National Post (National Edition)

RCMP supervisor took extended leave amid criticism, N.S. inquiry hears

Risk manager questioned for reaction time

- MICHAEL TUTTON

• One of the Mounties who oversaw the initial response to the mass shooting in Nova Scotia was off work for at least 16 months afterwards, saying he struggled with questions about his own decisions during the rampage.

Staff Sgt. Brian Rehill — a risk manager at the RCMP's Operationa­l Communicat­ions Centre in Truro, N.S. — told investigat­ors with the public inquiry investigat­ing the killings that support from other officers helped him cope with the aftermath.

However, he was still off work at the time of his interview on Jan. 15. “I'm a bit rusty because I haven't worked since September 2020,” he said. The inquiry removed the reasons behind Rehill's absence from the transcript, saying it was “personal informatio­n.”

In the remaining document, the 32-year veteran of the force describes a career that began in a small town on Newfoundla­nd's Great Northern Peninsula and included rural policing assignment­s in Cape Breton and northeaste­rn Nova Scotia.

As a risk manager, he said he worked alongside 911 call takers and dispatcher­s at the communicat­ions centre in Truro, giving safety directions to officers “engaged in high-risk activities” during non-business hours when district supervisor­s and commanders aren't on duty.

During his interview, Rehill spoke about his decision not to quickly send in a second group of officers to help the first three officers who advanced into Portapique, N.S., after the first reports of shootings were received on the night of April 18, 2020.

Lawyers for victims' families have said that if the RCMP had a full complement of six officers on duty that night — rather than the minimum four — and a system to track officers, a second team might have been able to advance up another road to where the killer actually was.

Rehill said he could have faced criticism if he'd sent in a second team and officers had shot at one another.

The staff sergeant also said that with hindsight, “I probably could have sent another team in there,” and he then spoke of the difficulty of looking back at the decisions taken, the distress it created for him and the reassuranc­es he received from other officers.

“I was second-guessing myself a lot and wondering, did I miss something that, had I not missed it, he (the killer) wouldn't have got out of there and (Const.) Heidi (Stevenson) would be alive, all these people in Wentworth

would be alive, that kind of thing,” he told the investigat­or. After the gunman killed 13 people and escaped from Portapique on April 18, he spent the night in nearby Debert before resuming his rampage and killing nine more people, including Stevenson.

An occupation­al health and safety investigat­or's report that looked at workplace compliance issues concluded there was an “environmen­t of confusion” over the roles of the initial RCMP supervisor­s on the night of the mass shooting.

Labour investigat­or Lorna MacMillan said this breached the RCMP's requiremen­t under the Labour Code to ensure each employee has the “supervisio­n necessary to ensure their health and safety at work.”

She also said in her March 29 report that the district supervisor­s from the Bible Hill RCMP office should have assumed command, but instructio­ns were coming from both Rehill and the district supervisor­s. Radio logs indicate that at 11:45 p.m. that night, a staff sergeant in the district told officers at the scene that Rehill “has command.”

In the interview, Rehill said he understood he was the “initial critical incident commander,” and was the “go-between” until a trained critical incident commander — Staff Sgt. Jeff West — arrived on the scene later that night.

Meanwhile, Rehill and other supervisor­s overseeing the response had trouble identifyin­g the killer's replica RCMP cruiser, according to commission's summaries of the events on the first night.

Within a half-hour of the shooting starting, 911 call takers and RCMP members received reports the killer's car was a “decked and labelled RCMP car,” that it was “just like a police car” with “lights and stuff.

However, Rehill said in his interview he heard from operators at the Truro communicat­ions centre that the killer, Gabriel Wortman, was a collector of decommissi­oned patrol cars, and Rehill said “everyone” at the centre believed “we're looking for one of these white, Ford Tauruses.”

In his interview with the inquiry, the staff sergeant said he didn't know until the next morning that “this guy had a fully marked police car that looked identical to one of ours that just rolled off the lot.”

“I was in shock when I saw the photo of the police car,” he said.

I PROBABLY SHOULD HAVE SENT ANOTHER

TEAM IN THERE.

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Staff Sgt. Brian Rehill, a risk manager at the RCMP's Operationa­l Communicat­ions Centre in Truro, N.S., controlled the initial response to the April 2020 serial murders.
ANDREW VAUGHAN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Staff Sgt. Brian Rehill, a risk manager at the RCMP's Operationa­l Communicat­ions Centre in Truro, N.S., controlled the initial response to the April 2020 serial murders.

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