Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Police Watchdog's Report Notes Suicides Post Arrest, Lack Of Body Cameras

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Nov, 2016 02:31 PM
    VANCOUVER — The annual report from British Columbia's police watchdog agency highlights several concerns about policing in the province, including suicides after arrest by RCMP and the lack of body cameras worn by officers.
     
    The 2015-2016 report from the Independent Investigations Office also says some officers are failing to follow so-called duty-to-account guidelines, delaying writing reports about officer-involved shootings or in-custody deaths.
     
    The IIO said it investigated allegations made against RCMP officers that they failed to take action to protect six people they arrested or questioned over sex-related offences who later killed themselves.
     
    In five of the six cases, the report says investigators found insufficient evidence for a connection between police and the suicide, and in the last case there was no reason to believe officers committed any offence.
     
    But the report says command staff at RCMP's B.C. headquarters have responded to the IIO saying it will review officer training to identify someone who may be at risk of suicide when released from custody.
     
    The report also says IIO staff reviewed 71 investigations and found that footage from body-worn cameras would have potentially assisted in resolving 93 per cent of those cases.
     
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justice Minister Hires Academic Who Thinks Supreme Court Erred On Assisted Dying

    Justice Minister Hires Academic Who Thinks Supreme Court Erred On Assisted Dying
    OTTAWA — Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould has hired a new legal affairs adviser who once argued that the Supreme Court over-stepped its bounds when it struck down the ban on medically assisted dying.

    Justice Minister Hires Academic Who Thinks Supreme Court Erred On Assisted Dying

    Energy East pipeline is safe, good for country, TransCanada tells NEB hearings

    SAINT JOHN, N.B. — TransCanada Corp. stressed its commitment to the safety of oil shipments as three days of hearings into the proposed $15.7 billion Energy East pipeline project opened in New Brunswick on Monday.

    Energy East pipeline is safe, good for country, TransCanada tells NEB hearings

    Trans-Canada Treks Struggle To Be Noticed In The Post-Terry Fox Era

    Canadians are running, biking and even pushing shopping carts across the country for various compelling causes this summer, but it's often a struggle to be noticed in the post-Terry Fox era.

    Trans-Canada Treks Struggle To Be Noticed In The Post-Terry Fox Era

    Remote Explosive System Will Keep Stretch Of Highway 1 Safer From Avalanches

    Remote Explosive System Will Keep Stretch Of Highway 1 Safer From Avalanches
    Transportation Minister Todd Stone says a new avalanche mitigation system will be operating this winter in Three Valley Gap, near Revelstoke.

    Remote Explosive System Will Keep Stretch Of Highway 1 Safer From Avalanches

    Abbotsford Police Locate Missing Indo-Canadian Woman And Two-Year-Old Son

    Abbotsford Police Locate Missing Indo-Canadian Woman And Two-Year-Old Son
    The missing mother and child were located at the residence of a relative. Both were fine. 

    Abbotsford Police Locate Missing Indo-Canadian Woman And Two-Year-Old Son

    KPU launches post-secondary bhangra course

    KPU launches post-secondary bhangra course
    Bhangra, anyone?

    KPU launches post-secondary bhangra course