Pubdate: Tue, 08 Jul 2003 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Petti Fong RCMP TO PROBE COMPLAINTS AGAINST VANCOUVER POLICE The RCMP are investigating 57 complaints of misconduct and abuse by Vancouver police officers operating in the Downtown Eastside. Police complaint commissioner Dirk Ryneveld requested an independent investigation by the RCMP rather than have the complaints investigated by the Vancouver force's own internal affairs department. "An external investigation is necessary in the public interest and necessary in order to preserve public confidence in the complaint process," Ryneveld said Monday. Ryneveld said the RCMP is the only entity in the province large enough to look into the complaints against the 1,100-member Vancouver force. "When you get a bundle of complaints that includes over 50 complaint forms, you need a force large enough to do a thorough, comprehensive job," Ryneveld said. The investigation is a victory for the Pivot Legal Society, which has been at loggerheads with the Vancouver police department over its treatment of people in the Downtown Eastside and gathered affidavits from complainants. A recent three-month crackdown on drug dealers in the area of Main and Hastings also created more tensions between the force and the legal society, an organization of lawyers and activists. The group's executive director, John Richardson said the complaints include allegations of torture, illegal searches and seizures, use of excessive force, and so-called starlight tours in which officers drive people out of the Downtown Eastside to beaches and other locations and dump them there. "Ideally, we would like non-police officers doing the investigation," Richardson said Monday. "In the current context, we believe the RCMP are detached enough that we can have a fair and objective investigation." Some of the complaints will be nearly two years old by the time the RCMP finish their investigation, a lag time which could pose problems, Richardson said. "Witnesses have become more difficult to locate, memories fail, but it shouldn't pose a barrier to the investigation. There is no limitation for criminal behaviour." Pivot originally refused to release the names of complainants because of concerns the Vancouver force would use the information improperly and fail to investigate properly. Last month, after filing a complaint with the police complaint commissioner, Pivot re-released its report with signed affidavits naming individual complainants. The complainants include Eric Amos, who alleges he was assaulted; Jose Cardona, who alleges he was kneed in the groin; Rob Weppler, who alleges he was threatened and harassed, and Jill Weiss, a YWCA Women of Distinction Award winner who alleges she witnessed police beating an unarmed man. The society has been calling on the police complaint commissioner to ask the provincial government for a public inquiry into what it calls systemic abuse by the Vancouver police department. Vancouver police chief Jamie Graham said the department wants a thorough and fair investigation. The force's own internal affairs unit was unable to investigate the complaints properly, according to Graham, because the Pivot Society refused to release the complaint forms with names attached when it first came out last fall. "I recognize many... of these people are poor and disadvantaged and may be fearful of public scrutiny," Graham said. "My view has been we can't respond and it was unfair to respond when you don't know who you're responding to." Graham said the department will cooperate fully with RCMP investigators. "While I'm very confident of the Vancouver police department's ability to conduct internal investigation, in unique and appropriate cases, the public interest would be enhanced by this arm's-length investigation to make sure justice is done." In an internal e-mail sent to staff two weeks ago, Graham admitted the department has been "under the gun" of late. Graham discussed with staff a wide range of issues, including a fatal car crash involving a police cruiser and the exodus of senior officers. On Monday, Graham said it was unfair to question him, the boss, about morale in the department. "I'm stopped continually by members in the street, on the elevator. We enjoy overwhelming support," he said. "We continue to attract record numbers of recruits. I stand by this organization. We're a quality group." Inspector Ron Rothwell, who is in charge of the VPD's internal investigation unit, said the sheer size of the force means internal investigators are capable of handling complaints. "In smaller organizations, people know each other so well, they may be more inclined to have an outside department investigate. But we investigate officers we've never met. No investigator in this office is put in a position of investigating someone they have a close friendship or a connection with," he said. RCMP spokesman Sergeant Grant Learned said as soon as all the affidavits from Pivot are received, Deputy Commissioner Bev Busson will consult with senior investigators on how to proceed. There is no way of knowing how long the investigation will take, Learned said. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart