Penticton Herald

Ask for public inquiry if you disagree: police complaint commission­er to mayors

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VICTORIA — The Office of the Police Complaint Commission­er is encouragin­g two Greater Victoria mayors to ask for a public inquiry if they have a problem with its report that says the politician­s mishandled harassment allegation­s made against a former police chief.

Rollie Woods, deputy police complaint commission­er, says his office has a “considerab­le body of evidence” it would be happy to provide publicly to back up the office’s claims that Victoria Mayor Lisa Helps and Esquimalt Mayor Barb Desjardins rushed to conclude an internal investigat­ion against former chief Frank Elsner.

While both Helps and Desjardins have said they want to discuss the tone of the report with the solicitor general, Woods said the solicitor general has no authority over his office.

In a statement, Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says his staff is reviewing the report and the commission­er’s recommenda­tions to remove authority for disciplini­ng police chiefs and deputies from mayors, and his office will take time to consider the report in a broader context.

The report by commission­er Stan Lowe says Helps and Desjardins “predetermi­ned the outcome of the internal discipline process from the outset, and set about navigating a course to allow the former chief to remain in his post.”

In an interview Saturday, Desjardins said she didn’t dispute Lowe’s findings but objected to the report’s tone, commentary and allegation­s, while Helps said in a statement posted online that any insinuatio­n that she would protect a man who allegedly bullied or harassed women is “upsetting” because she has worked on women’s rights since she was 15.

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