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Quebec anti-corruption unit lacks skills to investigate complex crimes, report says

The head of the office monitoring Quebec's anti-corruption unit, UPAC, recommends it recruit investigators better equipped to fulfil the squad's mission of maintaining the public's faith in the province's institutions.

Public security minister blames Liberal government for not having 'real intention' of fighting corruption

The head of the office that monitors Quebec's anti-corruption unit, UPAC, hire people with university degrees capable of handling lengthy investigations into 'highly complex criminality.' (Simon-Marc Charron/Radio-Canada)

Still reeling from accusations its investigators' fabricated evidence, the province's once-praised anti-corruption police unit, UPAC, is again the target of criticism.

The police force created to restore the public's faith in democratic institutions lacks officers with the necessary skills to conduct complex investigations into financial crimes, according to a government report published Thursday.

Claude Corbo, the head of the office that monitors UPAC, recommends that the unithire people with university degrees who are capable of handling lengthy investigations into "highly complex criminality."

The report came amid a series of embarrassing scandals for the police force, which was created in 2011 by the Liberals following reports of widespread fraud and corruption in the public and private sectors.

Political scientist Claude Corbo, a former UQAM rector and the head of a committee that monitors UPAC, said the anti-corruption unit needs to recruit investigators not for their policing experience but for their skills in areas such as 'law, accounting, forensic accounting, engineering, criminology, computer science [and] management.' (Simon Villeneuve/Radio-Canada)

UPAC has been criticized for its slow pace completing investigations, and there have been reports it is having trouble recruiting due to low morale. A former high-level officer reportedly told prosecutors the squad had fabricated evidence.

Corbo's report doesn't directly address the recent scandals, citing ongoing probes by prosecutors and an independent police watchdog. However, his report, despite its diplomatic language, describes a police force incapable of properly fulfilling its mandate.

"There is a training issuefor the UPAC as a whole," the report says, alluding to "the complexity of crime in the form of bribery in public contracts"and "the need for knowledge that is often very specialized."

Public Security Minister Genevive Guilbaultplaced the blame on the previous Liberal government, defeated by her Coalition Avenir Qubec party last October.

The Liberals created UPAC, she said, without giving it the necessary resources to do its job.

"The preceding Liberal government didn't have the real intention of giving itself the means to really fight against corruption in Quebec," she said.

Liberal critic blames ex-UPAC boss

Christine St-Pierre, Liberal critic for public security, called Guilbault's comments "low."Instead of blaming the Liberals, Guilbault should ensure the recommendations in Corbo's report are followed, St-Pierre said in an interview.

But St-Pierre was also quick to target someone else for blame: Robert Lafrenire, the former head of UPAC who unexpectedly quit on election day, Oct. 1, without completing his second mandateor explaining why he was leaving.

Lafrenire was the one responsible for hiring and ensuring his team had the expertise needed to investigate corruption across the province, she said. Maybe the lack of expertise and training described in Corbo's report helps explain UPAC's troubles, she added.

"We have heard allegations of fabrication of evidence;this is serious.It breaks the public's trust,"St-Pierre said.

Public Security Minister Genevive Guilbault blamed UPAC's troubles on the Liberals. She said the previous government created the anti-corruption unit without giving it the resources to do the job. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Last May, the Journal de Montralreported the Crown prosecutor's office was in possession of hours of testimony from the unit's former head of operations, Andr Boulanger. He reportedly told prosecutors under oath in 2018 that certain open investigations could fall apart because officers had fabricated evidence.

The unit has had some success in investigating crime since its inception. Last July, former Quebec construction mogul Tony Accurso received a four-year prison term following his conviction on fraud and corruption charges. He's been released pending his appeal.

But many of the people arrested by UPAC have been acquitted or received no jail time, causing public frustration. Other cases have dragged on for years.

"I share Quebecers' impatience to have UPAC's investigations completed,"Guilbault said.

Corbo's report was his first since his office was created last year to monitor UPAC.

In it, he recommends that a working group identify what university degrees and skills recruits should have.

"We can think of law, accounting, forensic accounting, engineering, criminology, computer science, management,"he wrote.

He saidcorruption investigators should not be required to have experience as patrol officers, as is currently the case. Corbo said the requirement shows how "rooted"the idea is among police officers that one cannot rise to the role of investigator without first going on patrol.

But the fight against corruption "requires the use of diversified skills related to several academic disciplines,"he said. "A patrol experience and general police investigation does not in itself provide this diversity of skills."