I don't imagine everyone was oblivious to what just transpired, especially after they were in-office laughing at the female officer and egging on the male officer (or which lead to him being egged on).
That's true. Maybe the officers did arrest her and try to lay a bunch of charges and some how that never made the news or is put in official records. In BC if the crown declines can police officers charge anyways? Or can they only lay charges if the crown agrees?
Fair enough, I'll stick with my where there's smoke there's fire observation.
Right. Maybe the RCMP officers tried to charge her for a bunch of criminal offences and for some reason the charges all got dropped.
Would that be a common occurrence in BC?
That's something I didn't take into consideration.
You're right I don't. I think they were fucking around in the office and when the female officer spazzed out they all found something else to do and didn't see nothing. I don't think they arrested her, took her gun away, or tried to charge her criminally. I also think if our friend Eaglelord17 did that with a pistol towards an RCMP officer the story would be much different. It's also another story painting RCMP officers as a bunch of frat boys.
I think you have an unrealistic expectation that the officers on scene would have been arresting her and writing up a charge package.
This would probably be immediately escalated to a supervisor, who would very quickly bring in their own chain of command. A professional standards unit would deal with the actual investigation.
An arrest in the moment would be
an option but would be legally unnecessary. In fact 495(2) C.C. would argue against if if the situation was already calmed back down by the time people realized just WTF was going on, and if all the things an arrest is intended to accomplish are satisfied. If, in these circumstances, the supervisor were to say “take off your belt, leave it with me, you’re done for the night, there’s going to be an investigation, now go home and wait for a call”, that would be unsurprising and would be an appropriate next step in this context.
I think - and I’m speculating - that something like this going down (and it sounds like it was over fast) would have initially been a really shocking “WTAF just happened?” and probably in the first moments resulted in some surprised and disbelieving reactions that would not seem appropriate or scaled to the event in hindsight. And I think that’s something most of us here can actually related to. Clearly this was then handled appropriately enough that the conduct process kicked off, and we don’t know if that took seconds, minutes, or days. I’d guess minutes.
There’s a lot of speculating going on here about a situation that was fast and that would have been shocking and exceptionally anomalous. Unless you imagine a colleague or subordinate doing this for real and you mentally rehearse your response, who the hell knows what your very first reactions the moment of will be?
IMO she got off very light. The ‘prosecution’ was seeking dismissal and I’d agree with that. Or at least “resign or be dismissed”.