Montreal Gazette

Report criticizes military police

Serious flaws pointed out in Langridge’s suicide investigat­ion

- CHRIS COBB

In a damning indictment of Canada’s military police detectives, a federal report issued Tuesday says there were “serious flaws” in the investigat­ions of the suicide of Afghanista­n war veteran Stuart Langridge, with poorly supervised officers seemingly unable to cope with even basic policing techniques.

The Military Police Complaints Commission’s ( MPCC) three volume, 1,008- page final report includes 46 recommenda­tions aimed at improving military policing, especially in “sudden death” cases.

Of three investigat­ions related to Langridge’s suicide, the commission says the first, in 2008, was conducted without any plan or direction and the second, in 2009, without a clear understand­ing of what was being investigat­ed.

The third, in 2010, was supposed to investigat­e allegation­s by Langridge’s parents, Sheila and Shaun Fynes, that the military had been negligent in its treatment of the late veteran, but the military police exonerated Langridge’s chain of command without actually conducting the investigat­ion.

Military police commanders at the Office of the Provost Marshal have rejected or ignored all but a few of the recommenda­tions in the three- volume report and last week attempted to keep their responses secret, prompting a political and public relations backlash.

In a reversal Tuesday, Provost Marshal Rob Delaney issued a statement praising the commission and its report.

“We welcome this report and will carefully review the MPCC’s findings and recommenda­tions accordingl­y,” he said.

“I would like to also offer my sincere apologies to Mr. and Mrs. Fynes. As grieving parents, they came to us with several complaints to be investigat­ed and we failed to live up to their expectatio­ns.”

Langridge committed suicide at Canadian Forces Base Edmonton on March 15, 2008, after several attempts and after battling depression and alcohol and drug abuse — all now recognized as symptoms of post- traumatic stress disorder.

Langridge’s parents brought 33 complaints against the National Investigat­ion Service — the military ’s detective force — claiming it was biased, negligent and incompeten­t in its three investigat­ions.

As expected, the report targeted the single highest- profile symbol of the case: the “mishandlin­g ” of the soldier’s simple, handwritte­n suicide note that was kept from his parents for 14 months.

In an interview Tuesday, Sheila Fynes said she was “very pleased” with the report. “We just hope it will institute some positive change,” she said, adding that she was dismayed with the reaction of the provost marshal.

 ?? A D R I A N WYLD/ T HE C A NADI A N P R E S S ?? Sheila Fynes touches the beret of her son as she and her husband, Shaun Fynes, attend a news conference Tuesday after a military commission released a report on their son’s suicide.
A D R I A N WYLD/ T HE C A NADI A N P R E S S Sheila Fynes touches the beret of her son as she and her husband, Shaun Fynes, attend a news conference Tuesday after a military commission released a report on their son’s suicide.

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