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New Brunswick

Author of books about Mounties hopes Moncton trial makes force safer

Canadian author, historian and honorary RCMP member Robert Knuckle will be watching the Moncton trial of the RCMP closely when it begins on Monday.

'I think this is going to ring the Mounties' bell,' says Robert Knuckle, author of books about the RCMP

Three men in Mounties uniforms
The RCMP will go on trial Monday after pleading not guilty to violating the Canada Labour Code during the 2014 shootings of Mounties in Moncton that took the lives Const. Douglas Larche, Const. Dave Ross and Const. Fabrice Gevaudan. (RCMP)

Canadian author, historian and honorary RCMP member Robert Knucklewas "taken aback" when he first heard the Mounties were being charged by an outside government agency, but he is now looking forward to the Moncton trial of the RCMP which begins on Monday.

The RCMP has pleaded not guilty to violatingfour health and safety provisions of the Canada Labour Code during theresponse to JustinBourque's shooting rampage in Monctonthat left three Mountiesdead and two others wounded.

RCMP officers use their vehicles to create a perimeter in Moncton on June 4, 2014, during the search for gunman Justin Bourque. (Marc Grandmaison/Canadian Press)
Robert Knuckle, who has written several books about the RCMP, including one about the Mayerthorpe, Alta., shootings in 2005 that killedfour officers, said he was initially upset by the charges.

"Itdidn'tsit well with me but then in further reflectionI thought, no, this is a good thing. This is bringing outside pressure saying, 'Help these guys out give them what they need to do their job and keep them safe.'"

The charges, filed by the Department of Employment and Social Development Canada, relate to equipment, training and supervision.

Access to high-powered rifles

"I think this is going to ring the Mounties' bell," Knuckle said of the trial.

"There's a political emphasis tied to it as well and I think theyrealizethat in today's society they have got to give our police forces ... the kind of protection they need to do their job."

'To be honest with you, I think it's probably a good thing because it's telling the RCMP, 'Get those high-powered guns into your detachments.'"- Robert Knuckle, writer

Knuckle, who describes himself as a big supporter of the RCMP, knows the police force has "warts," but in the long run, he said, the charges and the trial will bring outside pressure that will improve services for all Canadians and safety for all officers.

He calls the charges "precedent setting."

"To be honest with you,I think it's probably a good thing because it's telling theRCMP, 'Get those high-powered guns into your detachments.You may never use them, you may use them once in 25 years, but you need them.'"

A report issued seven months after the Moncton shootings urgedthe RCMP to expeditethe deployment of patrol carbines across the force, including improved training.

Retired assistant commissioner AlphonseMacNeil said in the report thatofficers were outgunned during the incident and had to rely on shotguns and pistols, while Bourque was armed with a high-powered rifle.

Severe fine unnecessary

Under the Canada Labor Code, thecharges couldlead to fines of up to $ 1 million, something Knuckle does not want to see.

Author and historian Robert Knuckle hopes the RCMP will be reprimanded but not fined severely. (Burnstown Publishing House)
"Ultimately, the taxpayer is going to pay that bill," he said. "I think [the RCMP]need to bereprimandedand found guilty and move on from there," Knuckle said."But to fine them excessivelydoesn't seem to make a lot of sense to me."

Knuckle said he wants to see high-powered rifles available to all RCMP officers at all detachments.

"Canada has in almost every community ... maybe one or two strange people who live on the edge of the law," he said. "So these guys in these detachments they need this kind of equipment in the rare cases where they're up against high-powered rifles."

The other challenge, as Knuckle sees it, is making high-powered rifles in RCMP detachments easy to access.

He said he's been told by officers that the rifles should not be under"such severe lock and key."

"If you trust a Mountie with a sidearm surely you can trust him with a long gun of this calibre, and that makes sense to me."

With files from Information Morning Moncton