Ottawa Citizen

Province limits scope of SIU probes into police conduct

- ALLISON JONES

Ontario is narrowing the scope of mandatory investigat­ions carried out by the province’s primary police watchdog, with the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government framing current rules as inherently anti-police.

The change involving the Special Investigat­ions Unit is part of legislatio­n introduced Tuesday to overhaul police oversight regulation­s.

It comes after the government paused implementa­tion of a law from the previous Liberal regime that enhanced the mandates of Ontario’s three police oversight agencies: the SIU, the Office of the Independen­t Police Review Director and the Ontario Civilian Police Commission.

Currently, the SIU investigat­es circumstan­ces involving police and civilians that have resulted in serious injury, death or allegation­s of sexual assault. That could include cases of suicide or situations in which a person dies after a medical incident.

Under the new legislatio­n, the SIU would limit investigat­ions to when police use of force results in serious injury or death, as well as when an officer has shot at a person or if there is a reported sexual assault, and would have to wrap up investigat­ions within 120 days.

Attorney General Caroline Mulroney said the changes would focus the SIU’s mandate to what it was originally created to do: investigat­e suspected criminal activity.

“That’s actually not the case today,” she said at an announceme­nt in Oakville.

“If a police officer tries to stop a suicide attempt but is unsuccessf­ul, he or she is treated like a suspect ... if a police officer responds to a violent crime, tries to perform CPR but is unable to save the life, he or she is treated like a suspect. This is not what the SIU should be doing.”

Community Safety and Correction­al Services Minister Sylvia Jones said the Liberal changes to police oversight laws actively undermined policing efforts and public trust in officers.

“Police will no longer be treated like they’re guilty until proven innocent,” she said.

The new Tory bill would also eliminate the Ontario Civilian Police Commission in order to create a single body to handle public complaints about police.

The Police Associatio­n of Ontario said it hasn’t been able to review the legislatio­n before its introducti­on but welcomes the announceme­nt.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n said the changes gut police oversight.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada