Mass Shooting in Nova Scotia April 18/19, 2020: misogyny and gun violence

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epaulo13

The Nova Scotia inquiry is prioritizing the trauma of police over the trauma of victims’ families

The public inquiry into the worst mass killing in Canadian history has been plagued by a putrid stink from its very start, when the federal government and the province of Nova Scotia tried to get away with avoiding one altogether.

After the families of the 22 victims who were killed during the rampage in April, 2020, spent weeks demanding a full inquiry, Nova Scotia Attorney-General Mark Furey and federal Public Safety Minister Bill Blair (both of whom, notably, had long careers in law enforcement) announced they would launch a three-person closed-door “review panel” instead, which would lack subpoena power and the ability to cross-examine witnesses. Mr. Blair suggested that this impotent review, which no one actually asked for, would actually be the “best way” to uncover how the killer evaded law enforcement for 13 hours. The families, who were understandably livid, staged a public protest in response, which embarrassed the federal and provincial governments enough to get them to yield to an inquiry in the end.

The Mass Casualty Commission, as it would come to be known, was then supposed to start in October last year, but was delayed twice, until Feb. 28. The families, meanwhile, were complaining that they were being left out of the proceedings (even though the commission claimed that further consultation with families as one of the main reasons for the delays), and that their lawyers were not given access to a witness list to prepare for possible cross-examination. The daughter of one of the victims – a retired firefighter and navy veteran who’d bravely responded to a fire set by the gunman – had to pen an open letter to the commission, saying her family was “losing more faith by the day” in the process.

And when the hearings did eventually get under way, they came with even more curiosities and frustrations. Documents suddenly disappeared from the Mass Casualty Commission website without explanation, though some were later reposted. The relevance of a victim’s Fitbit, which showed her heart beating hours after an RCMP officer pronounced her dead, was initially disregarded by the Commission but was still being debated when it released its foundational documents. A leaked video, first posted by Frank Magazine, showed police encountering the killer at a gas station during the manhunt (though they appeared not to recognize him) shortly before he was shot dead at a second gas station – an encounter that was never mentioned by the RCMP, nor included in the summary report by Nova Scotia’s Serious Incident Response Team, though it was referenced in the Commission’s documents.

But perhaps the Commission’s cruellest decision thus far has been to allow three senior RCMP officers special accommodations while testifying, citing its so-called “trauma-informed approach.” RCMP Staff Sergeant Brian Rehill and Sergeant Andy O’Brien were interviewed by commission council only – without cross-examination – in pre-recorded video interviews; Staff Sergeant Al Carroll testified via Zoom, not in person. None of these officers were on the ground during the manhunt for the shooter, but instead were managing the response from the dispatch centre – or in the case of Sgt. O’Brien, directing officers from his home, since he’d had by his own admission four or five drinks of rum that night. (He insisted he was not impaired.)

Outraged by the commission’s decision to allow key decision-makers to avoid cross-examination – in effect, prioritizing officials over people seeking answers for their lost friends and relatives – families of the victims staged public protests for the second time since the 2020 massacre, and many have boycotted the proceedings. In a statement, a lawyer for some of the families said their clients “will not be associated with this restricted fact-finding process for such critical evidence.” Others pointed out that in courts of law (which, of course, this is not), accommodations are made for those experiencing trauma that still allow for cross-examination, including allowing witnesses to testify alongside a support person or behind a privacy screen.

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But the effect of such a project will only be to further corrode the trust between a wounded community and a law enforcement agency apparently sworn to protect it – officers who know they are signing up for trauma when they take the job in the first place. This will only deepen the anguish of those who lost loved ones – an absolutely brutal outcome for people who have suffered so much already.

jerrym

The Nova Scotia mass shooting comission continues to reveal more and more RCMP blunders, even as it allows three senior RCMP officers to avoid cross-examination by victim's families. 

An RCMP officer said Tuesday she worked as fast as she could to warn the public on social media about a killer on the loose in Nova Scotia on April 19, 2020, but there was a crucial delay she can't explain.

"Look, I wish I could have gotten (tweets and Facebook posts) out earlier," Jennifer Clarke, a former Halifax-based public information officer, told a public inquiry in Truro, N.S. "I don't know if I could have saved someone. I don't know that I could have worked any faster."

The inquiry has heard the gunman -- disguised as a Mountie and driving a replica RCMP cruiser -- fatally shot 13 people in Portapique, N.S., on the night of April 18, 2020. Having escaped from the community, he resumed his rampage the next morning, killing another nine people at various locations in northern and central Nova Scotia. He was later shot dead by two Mounties at a gas station north of Halifax.

