Average wait for RCMP response to misconduct reviews is growing: report - Action News
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Average wait for RCMP response to misconduct reviews is growing: report

The average amount of time it takes for the top Mountie to respond to misconduct findings by the RCMP's watchdog isgrowing, says the head of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission.

CRCC expresses 'dismay' over slow pace of RCMP replies

RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki appears before the House of Commons Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security in Ottawa on Monday, May 7, 2018. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

The average amount of time it takes for the top Mountie to respond to misconduct findings by the RCMP's watchdog is growing, says the head of the Civilian Review and Complaints Commission.

"This issue is of significant concern, as lengthy delays serve to obscure transparency, dilute the effects of findings and reduce or eliminate the value of recommendations,"CRCC chairperson Michelaine Lahaiewrotein her latestannual report, tabled in Parliament on Friday.

The CRCCis the independent agency tasked with reviewing public complaints about the RCMP. Whenever CRCC investigatorsare unsatisfied with the RCMP's handling of a complaint, or disagreewith the force's initial take on it, they sendwhat they call an 'interim report' to the RCMP commissionerfor review.

Commissioner Brenda Lucki and her team then identify which of the CRCC's recommendations the RCMP will accept, and which ones it won't. If the commissionerdisagrees with any of the recommendations, she must provide the CRCC with reasons.

Only after the commissioner respondscan the CRCC's final report be compiled and released.

"I join many of my predecessors in expressing my dismay about the length of time that it takes for the commissioner to provide a response to commission interim reports, with the average length of time for a response now having risen to 17 months," said Lahaie.

As of March 31, 174interim reports were waiting for a commissioner's response. The CRCC report says the average time that an interim report iskept waiting for a commissioner's response is538calendar days butsome cases have taken more than three years.

CRCC still waiting for response to Boushiereview

"Canadians have a right to know if the commission's findings and recommendations have been accepted and, indeed, if RCMP policies, procedures and training have been adjusted as a result," said Lahaie, whose agency signed a memorandum of understanding with the RCMP at the end of 2019to set service standards.

"The old adage that justice delayed is justice denied is highly relevant in this situation."

Colten Boushie (left) was shot and killed during an altercation on Gerald Stanley's farm in Saskatchewan in 2016. (Colten Boushie/Facebook and Liam Richards/The Canadian Press)

A spokesperson for the RCMP said the force is workingto double the number of personnel responsible for review and analysis.

"The RCMP acknowledges there is a delay in responding to CRCC interim reports, due in part to the number of interim reports and the volume of relevant material to be analyzed. Efforts are currently underway to address this imbalance," said Cpl. Caroline Duval in an email to CBC News.

"The RCMP considers all public complaints to be important and tries to address them in as timely a manner as possible while at the same time ensuring they are assessed thoroughly and appropriately."

One of the reportscaught in limbo is a review of the RCMP's handling of the shooting death of Colten Boushie. The 22-year-old from Red Pheasant Cree Nation was shot and killed during analtercation with Saskatchewanfarmer Gerald Stanleyin August 2016. A jury at Stanley's trial acquittedhimof second-degree murder in February 2018.

The CRCCconfirmed it finished its investigation and gave the RCMP its findings,along with some recommendations, in January of this year but said it has not yetreceived Lucki's response.

"Workisongoingtocompletetheresponsesforotherfiles,includingtheBoushiefile,assoonasfeasible," said Duval.

Another delayedreview has to do withhow the RCMP handled Indigenous-led anti-fracking protests in New Brunswick back in 2013.

The CRCC said it sent the RCMP its report in March 2019.

In a rare move,Lahaie did release a portion of her commission's findings earlier this year when she announced that the commissionwouldn't investigate claims that the RCMPhad acted unlawfully during recent protests inWet'suwet'en territory in B.C. because recommendations addressing identical issues were sent to the force almost a year ago.

"The findings and recommendations made in that report had broad, far-reaching impact on policing that I determined the Canadian public should be able to access," she wrote in Friday's report.

A spokesperson for the CRCC said the RCMP responded to those findings over the summer and a final report is being finalized and prepped for public release this fall.

Last fiscal year, the public lodged 3,641 complaints against the RCMP22 per cent more than the previous year ranging from allegations of wrongful arrest and improper use of force to neglect of duty.

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