Times Colonist

Public hearing starts Monday into fatal shooting of woman by Victoria police officer

Lisa Rauch was shot with ‘less lethal’ weapon in December 2019

- — Vancouver Sun, Times Colonist

A three-week public hearing into the death of a woman shot by a Victoria police officer in 2019 begins on Monday.

On Christmas Day 2019, 43-year-old Lisa Rauch was hit with three rounds from a “less lethal” weapon that fires plastic projectile­s. The weapon is designed to incapacita­te a person without causing serious injury, but is intended to be fired at the body.

After Rauch barricaded herself in a unit in a supportive housing building on Pandora Avenue that was on fire, Victoria police officer Ron Kirkwood fired shots into the unit, striking Rauch in the head. She suffered bleeding on the brain and died in hospital four days later.

In 2020, an investigat­ion by the Independen­t Investigat­ions Office of B.C. cleared Kirkwood of wrongdoing, in part because emergency crews had been called about a woman threatenin­g residents with a knife. The darkness and smoke also likely obscured Kirkwood’s view of his target as he fired, according to IIO civilian director Ronald J. MacDonald in the decision.

Rauch’s family asked the Office of the Police Complaint Commission­er to look into the death, leading to an external investigat­ion by the Vancouver Police Department. That 2022 decision also cleared Kirkwood of misconduct.

Police complaint commission­er Clayton Pecknold then appointed a retired judge to review it once more, deciding there was a reasonable basis to believe the Vancouver police investigat­or got it wrong.

That led to a public hearing being ordered by the OPCC, at which Kirkwood will face allegation­s of abuse of authority and neglect of duty.

“The circumstan­ces surroundin­g [Rauch’s] death require a full accounting,” said Pecknold in October. “I agree with the complainan­ts that the circumstan­ces related to police officers’ accounting for their actions in police-involved deaths must bear public scrutiny.”

The OPCC announced this week the hearing will be heard at its offices in Victoria from April 15 to 19, April 29 to May 3 and May 6 to 10, beginning each day at 10 a.m. The hearing will be presided over by retired B.C. judge Wally Oppal.

As part of the hearing, IIO investigat­ors will be asked to give evidence about the duty of “subject officers” — Kirkwood in this case — to prepare and file notes and reports.

Oppal’s decision, as in all OPCC public hearings, on whether there was misconduct is considered final and conclusive. He can also make recommenda­tions about police policy and practice.

More informatio­n about the hearing is available at opcc. bc.ca.

 ?? FAMILY PHOTO ?? Lisa Rauch died in December 2019 after being shot by police.
FAMILY PHOTO Lisa Rauch died in December 2019 after being shot by police.

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