Vancouver Sun

RCMP FINED $550,000 IN DEATHS OF THREE MONCTON MOUNTIES.

- KEVIN BISSETT

MONCTON, N.B. • The RCMP has been ordered to pay $550,000 for failing to properly arm and train its members in a shooting rampage four years ago that left three New Brunswick Mounties dead and two injured.

Judge Leslie Jackson handed down the sentence to a packed courtroom in Moncton on Friday that included Acting RCMP Commission­er Daniel Dubeau.

The judge issued a clear rebuke to the force’s leadership for not acting sooner in making sure frontline members were equipped with high-powered rifles that could have made a difference in the lethal incident in 2014.

“While the failure of most of the senior RCMP management team to acknowledg­e that there was any delay in the patrol carbine rollout is troublesom­e in regard to their apparent lack of insight into the importance of workplace safety, the response post-incident has been robust,” Jackson said.

“It is clear to me, and accepted by both parties, that the provision of carbines to responding members on June 4, 2014, could have reduced the number of deaths and/or injuries.”

Jackson fined the national force $100,000, along with $450,000 in charitable donations for scholarshi­ps at the Université de Moncton, an education fund for the children of the fallen officers and two agencies that assist families of people injured in workplace accidents. But, he said no sentence would deal with the families’ grief.

Constables Doug Larche, Fabrice Gevaudan and Dave Ross were killed, and constables Eric Dubois and Darlene Goguen were injured, when gunman Justin Bourque went hunting police officers in a Moncton neighbourh­ood.

Bourque pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life in prison with no chance of parole for 75 years.

Nadine Larche said no sentence would bring back her husband Doug and the father of their three daughters, who are reminded daily of their loss as they travel through the neighbourh­ood where their father was gunned down or pass by a monument erected in the officers’ honour.

“Lives were forever changed because of people’s decisions,” she said outside the courthouse. “My family’s life has forever been changed. My three children are growing up without a daddy. No judgment will bring these men back. No judgment will ever make amends. No judgment will ever make reparation­s. No judgment will serve justice to what happened.”

The force was convicted of failing to provide its members with adequate use-offorce equipment and user training.

Carbine rifles were not available to general duty officers at the time of the Moncton shootings, and during the Labour Code trial, numerous witnesses said they could have made a difference.

The high-powered carbines were approved in 2011, but their rollout was delayed.

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