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Head of RCMP watchdog says a lack of resources is keeping her from launching investigations

The woman whose job it is to keep the RCMP accountable to the public says she often encounters cases involving Mounties that should be investigated but are not because her agency lacks the resources.

CRCC chair Michelaine Lahaie wants more resources to take on systemic investigations

Members of the North Vancouver RCMP wear plain navy cargo pants, removing the traditional yellow stripe in protest.
Bill C-20 would create the Public Complaints and Review Commission, which would give the existing RCMP watchdog the additional responsibility of handling public complaints about border officers. (Christer Waara/CBC)

The woman whose job it is to keep the RCMP accountable to the public says she often encounters cases involving Mounties that should be investigated but are not because her agency lacks the resources.

"I would say there probably isn't a month that goes by that I don't see a complaint where I say we should be investigating this ourselves," Civilian ReviewandComplaints Commission (CRCC)chair Michelaine Lahaie told a parliamentary committee Friday morning.

"When we're getting into serious incidents of use of force, or when individuals' personal liberties have been violated, then those are the cases where the commission needs to step in."

The federal government is working to pass a bill that would expand the mandate of CRCC to include border officers.

If Bill C-20 passes, the federal government proposes spending $112 million over five years, and more than $19 million per year ongoing, to establish the new oversight body, which would replace the CRCC and would also handle public complaints aboutCanada Border Services Agency (CBSA) staff.

WATCH | Chair of RCMP watchdog discusses lack of resources

Chair of RCMP watchdog agency discusses lack of resources preventing and delaying investigations

1 year ago
Duration 1:25
Michelaine Lahaie, chair of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, says there probably isnt a month that goes by when she doesnt see a complaint she thinks the CRCC should be investigating.

Lahaie told the committee she asked for more funding to handle a caseload that could increase by thousands offiles per year once the public can lodge complaints against border staff. She said she also needs more funding to launch more investigations.

As it stands, the CRCC receives complaints from the public and, in the vast majority of cases,refers them to the RCMP for investigation. The watchdog then reviews those investigations if complainants aren't satisfied. Lahaie said her team handles about 300 to 350 of those cases every year.

The CRCC chair can also initiate what's called a "systemic investigation" into RCMP activities. Those can look at policing trends, training gaps, egregious errors and any other matterthe chair feels warrants more investigation.

Lahaiesaid she can only take on one or two of those systemic investigations each year.

"What the commission needs is additional resources to be able to do that more often," she said.

"I refer to systemic reviews as our opportunity to fix policing before the police officer walks out the door."

For example, the CRCC is currently investigating the activities and operations of the Community-Industry Response Group (C-IRG), a special unit that polices protests against resource extraction in British Columbia.

"That's a big investigation. It's taking up a lot of my resources, but it's absolutely critical that we do so," said Lahaie.

Leon Joudreycase 'tragic':Lahaie

Lahaie raised the case of Leon Joudrey, a resident of Portapique, N.S., and neighbour of the gunman who killed 22 people in April of 2020.

In July 2020, Joudrey complained to the CRCC about the RCMP's response to the mass murder. He allegedthe responding officers failed to warn him of the threat to his safety or evacuate him from Portapique, and that he had been able to drive freely through crime scenes in Portapique in the absence of RCMP scene security.

Then RCMP commissioner Brenda Lucki assigned RCMP members from Nova Scotia to investigateJoudrey's complaint, but they wereunaware of the agreed-upontimeline to deliver a response.

A white man in a blue-checked plain shirt and glasses kneels in the grass in front of a forest of green fir trees
Leon Joudrey in May 2020 near his home in Portapique, N.S. Joudrey died in October after experiencing years of what he described as "hell" trying to move away from the area where many of his friends and neighbours were killed. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

In May of 2022,Joudrey told the inquiry investigating the mass shooting that he still had not been told of a resolution in his case.

"I just keep getting letters in the mail every month that they'll, they got no news," he told the Mass Casualty Commission.

Joudrey died suddenly in October after speaking out about mental health issues.

"That is an absolutely tragic situation that we should have taken on ourselves, but we just didn't have the resourcing to be able to do it," said Lahaie.

The final report of the Mass Casualty Commission tasked with investigating police response to the massacre pointed to systemic issues within the RCMP and called out its response to the tragedy.

NDP MP Peter Julian called the CRCC's current resource level a "major issue."

"Would it be fair to say that the budget allocation that is currently in place is about half of what your reasonable expectation is for the number of complaints that most likely will come forward?" he asked.

"That is a fair statement," said Lahaie.

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicinohas said he's hoping to have Bill C-20 passed before Parliament's summer break.

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