Regina Leader-Post

RCMP honours fallen members

Family of officer who died on job travels to Regina to remember him

- D.C. FRASER

Members of the RCMP held a national memorial service at the force’s Depot Division in Regina on Sunday.

The event is a decades-old tradition for members to honour fallen members of the service.

A memorial parade, wreath laying and names of 238 officers who lost their lives in the line of duty were read out to the crowd of officers and family members.

Added to that list of names this year was Const. Richer Dubuc, who died on Mar. 6 following a motor vehicle collision in Quebec during a response to an illegal border crossing.

His brother, Deitan Dubuc, travelled to Regina with his parents and other siblings to attend the memorial service.

“For us it was to come back as a family and to honour the sacrifice my brother made, when he made the oath to serve the residents and the country of Canada,” he said. “It’s very important to be part of it and remember all the people who paid the ultimate price and gave their life to serve this country.”

Dubuc said his family was honoured to attend and that the RCMP took great care of them.

“(My brother) was very tall and big and imposing, but also he had the softest heart. He was great with children, loved kids and his family,” he said. “We miss him dearly, he was the only older brother I had and nine years ago, I pinned his badge here on him.”

The two brothers were able to share that badge-pinning moment because Deitan is also a police officer. He is a sergeant with the Minneapoli­s Police Department and travelled to Regina when his brother graduated from the RCMP’s Depot division in 2009.

“He was very proud to join the force and being part of a great organizati­on like the RCMP, having the opportunit­y to do what he decided he wanted to do,” said Dubuc.

“We were proud of each other, we talked a lot,” he added, saying later his brother “was the kind of guy that took charge and made things OK for everybody, his partners and everybody else that he served.”

Const. Natasha Szpakowski was also in attendance.

For her, the memorial service is an annual event to honour her husband, Const. Marc Bourdages, who died on duty in Spiritwood in 2006.

“It’s really important, it’s an opportunit­y for the loved one’s legacy to live on,” she said.

Her son, who was only 9 months old when Bourdages passed, also attends.

“Each year we come, it hits home a little bit more,” Szpakowski said.

“Sometimes he talks about being a police officer.”

Sgt. Janie Perrault with the RCMP said it is important for cadets at Depot division to take part in the ceremony.

“This is also the place where we send the future members, so they need to know that whatever happens they will be remembered and part of this family here,” she said.

 ?? BRANDON HARDER ?? Const. Natasha Szpakowski, left, and Luca Bourdages — wife and son of deceased RCMP officer Marc Bourdages — lay a wreath on behalf of all families of deceased officers during the annual RCMP National Memorial Service at the RCMP academy in Regina on Sunday.
BRANDON HARDER Const. Natasha Szpakowski, left, and Luca Bourdages — wife and son of deceased RCMP officer Marc Bourdages — lay a wreath on behalf of all families of deceased officers during the annual RCMP National Memorial Service at the RCMP academy in Regina on Sunday.

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