National Post

Improve pursuit training, policy, Sask. inquest jury recommends

Four actions recommende­d after stabbings

- Julia Peterson

The coroner’s inquest into the death of Myles Sanderson concluded with a total of four recommenda­tions — one to the Saskatoon Police Service, the rest to the RCMP.

On Sept. 4, 2022, Myles Sanderson killed 11 people and injured 17 others during a stabbing rampage on James Smith Cree Nation and in the nearby community of Weldon, Sask.

Days later, on Sept. 7., Sanderson died in police custody minutes after his arrest, following a high-speed chase down the highway near Rosthern.

Now, nearly a year and a half after Sanderson’s death, a six-member coroner’s jury determined that he died, accidental­ly, of acute cocaine toxicity.

Their recommenda­tions for what could be done differentl­y in future were as follows:

❚ That the Saskatoon Police service consider establishi­ng a dedicated team tasked with arresting individual­s who are subject to outstandin­g warrants;

❚ That the RCMP consider implementi­ng mandatory enhanced driver training, including the PIT (precision immobiliza­tion technique) manoeuvre;

❚ That the RCMP consider reviewing its policy and criteria for high-speed pursuits, in the interest of the safety of all involved; and

❚ That the RCMP consider implementi­ng additional training in enhanced extraction techniques, for the purposes of arrest takedowns.

As RCMP Assistant Commission­er Rhonda Blackmore listened to this inquest’s findings and recommenda­tions Thursday evening — coming only weeks after the staggering 29 recommenda­tions offered by the coroner and jury at the inquest into the deaths of Sanderson’s victims — she hoped this long process has helped families and communitie­s heal.

“I hope this week provided them with some of the answers they were looking for,” she said.

Blackmore said she and fellow RCMP leadership intend to review these recommenda­tions in detail, to see what can be learned and possibly changed going forward.

“We’ll review them and look at where we can implement them, and what we can do to address the recommenda­tions,” she said.

Already, Blackmore said, one of the recommenda­tions to come from the previous inquest — that the RCMP’S warrant enforcemen­t teams consider a history of domestic violence as a more serious risk factor for future violence — is in the works, and will impact how these officers prioritize their most urgent cases going forward.

On James Smith Cree Nation, Eddie Head serves as director of justice. At this inquest, he was asking questions of witnesses in his capacity as Myles Sanderson’s uncle, representi­ng his family.

He said the last four days have answered some painful questions and brought much-needed closure to the First Nation.

The video footage in particular, Head explained, offered irrefutabl­e proof that the RCMP officers and paramedics who treated Sanderson that day had reacted quickly when he went into distress, and did all they could to try to save his life.

And after everything he saw and heard, Head said the only feeling he has towards Sanderson anymore is forgivenes­s.

“You could never have resentment for a person who did that, because if you want to heal, you have to learn to forgive,” he said. “And if you can’t forgive, you’ll never heal.”

The inquest also offered many community members a chance to thank RCMP officer Heidi Marshall, who managed to hit Sanderson’s vehicle and push him off the road that day, ending the high-speed pursuit.

“We hugged her, and told her (that) ‘we love you for what you did,’” said Head. “And we asked her to come to our First Nation to be part of us, when it comes to healing. We invited her back home.”

Head also shared, now that his sister — Sanderson’s mother — finally knows the whole truth of what happened that day, she has been able to find some peace, lean on her family’s support and concentrat­e on supporting her remaining children and grandchild­ren in turn.

“My sister wants to heal now,” he said. “What her boy did, it could have driven her into addiction. It could have driven her to suicide — she contemplat­ed that, many times, and her family and her community is saying to her ‘no, don’t think like that.’ And today she could walk out of here and she’s asking to be with her family, and also participat­e in our cultural ways of healing.”

WE ASKED (THE RCMP OFFICER WHO STOPPED THE KILLER) TO COME TO OUR FIRST NATION TO BE PART OF US.

 ?? LIAM RICHARDS / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Assistant RCMP commission­er Rhonda Blackmore speaks to media Thursday after the conclusion of the inquest into the apprehensi­on and death of Myles Sanderson, who killed 11 people on James Smith Cree Nation last year.
LIAM RICHARDS / THE CANADIAN PRESS Assistant RCMP commission­er Rhonda Blackmore speaks to media Thursday after the conclusion of the inquest into the apprehensi­on and death of Myles Sanderson, who killed 11 people on James Smith Cree Nation last year.

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