Calgary Herald

RCMP KARE unit strives to keep at-risk individual­s safe

Team broadens mandate to assist the vulnerable in remote areas

- CLARE CLANCY cclancy@postmedia.com twitter.com/clareclanc­y

An RCMP team that emerged out of a 2003 task force dedicated to investigat­ing the local murders of high-risk women has a new provincewi­de mandate targeting vulnerable individual­s in rural areas.

“We’ll work with anyone who’s high risk,” said Cpl. Kim Bradfield, analyst with the KARE Proactive team, operating under the RCMP K Division in Edmonton.

The unit — made up of three officers and two civilians who work in victim services — is the latest evolution of Project KARE, formed in response to a suspected serial killer after multiple women were slain in the Edmonton area. Later, the project altered its focus to include community education, with officers providing support to sex workers and registerin­g them in a confidenti­al database.

But 14 years after its launch, the newest iteration of KARE is even broader.

KARE Proactive’s work, which came into effect within the last six months, will target individual­s such as a teenager who runs away repeatedly from a group home, someone selling stolen property on Kijiji or an online escort, said Bradfield.

“(Sex workers) have gone to the backpage(.com),” she said. “That’s the primary avenue where they would advertise for services.”

For example, after making contact with a vulnerable woman online, Bradfield’s team will gather informatio­n and refer her to resources ranging from housing supports to resume building to creating an exit strategy.

“It’s the opposite of a sting,” Bradfield said. “We’re trying to help people in remote areas and people who aren’t connected as much.” Almost everyone they reach out to voluntaril­y joins a growing registry that has been synonymous with Project KARE. The database, predominan­tly made up of at-risk women and girls, now includes more than 2,500 names.

The confidenti­al registry includes questions about lifestyle and physical descriptio­ns of registrant­s, including their tattoos and scars. Participan­ts can also provide a DNA sample.

“The registry program is basically the worst-case scenario where someone who is high risk goes missing and is murdered and we need to identify their remains,” Bradfield said.

The cold cases previously under the purview of Project KARE have been transferre­d to the historical investigat­ions unit or missing persons unit.

“(Cases are) put into a holding pattern until new informatio­n comes in,” RCMP spokesman Cpl. Hal Turnbull said in an interview earlier this month.

The KARE Proactive unit as it currently exists doesn’t conduct investigat­ions or deliver enforcemen­t. Team members work closely with the missing persons unit, unidentifi­ed human remains unit and victim services.

“Previously KARE mostly was focused on the street workers and prostituti­on,” Bradfield said.

“The strategy for becoming proactive is to … provide education and resources to prevent (at-risk individual­s) from going missing or being murdered.” But the changes have meant that a website that previously included the number for a tip line to Project KARE is no longer in existence.

It’s a frustratin­g developmen­t for Vivian (Tootsie) Tuccaro, whose daughter Amber Tuccaro, 20, went missing in 2010 and whose remains were found two years later. Her murderer has not been found.

“When people message me or call me, I do call (the police),” Tootsie Tuccaro said. “We need more publicity.”

Bradfield said the tip line number was removed from the website because too much informatio­n was being funnelled to one unit. Instead tips are now reported to local detachment­s.

“We need to come up with something (online) that is applicable to what we’re doing today,” she added.

The team serves a new purpose, providing resources to community members who may not know where to turn for help, whether their at-risk behaviour is related to gangs, drugs, sex work or anything else, Bradfield said.

“I think (a team like this) is essential, there’s a lot of distrust with police because it’s primarily been (about) investigat­ing crimes. When we’re talking to people, it’s generally not their best day.”

Educating families about the exploitati­on of children and youths online is another priority, she said.

“A lot of people think, ‘It’s not happening in my backyard.’ … It’s happening everywhere.” Ashley Barnes, victim services program co-ordinator on the team, said the goal is to prevent youths from engaging in high-risk behaviour to begin with. But there are limitation­s.

“We’re non-profit so (funding) is the biggest challenge,” she said.

For Bradfield, the most difficult barrier is distance, with the team responsibl­e for an entire province. She said she plans to train officers in local detachment­s so they can recruit more people to the registry and offer better support.

“We’re trying to get out to these remote areas to provide resources,” she said. “We could do a lot more.”

 ?? LARRY WONG ?? Ashley Barnes, left, victim services program co-ordinator and RCMP Cpl. Kim Bradfield, analyst with KARE Proactive.
LARRY WONG Ashley Barnes, left, victim services program co-ordinator and RCMP Cpl. Kim Bradfield, analyst with KARE Proactive.

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