Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Not Fully Prepared For Active Shooters Five Years After Moncton: Auditor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 May, 2019 07:08 PM

    OTTAWA — The RCMP isn't sure that all its officers have access to the rifles and body armour needed to respond to an active shooter, almost five years after three Mounties were gunned down in New Brunswick, Canada's auditor general has found.


    In a report released Tuesday, interim auditor Sylvain Ricard said the national police force has mismanaged the purchase, distribution and ongoing maintenance of semi-automatic rifles known as carbines.

     

    In June 2014, a heavily armed assailant in Moncton, N.B., killed three Mounties and wounded two others. The RCMP had about 1,500 high-powered carbines nationwide at the time but officers in the Moncton detachment had not been trained to use them.


    The RCMP was convicted under the Canada Labour Code in 2017 of failing to provide members with the training and equipment to deal with an attack that left the community reeling.


    The police force subsequently bought thousands of carbines but did not know whether it had provided the rifles to all of the officers who needed them, the auditor general said.


    The auditor also discovered the RCMP had enough hard body armour across the country but not all officers had access to the equipment, which protects officers' vital organs from bullets.


    "Overall, we found that not all RCMP officers had access to the equipment they needed to respond to an active shooter situation," the report said.


    The RCMP agreed with the auditor's various recommendations and outlined plans to remedy the failings, including progress to date.


    The police force realized in 2011 that its officers lacked the firearms they needed to respond effectively to criminals armed with deadly weapons. The Mounties bought 527 carbines in 2012 and, as of last October, had 6,211 of the short-barrelled rifles in service.


    In 2014, the force committed to providing the rifles to at-risk officers. However, the auditor found the RCMP did not consistently define who those officers were across divisions. It also had no national standard for the number of carbines needed to equip its officers.


    Some detachments did not have enough carbines, which meant there were no spares for when the guns were being serviced.


    In addition, there were discrepancies between the RCMP's data and the number of carbines in various detachments. "So, RCMP National Headquarters did not have a full picture of the actual location of the carbines within the divisions," the audit report says. "The RCMP could not confirm that officers who needed the equipment had access to it."


    The auditor also found:


    — The RCMP did not have a plan to manage the acquisition of carbines, causing bottlenecks in distribution and backlogs in recertifying members on how to use them as well as for maintenance of the guns;


    — The police force met its target for the initial training of front-line officers on carbines, but 13 per cent of these officers had not completed annual recertification training;


    — Half the force's carbines had not been maintained according to RCMP policy;


    — Deficiencies with pistol maintenance and mandatory recertification training.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Green Party Targets Use Of Tax Money For Political Attack Billboards

    VANCOUVER — Green party Leader Andrew Weaver is calling for a ban on the use of taxpayer money for political attack ads after the B.C. Liberals bought billboards blaming Premier John Horgan for a spike in gas prices.

    Green Party Targets Use Of Tax Money For Political Attack Billboards

    Small Cessna Plane That Crashed Carried Crew Contracted By BC Wildfire Service

    Small Cessna Plane That Crashed Carried Crew Contracted By BC Wildfire Service
    SMITHERS, B.C. — Three men who died in a small plane crash northeast of Smithers, B.C., on Saturday were part of a crew contracted by the BC Wildfire Service to do aerial imaging.

    Small Cessna Plane That Crashed Carried Crew Contracted By BC Wildfire Service

    Feds Fund Media Project Aimed At Improving Coverage Of Human Rights Issues

    TORONTO — The federal government is investing millions of dollars in a project meant to improve international media coverage of human rights issues, particularly those impacting women and girls.

    Feds Fund Media Project Aimed At Improving Coverage Of Human Rights Issues

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Second NDP Term In Sight If Unions, Supporters Stick Together

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Second NDP Term In Sight If Unions, Supporters Stick Together
    VICTORIA — Premier John Horgan is already talking about British Columbia's New Democrats being re-elected to a second term even though the next election isn't scheduled until the fall of 2021.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Says Second NDP Term In Sight If Unions, Supporters Stick Together

    CBC Must Diversify Revenue To Protect It From Political Whims, President Says

    CBC Must Diversify Revenue To Protect It From Political Whims, President Says
    The CBC must continually look for new commercial revenue streams — particularly internationally — as a way to protect itself from the whims of politicians, the public broadcaster's president, Catherine Tait, said Friday.

    CBC Must Diversify Revenue To Protect It From Political Whims, President Says

    Floods Finally Subsiding Across Eastern Canada: 'Now You Get Into The Long Slog'

    Floods Finally Subsiding Across Eastern Canada: 'Now You Get Into The Long Slog'
    The worst appears over for flood-stricken areas across eastern Canada.

    Floods Finally Subsiding Across Eastern Canada: 'Now You Get Into The Long Slog'