Times Colonist

RCMP outlines response to mass shooting inquiry: ‘Things are going to change’

- MICHAEL MacDONALD

MILLBROOK, NOVA SCOTIA — RCMP commission­er Mike Duheme released a strategy Wednesday outlining how the national police force will respond to the inquiry into the 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia that claimed 22 lives.

Almost a year after the public inquiry released a final report that offered a blistering critique of the Mounties’ response to the shooting rampage, Duheme said he can understand why Canadians remain skeptical about the RCMP’s commitment to change.

The inquiry’s report found the RCMP missed warning signs about the killer, including reports of domestic violence, possession of illegal firearms and repeated run-ins with the law. As well, the inquiry found the Mounties failed to promptly send alerts to the public until it was too late for some of the victims.

“This was the worst mass shooting that Canada has ever seen,” Duheme told a news conference in Millbrook, N.S. “I’m sitting here in front of you, committed to saying, ‘Things are going to change.’ If we don’t change, then we’re going to lose the trust of the Canadian people.”

Millbrook is one of more than a dozen largely rural communitie­s the killer drove through during a 13-hour rampage that started in Portapique, N.S., on the night of April 18, 2020. Disguised as a Mountie and driving a car that looked exactly like an RCMP cruiser, Gabriel Wortman fatally shot 13 people on the first night, and the next day he killed another nine people, including a pregnant woman and an RCMP officer.

“I struggle with what they went through,” Duheme said Wednesday. “I can’t even imagine what they went through, losing loved ones in such a way. I’m sorry for what happened.”

In the new strategy document, Duheme admits RCMP responses to previous external reviews have “not always been fulsome.” As well, he says the organizati­on hasn’t been transparen­t about the work they have done to change.

“When I accepted the job of RCMP commission­er [almost a year ago], I knew we could change. You have my commitment we will continue on this path.”

Lawyer Sandra McCulloch, who represents most of the victims’ families, said the clients she spoke with Wednesday were not impressed with the RCMP strategy.

“The [RCMP] is taking responsibi­lity for recommenda­tions and change, but there’s a lot of vagueness and ambiguity,” she said after the news conference.

The public inquiry, formally known as the Mass Casualty Commission, found widespread failures in how the RCMP responded to the mass shooting. Last March, it issued 130 nonbinding recommenda­tions to improve public safety,.

Duheme said 33 of those recommenda­tions apply directly to the RCMP, and another 55 apply to the police force and its partners in the federal and provincial government­s, as well as other police agencies.

The RCMP say they have already responded to two key recommenda­tions that each had six-month deadlines — one dealing with critical incident response training and the other with management culture.

In terms of critical incident response, the inquiry’s three commission­ers found that when the shooting started in Portapique, the Mounties were quick to discount witness statements and were so poorly managed that officers were always one step behind the killer.

The RCMP have posted online a review of how they train frontline supervisor­s, saying they are following through on findings from the study.

As for the RCMP’s selection of senior officers and staff, the inquiry’s final report cited a 2015 task force that concluded RCMP management culture discourage­s leaders from relaying bad news up the chain of command and from making decisions that might be criticized.

The inquiry found that RCMP management culture thwarts institutio­nal learning and accountabi­lity. It cited a resistance to acknowledg­ing the existence of sexism and systemic racism within the ranks.

“The RCMP will not resolve these problems until it can recognize the persistenc­e of these problems,” the inquiry’s 3,000page report said.

As a result, the commission of inquiry asked the RCMP to explain how they will change their criteria for selecting senior managers “to disrupt the unhealthy aspects of the RCMP’s management culture.”

 ?? CP FILE ?? RCMP Commission­er Mike Duheme on Wednesday outlined how the national police force will respond to the inquiry into the 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia that left 22 dead.
CP FILE RCMP Commission­er Mike Duheme on Wednesday outlined how the national police force will respond to the inquiry into the 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia that left 22 dead.

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