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Edmonton

Critics question Edmonton police response methods after 2 deaths in 4 days

A pair of fatal encounterswith Edmonton police in the past week have promptedcalls for greater transparency and a different response to mental health emergencies.

ASIRT is investigating both fatal incidents

A wreath with a photo in the middle of it hangs from a tree next to a sidewalk.
A memorial has been set up in Edmonton's Oliver neighbourhood, at the site where a man was killed Sunday in an altercation with police. (Paige Parsons/CBC)

A pair of fatal encounterswith Edmonton police in the past week have promptedcalls for greater transparency and a different response to mental health emergencies.

In separate incidents days apart, aman and woman were shocked with stun guns and shot by police. Both died at the respective scenesin the Oliver and Laurel neighbourhoods despite receiving medical attention, according to the Alberta Serious Incident Response Team (ASIRT), theoversight agency thatinvestigates incidents causing death or serious injury that involvepolice.

ASIRT and the Edmonton Police Service (EPS) issued separate news releases announcing investigations into each person's death. ASIRT included photos of weapons allegedly found on scene a knife at the Oliver scene, and a pellet pistol at the Laurel scenebut neither agency specified whether the man and woman held themwhen police opened fire.

"ASIRT should either reveal no information, or reveal it all," said Tom Engel, a criminal defence lawyer in Edmonton who often works on police accountability cases.

"The perception is that they are issuing an exculpatory version of eventssame as the EPS issued and they shouldn't be doing that. They're supposed to be objective and they're not doing that."

A pellet gun and small kitchen knife
ASIRT distributed photographs of weapons allegedly found at the scene of two fatal police incidents this week. The police watchdog says a pellet pistol, left, was recovered from a Laurel apartment where a woman was killed Wednesday during a mental health call, and that a knife was recovered from an Oliver scene where a man was killed Sunday. (ASIRT)

Investigations into police-involved shootings often take years, Engel said. He's troubled that Edmonton police and ASIRT are sharing limited information about these kinds, then decline to answer further questions.

Video of Sunday shooting raises concerns: Engel

On Sunday evening, officers responded to a 911 call about a man who wasallegedly brandishinga knife at people in the Oliver neighbourhood. ASIRT released a photo of the knifethat was allegedly at the scene.

CBCNews has obtaineda bystander video of the confrontation that is partially obscured by abalcony railing.

In the video, the man alleged to have a knife approachesofficers who are yelling at him to get on the ground. One of the officers fires what seems to be a stun gun;the man stiffensand suddenly drops to the ground.

At this point, the man's body and the officers' whereabouts are largely obscured by the railing. But more officers can be viewed arriving on scene; someonerepeatedly yells "get off," then six rapid bangs are heard.

Engel has seen a second video of the confrontation that was filmed from a different angle, which raisesserious concerns about the police's decision to shoot the man, he said.That video was published online by APTN, but CBC News has not obtained or verified it.

Engel said EPS has a number of different teams and tools that could be deployed to such callsthat couldhelp avoid fatal outcomes, such as the police and crisis response team (PACT), the tactical unit andthe canine unit, as well as less lethal use-of-force options such as an ARWEN a launcher that shoots plastic projectiles.

Police spokesperson Carolin Maran said Friday that the officers involved in both fatal incidents are all on leave, which she said is standard procedure.

She declined to answer questions about policies for sending the tactical team or PACT to these kinds of calls, citing the ongoing ASIRT investigations.

A smallmemorial of candles, photographsand a wreath were set up at the site of the Oliver shooting this week.

Alternative responses

Four days later, a woman was killed in an apartment suite in the Laurel neighbourhood during an altercation with officers who had arrived to check on her well-being. In a news release,Edmonton police said officers entered the apartment after calling out several times and getting no response because they had information that the woman was at risk of harming herself.

ASIRTshared a photo of apellet pistol allegedly at the scene.

Research suggests police officers should not be sent on mental health calls, saidBenjamin Perrin, a law professor at the University of British Columbia.

"Tragic incidents where police respond to someone who's in mental health distress many of those could have been much better dealt with by a non-police team," said Perrin, who recently published a book about deadly encounters with police and alternative response options.

The proportion of people who die in police encounters, who also have mental health or substance use issues, is dramatically high and growing more common,Perrin said.

Other jurisdictions have implemented or are piloting 24/7 non-police crisis response teams and finding success, he said.

He referred to a program that has run for decades in Eugene, Ore.,as an example. There, trained mental health responders tackle 15 to 20 per cent of emergency calls and rarely end up needing police back-up, he said.

"Someone responds differently when you show up in a hoodie with a logo on it and you're like, 'Hey, we're here to see if you're OK.' That's very different than someone with a bulletproof vest with'POLICE' across it;a big person or multiple people armed, showing up at your home in the middle of the night," Perrinsaid.

"That alone leads to better outcomes."

Perrin said he is not a use-of-force expert, thus could not comment on the police actions in Oliver Sunday.