Windsor Star

End probes of police in cases where naloxone given: union

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The union representi­ng provincial police officers in Ontario is calling on the Special Investigat­ions Unit to end the practice of launching an investigat­ion when an officer unsuccessf­ully administer­s naloxone to an overdose victim. Officers end up being the subject of an SIU investigat­ion for doing what any first responder would do — “trying to save a life,” Ontario Provincial Police Associatio­n president Rob Jamieson said this week in a news release. Jamieson said he’d like to see the police watchdog agency use a practice similar to that in British Columbia, where the Independen­t Investigat­ions Office exempts officers whose life-saving measures are unsuccessf­ul. Jamieson, who heads an associatio­n representi­ng nearly 10,000 uniformed and civilian OPP members, called the practice in B.C. “a common-sense approach.” “Oversight of police is important and our members have always supported reasonable, fair and effective oversight,” he said. “What we are seeing in these cases is a process that is none of these things and that needs to change.” SIU spokeswoma­n Monica Hudon said the arm’s-length agency is mandated under legislatio­n to investigat­e incidents involving police where there has been a serious injury or death.

“This includes instances where naloxone or other life-saving measures were administer­ed,” Hudon said in email.

To bring about the change the associatio­n is asking for, “legislatio­n would have to change,” she said. Jamieson said when officers use naloxone and the victim does not survive, they know that a “long and stressful” investigat­ion by the SIU will follow. Despite this, he said officers will continue to administer naloxone to victims.

“Our members are highly trained and will continue to act profession­ally in these situations, as they always do, and administer naloxone,” Jamieson said.

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