Toronto Star

Changes urged after suicide of ex-Mountie

- CAMILLE BAINS

Krista Carle advocated for others who faced sexual harassment

VANCOUVER— Former RCMP officers who suffered sexual harassment and bullying on the job are grieving the suicide of an ex-Mountie who advocated for change within the force they say ruined so many lives.

Catherine Galliford, who was one of the first Mounties to speak out about her experience­s at the hands of fellow officers, said she was devastated to learn that Krista Carle, with whom she graduated from Depot division in Regina, had taken her own life. A photo shows Galliford, Carle and seven other female graduates wearing red serge on the day they graduated in 1991, years before several of them would be leaving their jobs because of sexual harassment or sexual assault.

“I had a breakdown a couple of nights ago and kept on saying to my partner, ‘I was right here, I was right here. Why didn’t she phone me?’ ” Galliford said Tuesday. “We were like sisters. We lived together for six months in Depot. We both went through harassment and I don’t know what happened.”

Carle worked for the RCMP for 19 years but took medical discharge in 2009 following sexual harassment on the job in Alberta, before she moved to British Columbia.

Galliford said she received a call from Carle’s sister last Friday, saying the former Mountie killed herself on Vancouver Island, leaving behind two teenagers who were being raised by their father because of her posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

Carle is being remembered by other former RCMP officers who filed lawsuits against the force as an outspoken advocate for a cultural shift within an organizati­on they say seems to have its own rules for conduct that should not be tolerated.

Galliford, who settled a lawsuit with the RCMP last year, said the force operates within a “rape culture” that must be fixed. She said she and others are upset about Commission­er Brenda Lucki’s recent comments that she doesn’t think things are necessaril­y broken.

Galliford said that while it’s impossible to know what pushed Carle over the edge, Lucki’s statement would not have been helpful to someone who’d worked so hard to have the force address serious issues.

“I don’t know, but I was very good friends with Krista and I had no indication,” Galliford said about the friend who seemed to be doing well. “But (the commission­er) made that statement, and we’ve been trying to say for a decade, ‘No, it’s broken.’ ”

Galliford said Carle apparently lost her will to live against the “PTSD demons” after years of daily harassment, starting with graphic pornograph­y left among her belongings, lewd questions about her personal life and forcible kissing.

Rob Creasser, a former RCMP officer and group spokesman for the Mounted Police Profession­al Associatio­n of Canada, said Carle’s suicide won’t be the last if changes aren’t made soon. Creasser said the force has had dozens of opportunit­ies to change its “toxic” culture, and he placed a lot of blame on the federal government, which has failed to act on reports commission­ed about the RCMP’s workplace.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale issued a statement saying he was saddened to hear about Carle’s passing.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Krista Carle worked for the RCMP for 19 years but took medical discharge in 2009 following sexual harassment on the job.
CHAD HIPOLITO/THE CANADIAN PRESS Krista Carle worked for the RCMP for 19 years but took medical discharge in 2009 following sexual harassment on the job.

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