Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

RCMP Blasts Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum For Using Fatal Shooting Of 22-Yr-Old To Make Political Point

Darpan News Desk, 09 Nov, 2018 09:46 PM
    RCMP Deputy Commissioner Brenda Butterworth-Carr, Commanding Officer of the BC RCMP, is criticizing Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum’s media release on Friday’s deadly shooting in the 14200-block of 70A Avenue in Surrey.
     
     
    “(The) tragic shooting outside of a home in Newton is yet another example of the ongoing trauma and fear that are being inflicted on the communities, residents and families of Surrey,” wrote Mayor Doug McCallum in a statement following the killing of a 22-year-old man early Friday morning.
     
     
    McCallum also said that “This latest incident of deadly gun violence further emphasizes the need for the City of Surrey to have its own city police force.”
     
     
    Butterworth-Carr said in a statement Friday afternoon that with a “homicide of this nature” people are already reluctant to come forward. 
     
     
    She went on to state that the Surrey RCMP and Lower Mainland integrated police teams remain responsible for and committed to ensuring public safety.
     
     
    “Until Surrey RCMP is no longer the contracted police service, our employees must be allowed to and will continue to police safely and effectively. I will not allow public confidence in policing to be undermined or eroded,” she wrote.
     
     
     
    Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth also responded to McCallum’s statement on Friday.
     
     
    “No one is putting up any roadblocks,” said Farnworth. “We are prepared to work with the mayor. He has to be willing to work, too. A new police force isn’t created over the weekend, but the province is committed to working with the city as they move forward.”
     
     
     
     
    READ DEPUTY COMMISSIONER BRENDA BUTTERWORTH-CARR FULL STATEMENT
     
     
    Earlier today, the Surrey Mayor issued a statement about a homicide in the 14200 block of 70A Avenue that occurred at 1:30 AM today.
     
     
    The homicide is believed to be a targeted event and while the exact motive is still being determined, our investigators say the victim is associated to the region-wide Lower Mainland gang conflict. As citizens in the region – I am one too – we are alarmed when there is gang violence on our streets. It erodes our sense of safety and our feeling of community.
     
     
    The fact that a 22-year-old man has been murdered is terrible. I feel for the family and for the residents of the Newton neighbourhood in which this incident took place. Right now, the Surrey RCMP and the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) are focussed on finding out who murdered this young man.
     
     
     
     
     
    Statements like this risk undermining public trust and confidence in policing. With a homicide of this nature, people are already reluctant to come forward. Any erosion of public trust and confidence challenges our ability to solve complex cases with assistance from people who are often reluctant to participate in the first place. This concern is not unique to any one police force.
     
     
    The Surrey RCMP includes the expertise of several Lower Mainland Integrated Teams including the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT), Emergency Response Team (ERT), Integrated Forensic Identification Services (IFIS), Integrated Police Dog Services (IPDS), Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit (CFSEU) and the Integrated Collision Analysis Reconstruction Services (ICARS). These all provide crucial services to the nearly two million people the RCMP serves in the Lower Mainland.
     
     
    As the Commanding Officer of the BC RCMP, I want the public to know that the Surrey RCMP and the Integrated Teams, made up of officers from the RCMP and independent municipal police departments, will continue to work diligently to maintain public safety.
     
     
    Until Surrey RCMP is no longer the contracted police service, our employees must be allowed to and will continue to police safely and effectively. I will not allow public confidence in policing to be undermined or eroded. I wish to assure all those engaged in delivering police services to Surrey that they have my utmost trust and confidence.
     
     
     
    Deputy Commissioner Brenda Butterworth-Carr
     
    Commanding Officer of the BC RCMP

    MORE National ARTICLES

    NDP Veterans In Saskatchewan Challenge Jagmeet Singh Over Ban On Erin Weir Candidacy

    OTTAWA — Jagmeet Singh won't allow scorned MP Erin Weir to run as a New Democrat in the next election — a decision that has caused a rupture between the NDP leader and the party's long-standing members in Saskatchewan.

    NDP Veterans In Saskatchewan Challenge Jagmeet Singh Over Ban On Erin Weir Candidacy

    Policy Barring Non-Permanent Families From Canada Child Benefit Unfair: Report

    Policy Barring Non-Permanent Families From Canada Child Benefit Unfair: Report
    Non-permanent resident families living in Canada, including irregular migrants, are prevented from receiving the Canada Child Benefit — a policy that poverty advocates say is discriminatory should be changed.

    Policy Barring Non-Permanent Families From Canada Child Benefit Unfair: Report

    Drake Fans Demand Refund After Rapper Skips TIFF Premiere

    Drake Fans Demand Refund After Rapper Skips TIFF Premiere
    TORONTO — Some film and music fans are demanding answers and refunds from the Toronto International Film Festival after Drake failed to appear at an opening-night screening.

    Drake Fans Demand Refund After Rapper Skips TIFF Premiere

    Schizophrenic Man Accused Of Stabbing Abbotsford Teen Says He Hears Voices 'Every Hour Of The Day'

    Schizophrenic Man Accused Of Stabbing Abbotsford Teen Says He Hears Voices 'Every Hour Of The Day'
    Gabriel Klein, 22, mumbled short answers to questions during a review board hearing Thursday at a forensic psychiatric hospital to determine his mental fitness to stand trial.

    Schizophrenic Man Accused Of Stabbing Abbotsford Teen Says He Hears Voices 'Every Hour Of The Day'

    Wild Eagle Strikes A Pose After Landing On Amateur Kelowna Fishermen's Boat

    Wild Eagle Strikes A Pose After Landing On Amateur Kelowna Fishermen's Boat
    Derril McKenzie, a millwright from Kelowna, B.C., smiles into the camera, leaning in to get both the eagle and himself into the shot, seemingly unfazed.

    Wild Eagle Strikes A Pose After Landing On Amateur Kelowna Fishermen's Boat

    Walmart Closes Shop In Surrey, BC As Fraser Health Digs Into Legionnaires' Disease Source

    Walmart Canada says it has closed one of its stores in Surrey, B.C., out of "an abundance of caution" following a small outbreak of legionnaires' disease.

    Walmart Closes Shop In Surrey, BC As Fraser Health Digs Into Legionnaires' Disease Source