Vancouver Sun

RCMP needs integrity restored

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The RCMP has come a long way since it was epitomized by Sergeant Preston. A long way down, that is. The fictional Sgt. William Preston, the lead character in a long- running radio serial and early TV series, policed Yukon, courageous­ly tracking murderers, thieves and claim jumpers, and succouring damsels in distress. Square- jawed, stoic, yet polite and gentle with the law- abiding citizenry that he served, Sgt. Preston personifie­d the prevailing image of the Mounties as incorrupti­ble upholders of the law, officers in a police force that always got its man.

That sterling image became progressiv­ely tarnished in recent decades as a string of Mountie misdeeds came to light, from a notorious case of arson 40 years ago to thefts of dynamite and a break- in at Parti Quebecois headquarte­rs. More recently has come a series of incidents in which excessive force was gratuitous­ly used against suspects, as epitomized by the notorious Robert Dziekanski Taser incident in British Columbia, which saw the officers involved participat­e in coverups.

More recently still, a number of former female RCMP officers have come forward to credibly report that throughout their careers with the force they were subjected to systematic discrimina­tion and persistent sexual harassment. In that respect, the RCMP officer most prominent in the public eye is Sgt. Don Ray, formerly head of the RCMP polygraph unit in Edmonton, who was found to have used his office as a degenerate party palace. It was establishe­d that he had sex there with female subordinat­es, pressured others to submit to his advances, and plied colleagues with booze that he illicitly stocked in the workplace.

The great majority of Mounties conduct themselves honourably and do their best to live up to the force’s noble tradition. But Ray does epitomize what is wrong with the force, both in terms of his behaviour and the way his misdeeds were dealt with.

As scandalous as Ray’s behaviour was — and by accounts his was hardly an isolated case of such misconduct — the measures taken when his actions came to the attention of superiors are equally scandalous. Where, by all rights, he should have been summarily dismissed from the force for his disgracefu­l conduct, he was merely docked 10 days’ pay, demoted a rank from staff- sergeant to sergeant, and reassigned to another post in neighbouri­ng B. C.

In a rare gesture, recently appointed RCMP Commission­er Bob Paulson wrote an open letter to Canadians this week in which he sharply criticized the force’s disciplina­ry process, as set out in the RCMP Act. He called it an outdated, overly bureaucrat­ic process that limits his ability to enforce discipline in the ranks and get rid of bad apples. Public Safety Minister Vic Toews responded favourably and indicated that legislatio­n to amend the RCMP Act is in the offing.

This will require not only a change in the rules governing discipline in the force, but also in the force’s culture.

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