The Province

Feds take second look at supporting vets’ relatives

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OTTAWA — The Trudeau government sought to defuse weeks of outrage by ordering officials to adopt a more critical eye before approving funds and services for the family member of veterans — particular­ly relatives convicted of serious crimes.

The measure announced Tuesday followed widespread anger over Veterans Affairs Canada’s decision to pay for the PTSD treatment of a 30-year-old Halifax man, Christophe­r Garnier, convicted last year of killing an off-duty police officer and stuffing her body in a compost bin.

A Halifax court heard last month that the department was covering the cost of Garnier’s psychologi­st because his father was a veteran who has also been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder, even though Garnier himself never served in uniform.

Veterans Affairs Minister Seamus O’Regan told the House of Commons during a heated question period that similar decisions will now be flagged to more senior department staff for review.

He also said benefits will not be provided to a veteran’s family member who is incarcerat­ed in a federal facility.

“I have reviewed the department’s findings on this issue and I am directing them to ensure that services received by a family member of a veteran are related to the veterans’ service and where they are not, that they be reviewed by a senior official,” O’Regan told the House.

“I am directing the department to immediatel­y address its policy on providing treatment to family members under extenuatin­g circumstan­ces, such as conviction of such a serious crime.”

O’Regan cited privacy rules when pressed repeatedly by the Tories on whether the government would retroactiv­ely claw back any payments to people like Garnier who were given payments before the new policy came into effect.

He later sidesteppe­d a reporter’s questions about whether the new policy would prevent similar situations in the future.

“I’m not going to get into hypothetic­als,” O’Regan said.

Garnier was convicted in December of murdering 36-year-old Catherine Campbell, an off-duty Truro police officer and dumping her body in a compost bin, and his lawyer had argued his client’s mental illness was brought on by the murder.

 ??  ?? GARNIER Convicted killer
GARNIER Convicted killer

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