Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Chief to ask Crown if officers should face charges in Tina Fontaine probe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Oct, 2014 12:41 PM

    Winnipeg police Chief Devon Clunis said Friday he has received a report into the officers' actions on the day before Tina Fontaine vanished and it will be forwarded to a Crown attorney.

    "That file was handed to me just this week and probably within a short period of time, the file itself will be forwarded to the Crown for an opinion," Clunis said.

    He refused to elaborate on what kind of charges or other penalties the Crown might consider.

    "I think it's better to have an objective view rather than myself trying to affect the outcome in any way, shape or form."

    "In a case like this, if we did not move that forward to have an outside look at it ... we'd be scrutinized for not doing that, so we're taking every step to ensure there is open transparency related to any decision."

    Police have already confirmed that two officers, who have not been identified, came across Fontaine when they pulled over a vehicle on Aug. 8.

    Fontaine was in the care of family services and had run away. She had been reported missing more than a week earlier, but was not taken into custody at the traffic stop — an apparent contravention of police protocol for handling missing minors.

    It's not clear whether the officers knew Fontaine's identity at the time or whether they were made aware she had been reported missing via the police database.

    The officers were among the last people to see Fontaine alive. Her body was found in a bag in the Red River nine days later. No arrests have been made.

    The case has renewed calls for a national inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Fontaine had spent much of her life with her great-aunt, Thelma Favel, on the Sagkeeng First Nation, 75 kilometres northeast of Winnipeg. The girl had a history of running away and went to Winnipeg about a month before her death to visit her biological mother.

    Favel has said social workers told her that on the night of Aug. 8 — a few hours after police came across Fontaine — the girl was found passed out in an alley downtown and paramedics took her to a nearby hospital.

    Social workers picked her up from the hospital, but she ran away again and disappeared a final time, Favel said.

    Child and Family Services has launched an internal investigation into the case as well. The Manitoba government and the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority have not confirmed or denied Favel's statements, citing privacy laws and the police investigation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan To Focus On Trade With Asia: Report

    Saskatchewan To Focus On Trade With Asia: Report
    REGINA - Premier Brad Wall says Saskatchewan is looking to triple its exports to Asia by 2020 to keep in line with a report's recommendations.

    Saskatchewan To Focus On Trade With Asia: Report

    BC Man Who Got Grouchy With Police Sentenced To Jail For Stealing Booze

    BC Man Who Got Grouchy With Police Sentenced To Jail For Stealing Booze
    A provincial court in Kamloops, B.C., has heard that a man who called a police officer a pig after being arrested was Grouchy.

    BC Man Who Got Grouchy With Police Sentenced To Jail For Stealing Booze

    Alberta ranchers to conserve huge tract of native grassland

    Alberta ranchers to conserve huge tract of native grassland
    CALGARY - Southern Alberta ranchers are banding together to preserve a huge swath of native grassland almost untouched by development.

    Alberta ranchers to conserve huge tract of native grassland

    Fire burns down former "Corner Gas" building in Rouleau, Sask.

    Fire burns down former
    ROULEAU, Sask. - A building made famous by the hit television series "Corner Gas" about small-town Saskatchewan life has burned to the ground.

    Fire burns down former "Corner Gas" building in Rouleau, Sask.

    Head of aboriginal women's group stepping down to seek Liberal nomination

    Head of aboriginal women's group stepping down to seek Liberal nomination
    OTTAWA - The president of the Native Women's Association of Canada will relinquish her post later this year as she seeks to run for the federal Liberals in the next election.

    Head of aboriginal women's group stepping down to seek Liberal nomination

    Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates

    Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates
    GATINEAU, Que. - Introducing a new national wireless carrier in Canada would result in lower consumer prices, but regulators need to do more than simply cap wholesale roaming rates to make that happen, the competition watchdog has told the country's telecom regulator.

    Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates