Blue Line News Week March 18, 2010

Ontario to unveil new Taser guidelines


TORONTO – Ontario is poised to revamp its guidelines on the use of stun guns by police, the Canadian Press has learned.

The changes are expected to be made public March 30, sources say, about two years after the governing Liberals launched a review of Taser use in the province.

Currently, only tactical officers and supervisors are allowed to carry Tasers in Ontario, but the government is being urged to make them available to all front-line police officers.

It’s among the recommendations made by the police standards advisory committee, a group of representatives from police groups and municipalities within the ministry tasked with providing advice to the government about the use of stun guns.

Ontario is already considered to be a Canadian leader in regulating the use of stun guns, said Larry Molyneaux, president of the Police Association of Ontario, which has a seat on the committee.

“What we’re doing is actually just tightening it up in relation to training and regulations,” he said.

Police organizations have long advocated for all uniformed police officers to be allowed to carry stun guns – otherwise known as conductive energy weapons – arguing they’re less lethal than guns and will save lives.

Uniformed police, rather than supervisors or tactical officers, are usually the first on the scene, Molyneaux said. In some rural areas of the province, it can take up to an hour to respond to a call.

“When you have a radio call and you’re involved in a situation where you might need that CEW at the very onset, you don’t have time to wait for somebody that carries one,” he said.

“So what we want is the first responding officer to have the option of using that CEW.”

Government officials wouldn’t comment on whether they plan to follow that advice, but hinted that drastic changes are not in the works.

“We have and will continue – notwithstanding the report – to have a very measured use of Tasers in the province of Ontario,” said Laura Blondeau, a spokeswoman for Community
Safety and Corrections Minister Rick Bartolucci.

Progressive Conservative critic Garfield Dunlop said he’s planning to re-introduce a resolution in the legislature demanding that all front-line officers carry Tasers.

“It will save lives,” he said.

“With people that are just being completely out of hand … where they have a case where they can put the person down and save his life as opposed to using a gun on him, then I think that it’s fully warranted and it’s fully acceptable to the general public as well.”

Tasers have become an increasingly common tool for police across Canada, leading some critics to question whether the rules governing their use are adequate.

Some complain that Tasers are being used by police to subdue unco-operative people even when they don’t pose a threat, while others maintain they’re a useful tool if officers are properly trained and held accountable.

In June 2008, a 36-year-old man died in Simcoe, Ont., after provincial police used a Taser. He collapsed upon arrival at the police detachment and died later in hospital.

Tasers have been in use in Ontario since 2002. Officers who carry them must undergo a two-day training course and follow guidelines that fall in line with the so-called “use of force” model that’s taught to all police personnel, according to the Ontario Provincial Police Association.

Under the province’s Police Services Act, any officer who uses a weapon other than a firearm on another person must report the incident to their police chief. Misuse of the weapon can result in criminal or police services charges, said Molyneaux.

The threshold is lower for using a Taser than a firearm, said association president Karl Walsh. A person must display “assaultive behaviour” before a Taser can be used.

Both federal and provincial governments are working on national standards for Taser use, but Ontario – which has its own police force, unlike some provinces which use the RCMP
- is planning to forge its own path.

Any federal model will likely mirror Ontario’s, because the province is “years ahead of everybody else,” said Walsh.

Ontario launched its Taser review after the 2007 death of Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski, which sparked a public inquiry in British Columbia.

Other provinces have also taken a second look at how they use stun guns, and the RCMP is planning a sweeping overhaul of its Taser policy.

At least 20 people in Canada are known to have died after being struck with a Taser.

Publishers Commentary

Morley Lymburner

Policing is the economic summit success story

I did not expect to write about the police handling of the economic summit. Upon viewing the event and listening over the months to all the preparations I was quite content that it was a textbook crowd control process, performed so well that nothing further needed to be said.

After talking to friends, family and other media people I realized that not everyone shares my opinion and are being fed considerable misinformation. So, here’s my opinion about that perfect storm and the perfect remedy supplied by a lot of dedicated people from

Blue Line Magazine

Quality of life

The quality of life, safety and security of Edmonton’s more than one million residents are the top priorities for the Edmonton Police Service (EPS). The latest example – an annual policing plan outlining policing priorities and performance targets developed last year saw crime decrease by more than two per cent, despite the slowing economy and other environmental factors.

The service continued to work towards its goal of reducing crime and victimization by responding to priority one calls within seven minutes, 90 per cent of the time; dedicating 25 per cent of patrol time to proactive activities; and working closely with community partners.


Judge didn’t believe officer, excluded evidence

Although the odour of raw marijuana may be sufficient to justify an arrest, if the judge doesn’t believe the officer smelled it the arrest is unlawful and the evidence may be thrown out.

In R. v. Noel, 2010 NBCA 28, a police officer, accompanied by a specially trained drug-sniffing dog, saw a vehicle traveling at a speed slightly in excess of the posted limit and decided to stop it and warn the driver. A license plate query indicated “no record found” and Noel, the lone occupant, was pulled over

Blue Line News Week

Officer missing in boating mishap in Yukon

Jul 15 2010

MAYO, Yn – Boat crews, aircraft and a dive team from the Yukon and British Columbia descended on a small village in the territory Wednesday to help in a desperate search for a missing rookie RCMP officer.