Cape Breton Post

RCMP recruits ‘deeply afraid’ to speak out

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Two RCMP doctors under police investigat­ion allegedly abused their power over vulnerable young recruits who were “deeply afraid’’ that speaking out would damage their careers in the national police force, a lawyer who represents RCMP sexual-misconduct victims says.

Megan McPhee, a principal with a Toronto-based law firm serving as counsel in a class-action lawsuit, said women have come forward with similar stories about sexual misconduct during medical examinatio­ns by RCMP physicians in Nova Scotia and Ontario.

“The issues we’re hearing with respect to the Halifax doctor are arising very early in the employment, when there is a potential power imbalance between a doctor and a woman who is trying to fulfil her dream of becoming an RCMP officer,’’ she said. “Women simply don’t feel comfortabl­e coming forward because they’re so deeply afraid of the impact that speaking out could have on their careers.’’

The Halifax doctor, nicknamed Dr. Fingers, has been accused of inappropri­ate and unnecessar­y vaginal and rectal examinatio­ns, while the Toronto doctor was particular­ly focused on women’s nipples, McPhee said.

“We’re hearing from claimants about common practices and nicknames for both a doctor in Halifax and one in Toronto,’’ she said.

The complainan­ts don’t believe there was any medical necessity to some of the examinatio­ns, she said.

“For example, an allegation of a woman having a prostate exam,’’ McPhee said. “Other women have expressed having their breasts fondled for lengthy periods of time and it’s difficult to ascribe any sort of medical necessity to that sort of examinatio­n.’’

The allegation­s against the doctors mirror widespread complaints about sexual harassment in the force that led the federal court to approve a landmark settlement last May.

The claims also reflect a broader societal reckoning with male predatory behaviour that has sparked the Me Too movement and toppled powerful men accused of sexual misconduct.

“There are lots of organizati­on where their history and their structure may be set up to enable the sort of things we’ve heard described here, which is the Old Boys Club,’’ McPhee said. “For us to see change going forward we need to address the Old Boys Club.’’

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