Bugfatty300
Buddha Squirrel
Ban something that's already banned. Truly a controversial and bold move by Trudeau.
Ban something that's already banned. Truly a controversial and bold move by Trudeau.
I wonder if the Truro Police were informed. They might've set up roadblocks on the bridges. Park Street already has a gate because the road floods out at least once a year and idiots kept trying to cross it anyways (even moving barricades so they can get through).
Macleans article said:It is not clear why the RCMP didn’t ask the Truro and Amherst police to set up roadblocks to prevent the killer from leaving the area. Roadblocks at the entrances to Highway 102, which leads to the killer’s Dartmouth home, could easily have been blocked by Truro police, closing a natural chokepoint where the Bay of Fundy divides the province.
“The Truro Police cannot comment on what the RCMP did or did not do,” said Gallant. “The Truro police was not asked to set up roadblocks or a perimetre for containment.”
The Truro Police only became aware that the killer had driven through Truro “when the RCMP released the video showing the vehicle driving through town [approximately a week later].”
Nice coordination there. Is there a provincial police force in Nova Scotia, or just the federals and the locals?
Three years ago, Gregory and Parker raised the issue with their fellow councillors. They knew that the current contract worth almost $6 million per year with the RCMP would be expiring within a year and they were looking for alternatives.
In January, the nearby Truro municipal force was asked to put in a proposal to police the entire county. Within a month of being asked, the Truro police made a proposal which included 24-hour policing, staffed sub-detachments, and more police on the ground — for less money.
The RCMP was asked to make a similar proposal, but hasn’t yet. A potentially complication is that the new RCMP union will come into being in the near future.
“When the time comes, I just want to be able to compare apples to apples,” Parker said.
“But the Department of Justice was supposed to come back to us with their model in March or April. Now they are telling us its going to be another 20 weeks. We need to know as soon as possible. The RCMP right now is 90th on pay scales in Canada for police. With the union, we can expect they are going to want a raise and we can’t afford $7 million or $8 million dollars.”
Nova Scotia Justice Minister Mark Furey says some kind of public inquiry, review or commission will be held into the mass killing of 22 people in April, and he's hoping those proceedings will start in the near future.
But exactly what form that probe will take and who will lead it are still up in the air.
Two families of victims of the Nova Scotia mass shooting are launching a proposed class-action lawsuit against the RCMP that questions not just how the force handled the rampage, but its actions in the weeks that followed.
The lawsuit covers a range of criticisms previously raised about the tragedy, including police communication. But it also questions staffing levels, notification of families and alleges a vehicle seized as evidence was later released to a family with human remains still inside.
Also the shooter smuggled drugs and guns from the U.S. and apparently the RCMP knew about this enough to mention it when requesting a warrant to search his property. This is...raising questions
There are rumours that he may have been a police informant (he picked up a lot of money from Brinks just beforehand, which is apparently how informants are paid?). Also the guy had family who was RCMP and got parts of his outfit from a family member (which is actually against their rules, they're supposed to return the uniforms).