Times Colonist

New probe ordered into troubled flight

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OTTAWA — The military’s top soldier has ordered a second investigat­ion into a recent Team Canada trip that resulted in sexual-assault charges against a former NHL player and cast a cloud over the morale-boosting tours.

The new investigat­ion is expected to be broader than the first, which was conducted by the Air Force soon after the December trip in which former Toronto Maple Leaf Tiger Williams was accused of assaulting a flight attendant. Williams has denied the accusation­s. The results of the Air Force’s investigat­ion, which were delivered to chief of the defence staff Gen. Jonathan Vance in February, have not been made public.

Media reports after the December tour painted a picture of heavy drinking and partying on such trips, which involve the military flying athletes and celebritie­s overseas to meet with Canadian troops deployed abroad.

Vance denied such characteri­zations, but nonetheles­s banned alcohol on all future military flights and temporaril­y suspended the Team Canada visits until officials could determine what, if anything, needed to be fixed.

Defence Department spokeswoma­n Ashley Lemire said the new investigat­ion ordered by Vance will include a review of police reports and evidence as well as interviews with witnesses — none of which was done during the Air Force probe. The investigat­ion will be conducted by Rear-Admiral Luc Cassivi, who is responsibl­e for the military’s different educationa­l institutio­ns, and is expected to take about 60 days. Once complete, it will be delivered to Vance, who “will render the necessary direction and guidance to ensure the safe and effective conduct of Team Canada and other special flights in the future,” Lemire said. Meanwhile, all Team Canada visits remain suspended.

The Toronto Star has reported that several passengers on the December tour arrived in Ottawa already drunk before embarking on the Team Canada flight — and that two were so inebriated that they urinated in their seats.

The paper also reported that the attendant Williams was alleged to have assaulted on the first leg of the tour was forced to return to Canada on a commercial flight, but that the former hockey player was allowed to continue on the tour.

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