Earlier that morning, the RCMP had obtained a photo of the killer's vehicle, which looked exactly like an RCMP patrol car. Clarke emailed her superior, Lia Scanlan, about the photo just before 9 a.m. and was told to write a tweet to alert the public. She said Scanlan told her to seek approval for its release from Staff Sgt. Addie MacCallum.

Clarke testified that she made several phone calls to ensure the accuracy of the tweet and she used a computer program to highlight the car's call sign, which the public could use to distinguish it from legitimate RCMP cruisers.

"We have to check every detail," she said. "We can't be wrong."

By 9:40 a.m., Clarke sent a draft tweet with a photo of the vehicle to MacCallum, but he had already left the command post to join the pursuit of the killer in Wentworth, N.S., and did not respond.

Clarke then contacted Staff Sgt. Steve Halliday, who approved the tweet at 9:49 a.m. She then sought approval via email from Scanlan, director of the Nova Scotia RCMP's strategic communications unit. But there was a delay of nearly half an hour, and Clarke said she sent three emails to Scanlan to draw her attention to the proposed tweet.

"I was pacing the floor," Clarke told the inquiry. "It was the longest 27 minutes of my life."

The tweet wasn't sent until 10:17 a.m., almost three hours after the Mounties first obtained the photograph. Inquiry documents do not provide an explanation, and Clarke did not offer one.

Scanlan, who is scheduled to testify Wednesday, told commission investigators in February that she had instructed her team on the morning of April 19 to release immediately whatever information they received. "My whole message was: 'When information comes in, it goes out .... Just get it out,"' Scanlan said.

Under cross-examination Tuesday, Clarke was asked why she sought approval from Scanlan when Halliday had already given his OK. "The rules aren't written down," she said, adding that critical incidents typically require more oversight. "The rule was understood."

Lawyer Tara Miller, who represents a relative of victim Kristen Beaton, suggested that seeking multiple approvals probably slowed down the release of information. Clarke said she wanted to make sure nothing had changed that could have increased the risk to RCMP members.

"It wouldn't have been productive to anyone to start going rogue, so to speak, and trying to get approval from different sources," she said.

At the time, the Mounties were dealing with a full-blown crisis. Shortly after 9:30 a.m., a series of 911 calls confirmed the killer had resumed his rampage. Soon after the RCMP learned Lillian Campbell had been shot in Wentworth, they were told a body had been found next to a burning home in nearby West Wentworth.

And just after 10 a.m., police learned of the shooting deaths of Beaton and Heather O'Brien, both of whom worked for the Victorian Order of Nurses. Another three people, including an RCMP officer, were fatally shot later that morning.

In an evidence summary released Tuesday, the inquiry disclosed for the first time that the photo of the suspect's car was supposed to be immediately forwarded to Scanlan early on April 18, 2020 but something went wrong.

In a previous interview with commission investigators, MacCallum said he forwarded photos of the killer and his car to Scanlan before 8 a.m. He also recounted how he specifically asked if she had a photo of the car.

The commission later determined the photo of the killer made it to Scanlan, but the picture of the car went elsewhere. The evidence summary, known as a foundational document, says investigators found that MacCallum sent a second email with both photos at 8:10 a.m.

"It is unknown whether the 8:10 a.m. email and attachment were received by Lia Scanlan," the document says. "Ms. Scanlan told the Mass Casualty Commission that she was not aware of the perpetrator's replica RCMP cruiser before 8 a.m." Notes that Scanlan took that day say nothing about the photo of the car.

At 8:54 a.m., the RCMP posted a tweet that included a description and a photo of the killer, as well as confirmation that the 51-year-old denture maker was armed and dangerous. There was no mention of the vehicle.

Previously released documents and testimony have confirmed there was discussion among senior Mounties who believed that releasing information about the replica vehicle could cause public panic and put police in danger.

"Whether or not there was a decision made at the command post to delay the release of information about the replica RCMP cruiser, it appears the preparations for such a release were underway shortly before 9 a.m. on April 19, 2020," the foundational document says.

When the hearings opened Tuesday, the chairman of the commission, Michael MacDonald, announced the RCMP had been issued a subpoena to compel them to provide a list of all the changes made to prevent a similar tragedy from happening.

https://atlantic.ctvnews.ca/lost-emails-and-unexplained-delays-mass-shoo...

jerrym

 

RCMP Incompetence Is The Real Scandal In The Nova Scotia Inquiry

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Police forces have abused the idea that politicians should stay out of the justice system, and operate with contempt for the public.

