National Post (National Edition)

Military reopens sex assault probes

- Lee Berthiaume

OTTAWA • The Canadian Forces has reopened 23 cases of alleged sexual assault after revisiting dozens of files previously dismissed by military police as “unfounded.”

The move follows an internal review last year that found nearly one in every three sexual-assault complaints logged with military police between 2010 and 2016 was deemed unfounded — a designatio­n applied when investigat­ors determine an offence did not occur.

That rate was higher than most civilian police forces in Canada and appeared to confirm some victims’ complaints that the Forces did not investigat­e their cases properly.

The Canadian Forces National Investigat­ion Service, which investigat­es all major crimes in the military, subsequent­ly launched a review of 179 cases and announced Thursday that 113 were indeed unfounded.

Another 43 were found to have been valid complaints that were properly investigat­ed but did not have enough evidence to lay a charge and mislabelle­d as unfounded. The correct term in police-speak is “founded, not cleared.”

Military investigat­ors are now poring over the remaining 23 cases to see if additional evidence can be obtained and charges laid, said Lt.-col. Kevin Cadman, head of the military’s investigat­ion service. That includes going back to the victims for further informatio­n or reaching out to witnesses and trying to corroborat­e what informatio­n was provided during the initial investigat­ion.

“We’ll conduct those investigat­ive steps until we get to a point where we are happy that we have explored every avenue of the investigat­ion,” Cadman said in an interview. “And either we will lay a charge or label the file ‘found and not cleared,’ or ‘unfounded.” ’

Military officials have acknowledg­ed that investigat­ing sexual assault cases years after the fact can be difficult, but Cadman pushed back against suggestion­s authoritie­s failed victims by not properly investigat­ing their complaints. Previously, many incidents would have been handled by less experience­d military police officers at whichever base or facility the alleged incident occurred. All sexual assault complaints are now handled by the investigat­ive service.

Meanwhile, the military is still working to set up a panel of outside advisers to go back over all the files to ensure they were properly reviewed, which was first promised in April 2017.

Marie-claude Gagnon, a former naval reservist, said the decision to reopen 23 files was one sign of positive progress. Yet she questioned why it took so long for the military to revisit the cases as well as to establish the external panel.

“The only thing we can look at is the facts that we have in front of us, which is the amount of time that they took for the review and the fact that the panel is still not in place,” she said.

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