Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Cops Trying To Save Lives With CPR Or Naloxone Won't Be Investigated: Watchdog

The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2016 02:41 PM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's police watchdog will no longer investigate police officers who have provided life-saving measures resulting in someone's death.
     
    The Independent Investigations Office says that while it is tasked with investigating in-custody deaths, officers who use CPR or the overdose-reversing drug naloxone to save someone's life will not be subjected to an investigation.
     
    Spokesman Marten Youssef says the change was brought in on Friday, a week after an overdose victim died in Surrey while an RCMP officer was administering naloxone.
     
     
    He says the investigations office was notified by police departments 11 times last August after people died while officers using CPR tried to save them.
     
    Youssef says all the cases were investigated, but it was clear that none of the officers involved had done anything wrong.
     
    He says some police departments have been reluctant to provide officers with naloxone because of concerns over investigations if someone dies, but that will no longer happen.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Marc Garneau Says Ottawa Will Require Video And Voice Recorders On Trains

    Marc Garneau Says Ottawa Will Require Video And Voice Recorders On Trains
    Marc Garneau says they will be used to investigate accidents such as the train derailment that killed 47 people in the Quebec town of Lac-Megantic in 2013.

    Marc Garneau Says Ottawa Will Require Video And Voice Recorders On Trains

    Kinder Morgan Canada President Doesn't Know If Humans Causing Climate Change

    VANCOUVER — Kinder Morgan Canada president Ian Anderson says he's read the science on both sides and doesn't know whether humans are contributing to climate change.

    Kinder Morgan Canada President Doesn't Know If Humans Causing Climate Change

    Federal Government Aims To Lower Airfares By Bolstering Competition

    Federal Government Aims To Lower Airfares By Bolstering Competition
    MONTREAL — The federal government plans to raise the cap on foreign ownership of Canadian airlines and adopt a passenger bill of rights in a bid to drive down fares and protect travellers faced with airline delays.

    Federal Government Aims To Lower Airfares By Bolstering Competition

    Home Sales In Greater Toronto Area Smash Record, Even As Prices Soar

    Home Sales In Greater Toronto Area Smash Record, Even As Prices Soar
    TORONTO — Home sales in the Greater Toronto Area hit a record high last month even as prices continued to soar, the Toronto Real Estate Board said Thursday.

    Home Sales In Greater Toronto Area Smash Record, Even As Prices Soar

    N.L. Man Who Watched His Father Murder His Mother Wants Stiffer Sentences

    N.L. Man Who Watched His Father Murder His Mother Wants Stiffer Sentences
    Daniel Benoit, 22, said he wants to start a national conversation about murder sentences and Canada's justice system in general, which he says lets convicted murderers off too easily.

    N.L. Man Who Watched His Father Murder His Mother Wants Stiffer Sentences

    Home School Shut Down Amid Allegations Of Misspending Takes Alberta To Court

    Home School Shut Down Amid Allegations Of Misspending Takes Alberta To Court
    Trinity Christian School Association and the Wisdom Home Schooling Society say in a court application that they have done nothing wrong.

    Home School Shut Down Amid Allegations Of Misspending Takes Alberta To Court