Ottawa Citizen

More Mounties sue over shootings

- KEVIN BISSETT

MONCTON, N.B. • More than a dozen RCMP officers who responded to shootings in Moncton, N.B., that claimed the lives of three of their colleagues in 2014 are now looking to sue the attorney general of Canada for negligence.

Originally four officers filed statements of claim with the Court of Queen’s Bench last month, but other current and former officers have joined the list, while two who had filed claims have withdrawn them.

The filings say the officers were inadequate­ly trained and outfitted to deal with a heavily armed shooter on June 4, 2014, and now they suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and other ailments.

Constables Fabrice Gevaudan, Dave Ross and Doug Larche were killed, while constables Eric Dubois and Darlene Goguen were wounded when Justin Bourque targeted police officers in hopes of sparking an anti-government rebellion. The rampage set off a 30-hour manhunt.

Bourque pleaded guilty and was given three consecutiv­e life sentences without chance of parole for at least 75 years. Court documents detail the anguish felt by officers who survived the shootings and now suffer nightmares and PTSD.

The statement of claim from Const. Martine Benoit describes the danger officers faced.

“The plaintiff attempted to exit her vehicle to assess the situation when she was ambushed by the shooter before she could get out and she was being fired at with heavy gunfire,” it says. “The plaintiff remained in her vehicle and ducked behind the engine block to use it as cover. She tried to reverse the vehicle without success because it was disabled by the gunfire.”

The statement of claim from Const. Mathieu Daigle describes seeing Const. Gevaudan being shot. Daigle and other officers followed the sound of the suspect’s gunshots southbound on Mailhot Avenue and discovered the lifeless body of Const. Ross, a close friend of Daigle.

The documents say Daigle now wakes up at night sweating because of nightmares related to the shootings.

Others say officers felt defenceles­s against the shooter.

C8 carbine rifles were not available to general-duty officers during the shooting spree in Moncton, despite being approved for use in 2011.

Their introducti­on was delayed on several occasions.

The RCMP was convicted in 2017 on Canada Labour Code charges that the police force did not act with due diligence in the rollout of carbines for members, putting their lives at risk.

Judge Leslie Jackson found the RCMP failed to provide its members with the appropriat­e use-of-force equipment and training for responding to an active shooter in an open environmen­t, leaving them “ill-prepared to engage an assailant armed with an automatic rifle.”

Lawyers for the force later said they would not appeal the ruling, but lawyer Brian Murphy, who represents the officers in the suit, said that’s far from being an apology. He said the officers want an apology and accountabi­lity from those who made decisions on providing officers with carbines

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