No national columnists are sitting though hearings, and no high profile reporters have been flown out to Halifax to hear testimony day after day. It has mostly been left to local and regional coverage.

But then came along the worst of all things to befall an investigation into the murder of 22 people involving a litany of police failures that might have otherwise saved lives, that scourge of all mass killings: political interference. And, in this case, the whiff of a Trudeau scandal.

Nova Scotia Supt. Darren Campbell gave a press conference the week after the killings where he was asked what type of guns the killer used. Campbell declined to answer, saying the investigation was ongoing. According to notes he took later that day, he was then taken to task by RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki.

“The Commissioner said she told Comms to tell us at H Division to include specific info about the firearms used by (the killer). … However I said we couldn’t because to do so would jeopardize ongoing efforts to advance the U.S. side of the case as well as the Canadian components of the investigation. Those are facts and I stand by them,” Campbell wrote, according to the independent local outlet the Halifax Examiner, which broke the story. ...

When you get to the bare bones of it, what’s being asked here is for a police force to be more transparent with the public. The reasons for it are maybe stupid and craven — gun control in this case would be no substitute for a police force with some basic competence, or even just regard for the public — but the general idea here is that the public should have more information. ...
Reading the latest stories, it’s easy to forget we’re talking about an inquiry into gross police incompetence that led to 22 people being killed. We’re supposed to trust the RCMP’s judgement on what the public should know? ...

One of the key failures of the RCMP during the mass shooting was its inability to communicate with the public. There was a killer on the loose, dressed as a Mountie in a replica police car, and at no point was the public warned on the province’s alert system. One woman was shot on the side of the road as she took a walk while the killer had been on the loose for hours.

At no point was the RCMP forthcoming with information after the killings, either. Last week, the CBC reported: “The RCMP intentionally held back key details — including the number of victims — and evaded questions officers knew the answers to in the early days following the Nova Scotia mass shooting in April 2020, a public inquiry into the tragedy has found.” 

Second, and more broadly, police hide information from the public all the time, claiming it might interfere with their investigations. This is typically just a useful dodge — for the police, to be clear — to keep information from the public when they’ve screwed up in some way. Police act on the unstated premise that the less the public knows, the better.

Taking police assertions at face value that naming the types of weapons the killer used would have jeopardized the investigation is almost impossible to believe. Particularly, as noted by the Examiner, because neither of the two men who got the killer his illegal weapons have yet to be charged with a crime.

The scandal at the root of the inquiry is the RCMP’s inability to first recognize the numerous warning signs the killer was about to go on a rampage, and then when it did start, not being able to stop him sooner or warn the public while he was on the loose. Whether the government pressured the Mounties to tell the public what kind of guns were used is essentially irrelevant in this scenario. 

Police are functionally unaccountable to the public, in part because politicians are too timid to put them in their place. Police forces have taken the idea that politicians should stay out of the justice system because it taints the law too far, and operate with contempt for the public, with impunity.

https://wm-so.glb.shawcable.net/zimbra/mail#2

epaulo13

Criminalize tactics of ‘coercive control’ of women used by N.S. mass killer: expert

An expert on gender-based violence is urging an inquiry into Nova Scotia’s mass shooting to recommend criminalizing isolation and intimidation tactics like those the killer used against women.

The method referred to as “coercive control” occurs over time and often involves abusers instilling fear in their partners, micromanaging their daily lives, taking power over finances and gradually isolating the partner from friends and family, according to definitions presented before the public inquiry.

“Coercive control effectively traps victims and removes their sense of individuality and freedom in the relationship,” says one definition prepared for the inquiry.

The killer’s 22 murders were preceded by a domestic assault against his spouse, Lisa Banfield, on April 18, 2020, and the inquiry has collected evidence indicating that he used the tactics of coercive control against her throughout their 19-year relationship, as well as against other women.

During a roundtable discussion on Wednesday, Carmen Gill, a sociology professor at the University of New Brunswick, told the three commissioners she favours a federal law prohibiting coercive control, as currently exists in the United Kingdom.

“For me, this form of violence is a crime. I cannot see someone terrorizing women for 15 years and that’s fine,” Gill said at the conclusion of a panel discussion......

laine lowe laine lowe's picture

Oh yes, coercive control is a crime. I have a friend that was my best friend when she was cut off from me and other friends and her family during a five-year relationship with a abusive man who never used his fists but emotionally beat her down, including threating to burn down her family's home should she ever cross him or contact them behind his back. Horrible stuff.

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