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Police Folk Allegedly Behaving Badly

Hoo boy...


More than 600 RCMP officers faced gender-based violence disciplinary charges since 2014, CBC analysis finds.

Researcher calls findings the 'tip of the iceberg'

This woman was asked by the RCMP to testify against her former husband, an RCMP officer, when he faced disciplinary allegations including domestic violence and sexual assault. CBC agreed not to name her because she fears telling her story could put her in danger.

The screams were so loud that neighbours across the street in this quiet, prairie community called 911.

Within minutes, RCMP officers from the local detachment responded. Inside the house, a woman was crying. So were the kids.

And the officers found themselves investigating one of their own.

"He was screaming and yelling," said the now ex-wife of the RCMP constable — the one the officers were investigating that night. "I was shaking. I was scared."

CBC has agreed not to name the woman because she fears telling her story could put her in danger.


 
Ontario's cop IG: time to look at everyone - all 45 police services in Ontario, that is.

Late add: here's the info-machine's news release (text also attached if link doesn't work):
 

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Hoo boy...


More than 600 RCMP officers faced gender-based violence disciplinary charges since 2014, CBC analysis finds.

Researcher calls findings the 'tip of the iceberg'

This woman was asked by the RCMP to testify against her former husband, an RCMP officer, when he faced disciplinary allegations including domestic violence and sexual assault. CBC agreed not to name her because she fears telling her story could put her in danger.

The screams were so loud that neighbours across the street in this quiet, prairie community called 911.

Within minutes, RCMP officers from the local detachment responded. Inside the house, a woman was crying. So were the kids.

And the officers found themselves investigating one of their own.

"He was screaming and yelling," said the now ex-wife of the RCMP constable — the one the officers were investigating that night. "I was shaking. I was scared."

CBC has agreed not to name the woman because she fears telling her story could put her in danger.


Napkin math puts that at about 60 allegations a year, maybe half or so established, across a force of 19,000 or so. Per the article it covers a pretty broad spectrum of misconduct, which could probably be pretty fairly equated with everything CAF would call “harmful and inappropriate sexual behaviour”.

One is too many, obviously. In terms of comparability, does anyone have similar numbers for CAF, or for other large professions or segments of society? I always wonder about a top line number that’s stripped of meaningful comparison. If half of these allegations are factual - the ‘conviction’ rate reported is lower, but I’ll assume, reasonably I think, that a lot of those who resign in the face of a conduct allegation in fact ‘did the thing’ - that works about to about 0.15% of RCMP members per year. That lands a bit differently from ‘over 600’.

It would be nice if the different types of captured behaviour were broken down by quantity, not just by what percentage resulted in convictions per category. An inappropriate joke or comment that results in a conduct process is distinct from an act or physical violence, or alternatively from looking at porn at work. More granularity there would be useful. I also wish this had been cross tabulated with criminal charges arising out of the same events; normally police conduct matters pause until criminal prosecutions conclude, so this data should be recordable and obtainable.

It’s good to see that their conduct approach in the past few years has been changed to go after this behaviour more forcefully and to (rebuttably) presume dismissal for more serious misconduct of this sort. Unfortunately our profession will never fully rid itself of this behaviour, because cops are humans and some humans suck- but we should be markedly better than a comparable cross section of society.
 
The CAF does not release information about summary proceedings; the RCMP transparency is very welcome and a sign of an organization that wants to improve.
 
Ontario's cop IG: time to look at everyone - all 45 police services in Ontario, that is.

Late add: here's the info-machine's news release (text also attached if link doesn't work):

You know maybe he has a point?

We should start charging a toll for travel through Canada to get to Alaska by land and Point Roberts, because "what does Canada get".
This will be the first big test of the new role of Inspector General. Depending on what third party he picks to conduct the probe, it can result is something workable - or not.
 
Ontario's cop IG: time to look at everyone - all 45 police services in Ontario, that is.

Late add: here's the info-machine's news release (text also attached if link doesn't work):

Pfft…those are rookie numbers.

Meanwhile, the criminal gangs known as ICE and CBP…


Criminality is so rampant inside CBP that it has seen one of its own agents or officers arrested every 24 to 36 hours since 2005. CBP’s misconduct scandal is so long-running that today it would be old enough to drink.

In total, according to CBP’s own discipline reports, over the 20 years from 2005 to 2024 — the last year numbers are available — at least 4,913 CBP officers and Border Patrol agents have been arrested themselves, some multiple times. (In 2018 alone, a single CBP employee was arrested five times.) To put that number in perspective:

The population of CBP agents and officers who have been arrested would make it roughly the nation’s fourth largest police department — equal to the size of the entire Philadelphia police.

• Indeed, for much of the 2010s and likely before and since, it appears the crime rate of CBP agents and offices was higher PER CAPITA than the crime rate of undocumented immigrants in the United States.

So it would appear that poor screening and rushed training are not the only reasons for the unprofessional thuggery We’re seeing down there …
 
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