Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

RCMP Officer Was Not Overly Stressed By Dziekanski Case: Former Supervisor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Nov, 2018 12:43 PM
    BURNABY, B.C. — The supervisor of an RCMP officer who took his own life in 2013 says Pierre Lemaitre didn't seem overly stressed about misinformation he gave the media after the death of a man following a confrontation with police at Vancouver's airport.
     
     
    John Ward, a retired staff sergeant, told a coroner's inquest today that part of the job of a communications officer is to trust that the information going out to the media is largely correct.
     
     
    He says the RCMP's media relations unit is always aware that any information given out may affect future court cases.
     
     
    Coroner's inquests are held to hear evidence on recommendations that could be made to prevent similar deaths in the future and do not make findings of blame.
     
     
    Lemaitre's former family doctor and psychologist have told the inquest that he had post-traumatic stress disorder from dealing with victims of crime but the incident in 2007 with Robert Dziekanski at Vancouver International Airport increased his depression and anxiety.
     
     
    A former media strategist for the Mounties accused the department of betraying Lemaitre, testifying that he had been "hung out to dry" by his superiors. Atoya Montague said Lemaitre was used to tell a false story about the death of Dziekanski, a Polish man who couldn't speak English and became agitated after wandering around the airport arrivals area for 10 hours.
     
     
    Montague said Lemaitre became a scapegoat for the Mounties after two decades of building his reputation and rising to the rank of sergeant. She said Lemaitre was told the inaccurate information he provided to the media about the Dziekanski case would not be corrected.
     
     
    After the incident at the airport, Lemaitre told reporters officers approached a combative man and jolted him twice with a Taser. But two days later he watched a video from a witness that showed Dziekanski was relatively calm when the Mounties arrived and that they used the stun gun five times.
     
     
    Dr. Cameron Smith said Lemaitre was prescribed antidepressants and anxiety medication but he was not suicidal. He described Lemaitre as a stoic man whose mental health issues began improving, only to worsen after Dziekanski's death.
     
     
    His wife testified that Lemaitre was never the same after the incident with Dziekanski. Sheila Lemaitre told the inquest jury her husband was transferred from the case after two days and was eventually moved to the traffic department, which she said he compared to "being put out with the trash."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman Charged After Racial Slurs Hurled At Indian-Origin Man Following Edmonton Parking Dispute

    Woman Charged After Racial Slurs Hurled At Indian-Origin Man Following Edmonton Parking Dispute
    A 44-year-old Edmonton woman who was captured on camera shouting racist slurs and mocking an Indian-origin man’s accent over a parking dispute has been now charged.

    Woman Charged After Racial Slurs Hurled At Indian-Origin Man Following Edmonton Parking Dispute

    Alberta City's Cartoon Cannabis Spokesman Up In Smoke After Parental Backlash

    Alberta City's Cartoon Cannabis Spokesman Up In Smoke After Parental Backlash
    The official cartoon cannabis spokesman for the City of Leduc, just south of Edmonton, only lasted about a week before the administration decided to roll him on to the shelf. 

    Alberta City's Cartoon Cannabis Spokesman Up In Smoke After Parental Backlash

    Air Canada Pilots Say Near Collision Should Prompt Ottawa To Address Pilot Fatigue

    Air Canada Pilots Say Near Collision Should Prompt Ottawa To Address Pilot Fatigue
    TORONTO — The union representing Air Canada pilots says a near-collision at San Francisco's airport involving one of the airline's jets should be a wake-up call for the federal government to properly address pilot fatigue for overnight flights.

    Air Canada Pilots Say Near Collision Should Prompt Ottawa To Address Pilot Fatigue

    Hairy Mission: Canadian Military Eases Restrictions On Beards In Uniform

    Hairy Mission: Canadian Military Eases Restrictions On Beards In Uniform
    OTTAWA — While the Canadian Armed Forces has been in a lot of hairy situations over the years, it's taking that notion in a different direction by officially easing its restrictions on beards while in uniform.

    Hairy Mission: Canadian Military Eases Restrictions On Beards In Uniform

    Dad Furious, Pm Rapped Over Transfer Of Girl's Killer To Healing Lodge

    Dad Furious, Pm Rapped Over Transfer Of Girl's Killer To Healing Lodge
    TORONTO — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale has asked correctional officials to review the transfer of a woman convicted of killing an eight-year-old girl from prison to a healing lodge.

    Dad Furious, Pm Rapped Over Transfer Of Girl's Killer To Healing Lodge

    Vancouver Police Mull Updates To Street Checks But Find No Systemic Racism

    Vancouver Police Mull Updates To Street Checks But Find No Systemic Racism
    An internal report from the Vancouver Police Department recommends an overhaul of the use of random street checks, even though the review finds "no statistical basis" to conclude officers use the checks to discriminate against certain races.

    Vancouver Police Mull Updates To Street Checks But Find No Systemic Racism