Times Colonist

Inquest into B.C. police shooting deaths recommends emergency events be recorded

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BURNABY — An inquest jury looking into the police shooting deaths of a man and the woman he was holding hostage has recommende­d that events involving the emergency response team be recorded with both video and audio.

The recommenda­tion is one of seven that came Thursday following the inquest into the deaths of Randy Crosson and Nona McEwan in March 2019 in Surrey.

The jury also recommende­d the Ministry of Public Safety offer extended training to probation officers in mental health disorders and addictions, and create partnershi­ps with health authoritie­s.

When reading their recommenda­tion that events involving emergency response team members be “captured by audio, visual and other means,” the jury foreperson said the suggestion was based on testimony from police and the Independen­t Investigat­ions Office, who said recordings would be beneficial.

The jury recommende­d inquests be done in a timely manner. The foreperson said they heard testimony that the fiveyear wait following Crosson’s and McEwan’s deaths was “too long.”

It was recommende­d that the RCMP ensure the emergency response team have access to explosives without delay and that positions be created for full-time hostage negotiator­s.

The final recommenda­tion was for 911 call takers to be trained to play back calls related to critical incidents to crisis negotiatio­n teams.

During the inquest, the jury heard from several officers involved in the more than ninehour standoff, which ended with police shooting and killing both Crosson and McEwan.

RCMP were called to the home after reports of a loud bang and a scream, and arrived believing that a man inside had a gun.

They would spend hours trying to get a response from anyone inside the home, including though loudspeake­rs.

The jury heard Crosson had a criminal record dating back to 1996, including break-ins, theft, assault, carrying a weapon and numerous conviction­s for failing to comply with court orders.

In 2003, he was convicted of assaulting McEwan and released on a two-year probation order.

The jury was told Crosson had used drugs, mainly heroin and crystal meth, since his late teens and was diagnosed as bipolar.

The inquest began last week with a statement written by Crosson’s son, who described his father as a caring person who didn’t have the opportunit­y to “get clean” from his addictions.

McEwan’s son described her as a great mother who always tried to do at least one good deed a day.

Officers testified that in the early hours of March 29, 2019, Crosson was heard giving a onehour deadline before he would kill McEwan, and very soon after shortened that to five minutes.

An emergency response team of six officers stormed the bedroom where Crosson was holding McEwan.

In the flurry of bullets that killed Crosson, McEwan was struck twice, in the arm and in the abdomen. She died on the way to the hospital.

Officers testified that when they entered the room, Crosson was lying on a bed with McEwan held against him as a human shield.

He had a knife to her throat and a gun in his other hand, they told the jury.

A report from the province’s Independen­t Investigat­ions Office cleared officers of any wrongdoing. It said investigat­ors found “a realistic-looking replica pistol” at the scene.

Police on the scene, including hostage negotiator­s, testified at the inquest that they believed Crosson was potentiall­y volatile and violent after his relationsh­ip with McEwan ended and he was told to leave the house. The jury heard that a mental health expert working with the police believed Crosson wanted to die.

A friend of McEwan testified that, in the days prior to her death, McEwan was happy that Crosson was leaving the house so that she would be free to “discover herself.”

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