Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Provincial Police Boss Expects Tensions To Subside In Wake Of Cop Suspensions

The Canadian Press, 27 Oct, 2015 12:00 PM
    VAL D'OR, Que. — The head of the provincial police force says he expects calm to return to a northwestern Quebec town where eight officers were recently suspended after they were accused of abusing native women.
     
    Martin Prud'Homme says there's no crisis in Val d'Or, despite reports of dozens of local officers calling in sick over the weekend after their colleagues were suspended.
     
    The director of the Quebec provincial police told reporters today in Val d'Or he hopes to meet with officers and expects a gradual return to work.
     
    Prud'Homme says police are already implementing new measures: patrol vehicles are now equipped with cameras and social workers are joining police patrols in the city's downtown.
     
    He says while the force needs to review its police-training procedures, the detachment has a good reputation.
     
    Aboriginal leaders from across Quebec are also gathering in that town today to discuss the allegations.
     
    Last week, Radio-Canada's investigative "Enquete" program broadcast interviews with various women who accused officers of assault and abuse of power over a period going back several years.
     
    Prud'Homme says none of the eight suspended officers are facing sexual misconduct allegations.
     
    The probe into the alleged incidents was transferred to Montreal police amid criticism the provincial force was investigating its own members.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Donald MacLean, Nova Scotia Bus Driver Emotional As He Speaks Of Student's Death

    Donald MacLean, Nova Scotia Bus Driver Emotional As He Speaks Of Student's Death
    SYDNEY, N.S. — The driver of a school bus that ran over and killed a student outside a high school in Sydney, N.S., last winter says he didn't know something had happened until someone banged on the door of his bus.

    Donald MacLean, Nova Scotia Bus Driver Emotional As He Speaks Of Student's Death

    Mom And Baby Whale Number 5 Doing Well Off B.C. Coast As Population Rebounding

    Mom And Baby Whale Number 5 Doing Well Off B.C. Coast As Population Rebounding
    SOOKE, B.C. — Scientists say a fifth baby has joined an endangered population of killer whales off British Columbia's coast.

    Mom And Baby Whale Number 5 Doing Well Off B.C. Coast As Population Rebounding

    Woman Arrested, Police Seek Details Following Suspicious Death Involving Truck In Fort St. John

    Woman Arrested, Police Seek Details Following Suspicious Death Involving Truck In Fort St. John
    A woman is in custody as RCMP in Fort St. John, B.C., investigate what they are calling a suspicious death.

    Woman Arrested, Police Seek Details Following Suspicious Death Involving Truck In Fort St. John

    Muslim Flight Attendant Suspended For Refusing To Serve Alcohol Files Complaint

    Muslim Flight Attendant Suspended For Refusing To Serve Alcohol Files Complaint
    Charee Stanley, a Detroit-based flight attendant for ExpressJet, filed a discrimination complaint Tuesday with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

    Muslim Flight Attendant Suspended For Refusing To Serve Alcohol Files Complaint

    RCMP Lay Charges In Fire That Destroyed School In Nunavut

    RCMP Lay Charges In Fire That Destroyed School In Nunavut
    Police have laid charges in a fire that destroyed the only school for junior and senior high students in the Arctic community of Cape Dorset.

    RCMP Lay Charges In Fire That Destroyed School In Nunavut

    Four Out Of Five Missing Persons Reported Are Kids In Manitoba Care: Police

    Four Out Of Five Missing Persons Reported Are Kids In Manitoba Care: Police
    WINNIPEG — Police in Winnipeg say that four out of five missing persons reports they receive are about young girls in the care of Manitoba Child and Family Services.

    Four Out Of Five Missing Persons Reported Are Kids In Manitoba Care: Police