Ottawa Citizen

Mounties revamp witness protection

Secret internal review calls for changes

- JIM BRONSKILL

The RCMP is retooling its witness protection program following a secret internal review that called for changes to enrolment decisionma­king and better reporting on the program’s impact.

The changes come less than two years after a fullscale overhaul of the program prompted by high-profile controvers­ies.

The federal witness program, administer­ed by the RCMP, is seen as a key tool in the fight against terrorism and organized crime. It shields people who help authoritie­s by providing everything from short-term protection to permanent relocation and identity changes.

Protectees may be victims, informants, witnesses or others threatened with intimidati­on or violence. Protection is available to those referred from any police service in Canada, foreign agencies and other federal department­s involved in national security or defence.

In 2014-15, the $9.6-million program admitted 23 protectees, all of whom were granted a secure name change.

The program was thrust into the headlines several years ago when it emerged that a protectee committed a murder while enrolled. Some members have sued over their treatment, while others have been kicked out.

In 2010, a federal inquiry into the 1985 Air India bombing said it was inappropri­ate for a police agency with an interest in ensuring sources agree to become witnesses to also make decisions about admission into a witness protection program.

As a result, legislativ­e changes that took effect in November 2014 walled off the program from the RCMP’s investigat­ive units. The Mounties also introduced new training, standardiz­ed procedures and a “psychosoci­al assessment” to determine whether possible protectees are a good fit.

Still, five people were told to leave the program in 201415, while three protectees filed lawsuits.

The RCMP’s deputy commission­er for federal policing ordered the review to see whether the program was effectivel­y handling admission and management of clients. Given the sensitivit­y of some informatio­n in the report, the Mounties decided not to publish it.

However, internal records obtained under the Access to Informatio­n Act show the review found:

the witness protection program has “undertaken considerab­le efforts” to address the concerns identified by the Air India inquiry and the House of Commons committee on public safety and national security;

opportunit­ies to improve the management of cases, including deliberati­ons on who gets into the program;

a need for new ways to report on the results achieved and their impact.

Senior RCMP management signed off on the report, including various recommenda­tions to strengthen the program.

Last year a federal advisory committee reported that the witness protection program was “on the right track” following its legislativ­e transforma­tion.

However, the committee suggested, among other things, that the program build on its efforts to better accommodat­e people of various ethno-cultural background­s, including aboriginal­s, and that it usher in cultural sensitivit­y training.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? As the result of a review focusing on the effectiven­ess of the witness protection program, the RCMP will retool enrolment decision-making and the ways in which the impacts of the program are reported.
JEFF MCINTOSH / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES As the result of a review focusing on the effectiven­ess of the witness protection program, the RCMP will retool enrolment decision-making and the ways in which the impacts of the program are reported.

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