Police defend robbery response after bakery owner was told officers might not get there until next day - Action News
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Police defend robbery response after bakery owner was told officers might not get there until next day

Police are defending the length of time it took to respond to a recent robbery at a Winnipeg bakery, saying the service has to put calls in priority.

'We ended up closing because we don't know what to do whether they're going to come or not': owner

Exterior shot, in rain, of a business called Cinnaholic
The Cinnaholic location on McPhillips Street was robbed around 7:30 p.m. Saturday when a woman broke into the counter area and took the cash register. (Kevin Nepitabo/CBC)

Police are defending the length of time it took to respond to a recent robbery at a Winnipeg bakerythe owner says she was told officers might not show up until the next day saying the service has to put calls in priority.

"We understand that these types of events are traumatic events, and they're very stressful times in people's lives," Insp. Gord Spado said at a news conference Thursday.

"But we have to be cognizant of the higher-priority calls, and that's why we have a priority system."

Using a first-call-in, first-response-out system is simply not realistic for policing, he said.

"As much as we'd love to be at every event as soon as possible we have to deal with the life safety issues first."

Around 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Menchie Finlaygot a panicked call from her two employees atCinnaholic, a bakery in a strip mall on McPhillips Street.

A still from a surveillance video shows a woman lifting a cash register from behind a counter.
A still from surveillance video at Cinnaholic shows a woman taking the cash register from behind the counter. (Submitted by Colin Finlay)

A woman had pushed her waybehind the counterand grabbed the cash register. She opened it, took out about $300 and threw the empty machine onto the floor, Finlay said.

Surveillance video viewed by CBC News shows the woman breakingthrough a small doorthat separates the area behind the counter from the public area.

Finlay'stwo staffersrushed outside through aback door as the robbery washappening and called Finlay, who said to call 911. They did and were advised not to go back in, in case the thief was still there.

Finlayrushed to the store and called 911 to ask if officers were on the way and what she should do. She was instructed by the dispatcher to check the store to make sure the thief was gone, she said.

"They made me check the bathroom, the fridges and [all the]nooksand crannies just in case she's still hiding," Finlay said.

"I asked them,'How long do you think the police are going [to take] to come?' And she said, 'It might be today or tomorrow, depending on how busy we are tonight.'"

Head-and-shoulders photo of a woman.
Menchie Finlay, who runs a Cinnaholic location on McPhillips Street, says she was told by a 911 dispatcher she might have to wait until the next day for police to respond to a robbery at her shop. (Kevin Nepitabo/CBC)

Finlay didn't know whether police needed to gather evidence, so she was worried about cleaning up.

"We ended up closing the store [for the rest of the day] because we don't know what to do whether they're going to come or not," Finlay said.

After some time, she sawtwo officers pull up to a restaurant at the strip mall and flagged them down.

Spado confirmed Thursday that two officers, who were going on their break, took statements and filed the robbery report.

He took issue with informationin stories by other media, in which Finlay's husband, who is the co-owner,quoted the dispatcher as saying"We'll send someone out if we're not too busy."

A man in a white collared shirt and short grey hair stands at a podium with microphones.
Insp. Gord Spado says police have a 10-level priority system for calls. Using a first-call-in, first-response-out system is simply not realistic, he says. (Kevin Nepitabo/CBC)

"The reporting of how that police response was characterized to the caller was not exactly accurate," Spado said.

Accurate articulation of events can be challenging because emotions are high, he said.

A surveillance video still shows a restaurant counter area
A woman walks away from the Cinnaholic counter after tossing the cash register onto the floor in a still from surveillance video. (Submitted by Colin Finlay)

"They heard what they heard, and that's how that made them feel."

He read from the transcript of the 911 call, which mirrored what Finlay said. The dispatcher also explained 911 "can't ever predict when those other emergencies come in," which is why the possible response time was so vast.

The dispatcher said it was OK to leave and that Finlay would be called when officers were on the way.

"That's to allow people to get on with their lives and get closure rather than sitting and waiting for a police response that has no timeline at that point," Spado said.

Finlay's call was classified as a Priority 3 event on the police service's 10-point scale. That was "as high a priority as that event would justify," Spado said.

Higher priorities are for situationsinvolving presentdanger to life or of grievous bodily harm, he said.

In fact, Finlay's call could have been downgraded as "there was no threat to anybody anymore. The suspect had left [and] there's no threat to property," Spado said.

"That person was 100 per cent safe at that point in time."

Spadowas asked but did not know the average response time for a Priority 3 call. He was alsoasked how busy it was on Saturday at the time Finlay called, but said he couldn't speak specifically to that.

"I just know that our queue is never down to zero," he said. "I can say it was likely busy. The fact a Priority3 sat there tells me there were other prioritythreesand twos that were present."

Justice Minister Matt Wiebe announcedWednesday that theprovince will fund overtime pay for four police units with the Winnipeg Police Service to target "hot spots," such as retail stores and restaurants.

"That will be a great idea," Finlay said."Even just a cop car in the area frequently hopefully will deter these criminals."

Spado said he didn't have enough details about Wiebe's announcement to respond.

"Do we have a retail theft problem? Absolutely we do. I don't know what else I can say about that," he said.

With files from Josh Crabb