NP Rank:
RCMP admits mishandling Taser reports
The RCMP commissioner admits they could have done a better job in passing along Taser report information to the press.
RCMP Commissioner William Elliott admitted Tuesday that mistakes were made in handling — and keeping secret — reports about Taser use by the force.
"Frankly, we didn't handle this very well," Elliott said Tuesday during a speech in Gatineau, Que.
"We should not have needed two kicks at the can. We must learn from that, and do better."
Elliott was responding to criticism in late March of how the force released more than 4,000 Taser reports. The documents were released to both CBC News and The Canadian Press, but were mostly blank.
The RCMP then spent two weeks reviewing whether they could release further details.
A second release was made on Monday, but those documents, too, were heavily censored, making it impossible to determine if RCMP members are using the stun gun appropriately.
Elliott said the RCMP has been forced to make tough choices.
"Our motivation is not to avoid criticism or controversy by exercising our discretion one way or the other, but to strike an appropriate balance between sometimes competing interests like privacy and the public's right to know," he said Tuesday.
"I believe we need to do a better job in assessing and factoring in the public interest."
But Elliott said some information about Taser use cannot be made public. And he noted the Commission for Public Complaints Against the RCMP has access to full versions of all of the force's Taser reports.
Tasers were introduced into the RCMP in 2001 and police use of them has increased sharply since then. More than 2,800 devices have now become available to more than 9,100 RCMP officers across the country.
According to Taser-use report forms, Taser use has more than doubled in the last two years, with British Columbia and Manitoba experiencing the heaviest use.
News Tools
April 15, 2008 at 10:21 pm by Rob Peters, 279 views, 1 comment





Add a comment
Comments (1)
at 03:16 on April 16th, 2008
Canadian law may be different from U.S. law; however, I wonder what place "privacy" has regarding the use of a weapon that too often results in permanent injury to and deaths of citizens. Unfortunately, this weapon which is supposed to offer police a non-lethal way to arrest citizens and control unruly inmates too often results in death by electrocution. The use of Tasers is very expensive to taxpayers as their deadly use has resulted in a good many wrongful death suits against police departments and cities in the U.S. And that is without counting the deaths that were ruled not to be caused by the Taser, merely because the people died after being Tasered of a "pre-existing condition." Imagine having an already weak heart and then being hit with a jolt of electricity! Regrettably, Taser guns are used to control erratic behavior of mentally ill citizens during and after arrests. The Taser guns and restraint chairs are instruments of torture and both should be banned.
Great story! Thanks for the information.
Mary Neal
Assistance to the Incarcerated Mentally Ill
web: http://wrongfuldeathoflarryneal.com