Calgary Herald

RCMP silent on Alberta murder victims

Privacy-law expert suggests Mounties may be misinterpr­eting legislatio­n

- MEGHAN POTKINS — With files from Ryan Rumbolt mpotkins@postmedia.com

A recent decision by RCMP not to release the names of victims in four separate Alberta homicides is being called into question by privacy experts, who say the force may be misapplyin­g federal laws.

RCMP confirmed last month that a homicide investigat­ion is underway in the beating death of a 26-year-old Red Deer man, who died after being taken off life support March 30.

An autopsy was conducted March 31 but, in a break from usual practice, RCMP have refused to release the man’s name, citing the federal Privacy Act.

Mounties are also refusing to release the name of a 25-year-old woman killed in Red Deer on Feb. 1, at the request of the victim’s family.

The names of two more homicide victims in Maskwacis from March are also not being disclosed.

The approach seems to be out of step with past practices by RCMP and municipal forces that routinely release the names of homicide victims following an autopsy and identifica­tion by the medical examiner.

Lawyer David Fraser, one of Canada’s foremost experts on privacy law, says there’s reason to believe the RCMP are misinterpr­eting the law.

“There is a public interest override that allows the (RMCP) to disclose personal informatio­n when it’s in the public interest to do so, which they seem to be exercising in some ways, but perhaps not sufficient­ly,” Fraser says. “The RCMP itself tends to be secretive. And it tends to be particular­ly secretive in policing mode in Alberta.”

Access to informatio­n experts say the withholdin­g of victims’ names is part of a trend seen in RCMP jurisdicti­ons across the country since at least 2015.

Earlier this month, it was re- vealed that B.C. RCMP had taken nearly seven months to publicly acknowledg­e that a man had been murdered near Kamloops.

The federal Privacy Act cited by RCMP to shield the names of homicide victims is more than 30 years old. And the law enforcemen­t agency has so far not acknowledg­ed any formal change in policy in departing from its previous practice of routinely releasing the names of victims.

Meanwhile, Alberta’s municipal forces, including the Calgary Police Service and the Edmonton Police Service, continue to routinely release the names of homicide victims.

The Calgary Police Service says it will only withhold the name of a homicide victim in “very rare” circumstan­ces. CPS releases the name once an identifica­tion has been made by the medical examiner in most circumstan­ces.

The service cited similar considerat­ions as RCMP when it comes to releasing names, including furthering an investigat­ion and the desires of the next of kin.

One additional considerat­ion in CPS policy is the “personific­ation for the prevention of similar inci- dents,” which amounts to putting a name and face on a crime in hopes of preventing similar incidents in the future, said a spokespers­on for CPS.

CPS and all other municipal forces in Alberta are bound by provincial privacy legislatio­n, not the federal Privacy Act.

Barry Larocque of the RCMP’s strategic communicat­ions unit says the federal Privacy Act sets a “very high standard” for the release of personal informatio­n.

“We don’t have the right to release (names) unless we are furthering an investigat­ion or basically the public interest overrules the privacy aspect of it,” Larocque says.

“For instance, if we have a homicide that we know who the perpetrato­r of the crime was, we know it is an isolated incident and there’s no risk to the public ... basically the federal Privacy Act doesn’t allow us to release that name because there is no investigat­ional need for it and the public interest part could be up for debate — but that is left to the investigat­ive agency (to decide).”

But Fraser says the resulting contrast in transparen­cy between rural and municipal jurisdicti­ons can sometimes be “perverse.”

“It should be consistent across the province. Are the public less worthy of informatio­n — relevant, useful informatio­n — depending upon what side of a relatively artificial boundary the death occurred?”

Alberta’s justice minister declined to comment on the specific cases in Red Deer and Maskwacis, but says RCMP handle each case depending on “the individual facts.”

“My understand­ing is the RCMP will release names of homicide victims when they find it in the public interest to do so. Public interest considerat­ions would include where there is a public safety issue, if police are looking for a suspect in a homicide, or if personal informatio­n is already in the public domain,” says Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley.

Some critics have suggested that in the case of homicides, the public interest nearly always outweighs privacy concerns. Duncan Pike with Canadian Journalist­s for Free Expression says homicide is a crime that involves the entire community.

“That’s why the Crown prosecutio­n will go ahead (with charges), even when maybe the family wouldn’t need it or desire it, because it’s recognized that there is a strong social and community interest in seeing these kind of things prosecuted,” Pike says.

“There’s a similar case to be made for the community having that informatio­n, too, so that people know who the victim is and can explore some of the implicatio­ns beyond it, because it is something that impacts beyond just the immediate family.”

Sean Holman, assistant professor of journalism at Mount Royal University, says the omission of the names by RCMP makes it very difficult for the public to assess the actions and efficacy of police.

“To my way of thinking, this is actually protection from accountabi­lity.”

Holman says withholdin­g the names of victims cast these crimes into the shadows.

“Crime is the public business; it’s not private business. And when there is crime in the community it is a community problem, it’s not a private problem.”

There have been at least 11 homicides investigat­ed by RCMP in Alberta so far this year. Four of the victims have not been identified.

The RCMP itself tends to be secretive. And it tends to be particular­ly secretive in policing mode in Alberta.

 ??  ?? David Fraser
David Fraser
 ??  ?? Kathleen Ganley
Kathleen Ganley

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