Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

RCMP Officer Was Not Overly Stressed By Dziekanski Case: Former Supervisor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2018 12:43 PM
    BURNABY, B.C. — The supervisor of an RCMP officer who took his own life in 2013 says Pierre Lemaitre didn't seem overly stressed about misinformation he gave the media after the death of a man following a confrontation with police at Vancouver's airport.
     
     
    John Ward, a retired staff sergeant, told a coroner's inquest today that part of the job of a communications officer is to trust that the information going out to the media is largely correct.
     
     
    He says the RCMP's media relations unit is always aware that any information given out may affect future court cases.
     
     
    Coroner's inquests are held to hear evidence on recommendations that could be made to prevent similar deaths in the future and do not make findings of blame.
     
     
    Lemaitre's former family doctor and psychologist have told the inquest that he had post-traumatic stress disorder from dealing with victims of crime but the incident in 2007 with Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver International Airport increased his depression and anxiety.
     
     
    A former media strategist for the Mounties accused the department of betraying Lemaitre, testifying that he had been "hung out to dry" by his superiors. Atoya Montague said Lemaitre was used to tell a false story about the death of Dziekanski, a Polish man who couldn't speak English and became agitated after wandering around the airport arrivals area for 10 hours.
     
     
    Montague said Lemaitre became a scapegoat for the Mounties after two decades of building his reputation and rising to the rank of sergeant. She said Lemaitre was told the inaccurate information he provided to the media about the Dziekanski case would not be corrected.
     
     
    After the incident at the airport, Lemaitre told reporters officers approached a combative man and jolted him twice with a Taser. But two days later he watched a video from a witness that showed Dziekanski was relatively calm when the Mounties arrived and that they used the stun gun five times.
     
     
    Dr. Cameron Smith said Lemaitre was prescribed antidepressants and anxiety medication but he was not suicidal. He described Lemaitre as a stoic man whose mental health issues began improving, only to worsen after Dziekanski's death.
     
     
    His wife testified that Lemaitre was never the same after the incident with Dziekanski. Sheila Lemaitre told the inquest jury her husband was transferred from the case after two days and was eventually moved to the traffic department, which she said he compared to "being put out with the trash."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    A Night of Community Achievements & Excellence

    The 9th Annual spectacular event took place on September 14, 2018, and was attended by over 700 guests in attendance.

    A Night of Community Achievements & Excellence

    Two Elderly Women In Hospital After Separate Vancouver Home Fires

    VANCOUVER — Two elderly women are in hospital, one with minor burns and the other suffering from smoke inhalation, after separate fires in Vancouver on Saturday.

    Two Elderly Women In Hospital After Separate Vancouver Home Fires

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University
    VANCOUVER — A professor who has taken a stand against the publication of research in journals that aren't peer reviewed says he has been suspended from the campus of the university where he works in the Interior of British Columbia.

    Professor Fights Ban Amid Debate On Academic Freedom At B.C. University

    Surrey Woman Seriously Hurt In Newton Hit-And-Run

    Surrey Woman Seriously Hurt In Newton Hit-And-Run
    On November 22nd at approximately 7:00 am the Surrey RCMP responded to a report of a pedestrian struck at the intersection of 64 Avenue & 134 Street. 

    Surrey Woman Seriously Hurt In Newton Hit-And-Run

    Delta Police Ask Public To Help Identify South Asian Man In Connection With Act Of Vandalism

    On October 27, 2018, the manager of a restaurant in the 9200 block of 120th Street reported that a customer had cut a cultural canvas near the washroom in his business, causing an estimated $2,500 in damages.

    Delta Police Ask Public To Help Identify South Asian Man In Connection With Act Of Vandalism

    B.C. Announces Urgent Care Centre In Vancouver Set To Open On Monday

    B.C. Announces Urgent Care Centre In Vancouver Set To Open On Monday
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's health minister has announced the opening of the province's fifth urgent primary care centre in order to lessen demand on emergency departments.

    B.C. Announces Urgent Care Centre In Vancouver Set To Open On Monday