Toronto Star

RCMP health office doctor accused of sexual abuse

Police investigat­e allegation­s from dozens of women spanning two decades

- MICHAEL TUTTON AND ALISON AULD

Halifax police are investigat­ing allegation­s from dozens of female RCMP officers and recruits who say they were sexually assaulted by a doctor at the Mounties’ health clinic in Nova Scotia over two decades.

The force’s commanding officer in Nova Scotia, assistant commission­er Brian Brennan, said Tuesday that “dozens” of women have brought forward allegation­s of incidents between October 1981 and July 2003 at the RCMP health services office in the Halifax suburb of Bedford.

In a note to officers, he said he expects “many more” women to come forward in the months ahead.

“I am at a loss for words as I write this message to you. To say I’m shocked and dishearten­ed doesn’t seem like enough,” Brennan wrote in the internal memo.

“This is an extremely devastatin­g time for those who have shared their trauma and are reliving this, and I am beyond unsettled to think that an individual who this organizati­on entrusted abused their position of power.”

Lawyer David Klein, whose firm is one of two that represente­d female RCMP employees in a sexual harassment class action, said several of his clients had informed him the physician was nicknamed “Dr. Fingers.”

Klein said in an interview from his Vancouver office that eight clients told him the doctor gave them unneeded rectal exams, inserted his fingers into their vaginas without good reason and spent unusually long periods rubbing their breasts with his hands.

The lawyer said more women were contacting his office to tell their stories on Tuesday, but they were not necessaril­y bringing their reports forward to police.

Assistant Commission­er Stephen White, the force’s acting chief human resources officer, said in an email to members that the allegation­s involved a doctor who conducted recruitmen­t medical examinatio­ns and periodic health assessment­s on members.

Brennan said the RCMP has received its informatio­n from sources other than the recently settled class action involving more than 1,000 female RCMP employees who alleged they suffered sexual abuse and harassment.

He also said the potential scope of the investigat­ion is very large because hundreds of women applied for the police force over the period in question and received medical exams from the doctor.

Yet, he said it has only recently come to the attention of senior management.

“To my knowledge, no informatio­n has been brought up to senior management of the RCMP in any regard,” he said, referring to the time period before the allegation­s surfaced last November.

Const. Carol McIsaac, a spokespers­on for Halifax Regional Police, said an investigat­ion was opened after the allegation­s were brought to their attention late last week.

“The investigat­ion is in the very early stages and is fluid at this time,” she said in an email.

“While we are unable to provide a specific number, we can confirm that we have received a number of calls so far.”

Dr. Gus Grant, registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Nova Scotia, said the medical regulator also had not received reports like the ones described by Klein.

He said if they had, the college would have initiated an investigat­ion. He also said the RCMP doctor had no record of any disciplina­ry findings against him and that the doctor is now retired.

Brennan said the applicants were new to the police force and this may have played a role in senior management not being informed.

Klein said he’s pleased the police force has publicly released informatio­n about the case, and that it is offering support to the employees who are reporting the assaults.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada