Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Undercover Cops Had To Use Degrading Language During BC Investigation: Mountie

The Canadian Press , 20 Nov, 2014 11:13 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — When police launched an undercover investigation of a man suspected of bludgeoning his girlfriend to death with a hammer, officers were advised to use language that degraded women, a jury has heard.
     
    One of the officers who posed as a gangster during the investigation of Robert Balbar said officers also had to be racist in an attempt to gain the trust of a 42-year-old suspect.
     
    “In this undercover operation, I was playing a member of a criminal organization — somewhat of a professional criminal with a rougher edge,” said the RCMP officer, who cannot be named, before a B.C. Supreme Court jury heard a recording.
     
    Balbar is charged with second-degree murder in the 2003 death of Heather Hamill, his girlfriend of two years.
     
    The jury heard audio that was recorded in Vancouver on Dec. 6, 2007 — more than two months into the so-called Mr. Big sting targeting Balbar.
     
    He can be heard talking with the Mountie following a staged meeting in a hotel bar involving the supposed leader of a fictitious criminal organization.
     
    In the recording, Balbar was told that the purported crime boss would be looking into his past.
     
    The officer asked  if he would find anything that could put “heat” on the gang. Initially, Balbar said he was suspected of killing “a couple people" in Kamloops, B.C.
     
    "My girlfriend got whacked and a few other people got whacked and they’re trying to say it was me,” Balbar said.
     
    “Why didn’t you tell me about this before?” the undercover officer replied.
     
    “How many are we talking about?”
     
    “Maybe four guys, one girl,” Balbar replied. “They’re nobody,” the officer said.
     
    Balbar said he didn’t think he "had heat” on him. But he soon retreated from his claim about four men being killed and confessed to murdering Hamill.
     
    “She got whacked out and went nutty,” Balbar said. “So, I whacked her upside the head with a hammer.”
     
    “What’s the big deal about that?” the officer asked, dismissing the victim with a couple of vulgarities. The Mountie implied he had murdered multiple women.
     
    “You know how many people I’ve whacked?” he said, using an expletive. “You know how long I’ve been doing this?"
     
    "I know how to do it right," he said. Five days later, Balbar and the undercover officer were in Kamloops when they were pulled over by Mounties in a staged traffic stop.
     
    RCMP Cpl. Andre Mathieu approached Balbar and fingered him for Hamill’s death.
     
    “I know you killed her and I’ll be back for you, Mr. Balbar,” he said.
     
    The undercover Mountie then set in motion a plan for the supposed criminal organization to “clean up" after Balbar.
     
    The jury has already seen video of Balbar’s subsequent meeting with the crime boss, at which he confessed to killing Hamill with a hammer and dumping her body in the North Thompson River.
     
    Her body was discovered by a jogger at Indian Point on Aug. 1, 2003. She was last heard from on July 28 that year, when she spoke on the phone to her daughter.
     
    This is Balbar's second murder trial on the same case. (Kamloops this week)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Governor General mourns the loss of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at National War Memorial

    Governor General mourns the loss of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at National War Memorial
    OTTAWA - The governor general has paid his respects to Cpl. Nathan Cirillo, the soldier who was gunned down while on guard duty last week at the National War Memorial.

    Governor General mourns the loss of Cpl. Nathan Cirillo at National War Memorial

    Fires on Manitoba reserves 'high risk' but only $4M given out: internal document

    Fires on Manitoba reserves 'high risk' but only $4M given out: internal document
    WINNIPEG - An internal report from Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada estimates it will take a $28-million injection of federal funding to reduce the number of deadly fires on Manitoba reserves, but only a fraction of that amount has been approved.

    Fires on Manitoba reserves 'high risk' but only $4M given out: internal document

    Kuwait plays gracious but uneasy host as Canadian jets join anti-ISIL campaign

    Kuwait plays gracious but uneasy host as Canadian jets join anti-ISIL campaign
    KUWAIT CITY - Canadian warplanes have taken up position in Kuwait, a country straining in its own way to hold back the tide of Islamic extremism from its borders.

    Kuwait plays gracious but uneasy host as Canadian jets join anti-ISIL campaign

    Playing with fire: Manitoba reserves lag in firefighting capabilities

    Playing with fire: Manitoba reserves lag in firefighting capabilities
    WINNIPEG - Baby Errabella Harper was fast asleep in a three-bedroom house with no running water on St. Theresa Point First Nation when fire broke out.

    Playing with fire: Manitoba reserves lag in firefighting capabilities

    Jobs, not human rights, focus of Chinese trade mission: Couillard

    Jobs, not human rights, focus of Chinese trade mission: Couillard
    BEIJING — Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard says he didn't bring up the issue of human rights at all with his Chinese counterparts as a trade mission to that country wrapped up today.

    Jobs, not human rights, focus of Chinese trade mission: Couillard

    Ghomeshi vows to 'fight allegations' in Facebook post; won't talk to media

    Ghomeshi vows to 'fight allegations' in Facebook post; won't talk to media
    TORONTO — Jian Ghomeshi thanked his supporters Thursday and vowed to meet the allegations against him head-on, a pledge that came as a "Trailer Park Boys" actor became the first to go on the record with accusations the ousted CBC-Radio personality engaged in abusive behaviour.

    Ghomeshi vows to 'fight allegations' in Facebook post; won't talk to media