Times Colonist

Officer felt betrayed by RCMP after man’s death, inquest told

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BURNABY — An RCMP officer who took his own life was betrayed by the force and “hung out to dry” by superiors who used him to tell a false story about the death of a Polish immigrant at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport, a former media strategist for the Mounties testified Tuesday.

“I saw the institutio­nal betrayal that he experience­d first-hand, and I saw damage it did to him first-hand,” Atoya Montague told a coroner’s inquest into Pierre Lemaitre’s death in July 2013. “It was really horrible.” She said Lemaitre became a scapegoat for the Mounties after two decades of building his reputation and rising to the rank of sergeant. Montague said Lemaitre was told the inaccurate informatio­n he provided to the media about the incident involving Robert Dziekanski would not be corrected.

Montague said another officer was initially deployed to the airport to address the media after the confrontat­ion between Dziekanski and four Mounties, who used a Taser to try to subdue the man on the night of Oct. 14, 2007. The officer called her at 4 a.m. to say dealing with the incident would be beyond his scope, Montague said, adding she advised him to contact Lemaitre, who received informatio­n from investigat­ors when he arrived at the airport.

Lemaitre told reporters three officers approached a combative man and jolted him twice. But two days later he watched a video from a witness that showed Dziekanski was relatively calm when the Mounties arrived and that they used a Taser five times.

Lemaitre was so distressed that he approached managers to demand the informatio­n be corrected immediatel­y, Montague said, but a decision was made to not take any action.

“He was helpless, helpless to correct it. He was so distraught,” she said through tears, recalling how Lemaitre worried he’d be considered a liar.

The RCMP refused to set the record straight despite her advice that the force was making a “huge mistake,” said Montague, who retired last year after a medical discharge. “This is a national and internatio­nal story,” she said, adding that Lemaitre was under more pressure after the video became public.

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