Waterloo Region Record

Defence chief looking to speed up military inquiries into deaths

- LEE BERTHIAUME — Follow @leeberthia­ume on Twitter.

OTTAWA — The military’s top general says he is not satisfied with the length of time it takes the Canadian Forces to conduct internal inquiries into suspected suicides and other deaths and is looking at ways to speed things up.

His comments come after the families of three dead Royal Military College cadets expressed anger and frustratio­n about waiting more than a year for the results of a board of inquiry into their sons’ deaths.

Harrison Kelertas, Brett Cameron and Matthew Sullivan are believed to have taken their own lives in separate incidents in 2016, but defence officials have yet to confirm an official cause of death.

Gen. Jonathan Vance would not comment Thursday on the inquiry, which saw formal hearings wrap up early last year, but whose findings are still being reviewed by military lawyers.

He did, however, say that while it is essential that inquiries and similar investigat­ions are conducted thoroughly, he is not convinced that they operate as quickly and efficientl­y as they could.

“I’m not satisfied, either,” Vance told reporters following an event organized by the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. “So I think it’s high time we had a deep look at how we do this.”

The families of Kelertas, Cameron and Sullivan are not the first to raise concerns about the way the military runs such inquiries; other families as well as the military ombudsman have also criticized the system over the years.

In a report year, ombudsman Gary Walbourne said some reports took up to three years and that the legal review was often among the most time-consuming parts of the process.

Among the measures that Vance said he would consider is whether to appoint and train specific individual­s to oversee such inquiries on a more permanent basis, rather than the ad hoc approach currently in use.

“So I’m looking right now at how do we profession­alize this process,” he said.

“Oftentimes, boards of inquiry or summary investigat­ions are done as a secondary duty. You take time out of the job that you’ve been assigned to do it. We have senior people who head them up, but they still have really busy jobs.”

Yet Vance pushed back against complaints from families who have said they cannot find closure until the final report is released, saying such inquiries “are not designed to provide closure for families.

“Boards of inquiry are designed to inform the chief of defence staff and the Armed Forces about what changes need to be made, what went wrong, does anybody need to be held accountabl­e, and so on,” he said.

“And so, they are often seen as a mechanism to help people find closure, and I understand that and I’m glad they play a role in that, but that’s not their design.”

And while he said efforts would be made to make inquiries more efficient and faster, the priority will always be on ensuring they are thorough and answer all the military’s questions.

One of the controvers­ial military boards of inquiry in the last decade was the investigat­ion into the suspected suicide of Cpl. Stuart Langridge in March 2008, which was later blasted by the Military Police Complaints Commission.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada