saving enough and are reasonably well-prepared for life after work, said a report Thursday by the C.D. Howe Institute, which challenges some of the common assumptions about retirement planning.

    Canadians Reasonably Well-prepared For Retirement, C.D. Howe Report Says

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety
    HALIFAX — The wife of a man accused of stockpiling chemicals in Nova Scotia says she went to police out of fear that her children would come in contact with a dangerous substance in a shed on their property.

    Christopher Phillips's Wife Arrested After Chemicals Scare Feared For Children's Safety

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings
    MONCTON, N.B. — The widows of three fallen Mounties are thanking the public for their support one year after their husbands were gunned down in Moncton, N.B.

    Memorial Design And Musical Ride To Mark Anniversary Of Mountie Shootings

    Nurses Unions Plan To Get Involved In Federal Election Campaigning

    HALIFAX — A national nurses union is training its members to spread the message about health care and become a political force during the upcoming federal election campaign.

    Nurses Unions Plan To Get Involved In Federal Election Campaigning