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The RCMP will make public a summary of reviews into police actions during the Oct. 22 attack on Parliament Hill, Assistant Commissioner Gilles Michaud said Saturday.
The report will cover separate reviews by the Ontario Provincial Police of the RCMP and Hill security response inside and outside Parliament, as well as a broader, inter-agency review prepared by the several security services involved after ISIL sympathizer Michael Zehaf-Bibeau killed a soldier at the National War Memorial and stormed Centre Block.
Michaud said in an interview that the report will not disclose information that could reveal possible security vulnerabilities or actions being taken to remedy them.
However, “We’re hoping that we’ll be able to provide as much detail as possible because we do want to inform the public as much as we can as to what transpired,” he said.
The force hopes to have the summary ready for release by June 6, he said.
The OPP reports were delivered to Parliament and the RCMP in early April and are known to conclude that RCMP and Hill security officers were justified in using lethal force to stop Zehaf-Bibeau in an attack that brought him within steps of meeting rooms holding Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other MPs.
Michaud described the third report as “basically an after-action review of how the RCMP with its partners responded to the event.” Among the other agencies that contributed is the Ottawa Police Service, which this week provided some details from its own internal review, including a call for better internal and external communications in a major emergency.
The assistant commissioner said some of the findings of the reviews before the RCMP “are in line” with what the Ottawa police learned about the confusion of a surprise attack.
Michaud would not comment on a CTV News report that suggested the RCMP made “serious mistakes” on Oct. 22. The report, based on unnamed sources, said one officer ran away from the scene and another was sending a text message and didn’t see the gunman pass in a commandeered car.
In a message to employees of the RCMP National Division, however, Michaud referred to “false media reports” that he said contained “erroneous facts which stray far from the truth.” He said the summary of reviews into police actions will shed light on what happened and on “the courageous and dedicated actions of our members.”
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rbostelaar@ottawacitizen.com
twitter.com/robt_bostelaar
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The report will cover separate reviews by the Ontario Provincial Police of the RCMP and Hill security response inside and outside Parliament, as well as a broader, inter-agency review prepared by the several security services involved after ISIL sympathizer Michael Zehaf-Bibeau killed a soldier at the National War Memorial and stormed Centre Block.
Michaud said in an interview that the report will not disclose information that could reveal possible security vulnerabilities or actions being taken to remedy them.
However, “We’re hoping that we’ll be able to provide as much detail as possible because we do want to inform the public as much as we can as to what transpired,” he said.
The force hopes to have the summary ready for release by June 6, he said.
The OPP reports were delivered to Parliament and the RCMP in early April and are known to conclude that RCMP and Hill security officers were justified in using lethal force to stop Zehaf-Bibeau in an attack that brought him within steps of meeting rooms holding Prime Minister Stephen Harper and other MPs.
Michaud described the third report as “basically an after-action review of how the RCMP with its partners responded to the event.” Among the other agencies that contributed is the Ottawa Police Service, which this week provided some details from its own internal review, including a call for better internal and external communications in a major emergency.
The assistant commissioner said some of the findings of the reviews before the RCMP “are in line” with what the Ottawa police learned about the confusion of a surprise attack.
Michaud would not comment on a CTV News report that suggested the RCMP made “serious mistakes” on Oct. 22. The report, based on unnamed sources, said one officer ran away from the scene and another was sending a text message and didn’t see the gunman pass in a commandeered car.
In a message to employees of the RCMP National Division, however, Michaud referred to “false media reports” that he said contained “erroneous facts which stray far from the truth.” He said the summary of reviews into police actions will shed light on what happened and on “the courageous and dedicated actions of our members.”
Related
- Editorial: What the Michael Zehaf-Bibeau video tells us
- Sentries back on guard, and under guard, at National War Memorial
- NDP decries release of gunman's video just ahead of anti-terror hearings
rbostelaar@ottawacitizen.com
twitter.com/robt_bostelaar
查看原文...