MWCI: Bond says June 30 deadline is firm
January 30, 2012 in Opinion
According to a CKNW report today, Attorney General Shirley Bond has said that there will be no further time extension granted to the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry, meaning its report must be delivered to the provincial government by June 30, 2011. She apparently cites the Commission’s $3 million cost as the reason for the deadline.
This news is very concerning for the families of the murdered women. Many of them were denied the closure of a criminal trial when a former Attorney General said it would not be in the public interest to proceed with twenty first degree murder charges against Robert William Pickton. They waited almost a decade for a public inquiry to be held into the police and Crown actions and expected it to be a thorough, independent and transparent public proceeding. Now, as it becomes increasingly evident that the RCMP and VPD have withheld important documents from the Commission, as the families’ application for more witnesses has not yet been determined, and as individual police officers have sent over a dozen new lawyers into the hearings halfway through, the families are questioning the validity of the exercise.
Although the Commission was established on September 29, 2010, it inexplicably did not start its evidentiary hearings until October 11, 2011. Peel Regional Deputy Chief Jennifer Evans, who prepared a report for the Commission, has testified that document disclosure to her was “frustrating” and “ridiculous”. The families fear that the public inquiry may be superficial and inadequate. Time will tell.
posted by Cameron Ward
MWCI: The victims’ families deserve answers; will they get them?
January 27, 2012 in Missing Women Commision of Inquiry, Opinion
On March 23, 1997 Robert “Willy” Pickton attacked a downtown eastside Vancouver sex trade worker at the Port Coquitlam property he shared with his brother. The Crown laid charges of attempted murder, forcible confinement, assault with a weapon and aggravated assault against him but stayed the charges as the trial approached.
Why?
The VPD and the RCMP had Pickton in their sights as a prime suspect in the disappearances of other downtown eastside sex trade workers from August of 1998 onwards but didn’t apprehend him. He was able to kill dozens of women, as many as 49 in all, until February 5, 2002.
Why?
These are the central factual questions posed by the terms of reference of the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry. The anguished families of Pickton’s victims have long sought a public inquiry into these questions, and others. Now that the Commission is finally hearing testimony from the police officers actually involved in the investigations, will the families get the answers they need and deserve? Or will the sudden appearance of a host of lawyers for individual police officers to augment the teams that the VPD and RCMP have had to look out for their interests for the last decade throw a spanner in the works?
…..
The latest report from The Vancouver Sun’s Neal Hall is here.
posted by Cameron Ward
Social D adds second Vancouver show
January 25, 2012 in Opinion
posted by Cameron Ward
MWCI: Another day, another police lawyer
January 25, 2012 in Missing Women Commision of Inquiry, Opinion
Today’s session began with David Neave unexpectedly arriving and introducing himself as the lawyer for former VPD Insp. Biddlecombe and advising he intended to cross-examine witnesses and would need time to prepare. Biddlecombe’s role in the investigation of Canada’s worst serial killing was well-documented by VPD Deputy Chief LePard’s August 2010 report, but Biddlecombe did not apply for standing when the Commission sought applications a few months later. An updated list of the lawyers for the various police interests is set out below:
RCMP: Cheryl Tobias, Q.C., Jan Brongers, Judith Hoffman and Andrew Majawa
Vancouver Police Department and Vancouver Police Board: Sean Hern and Tim Dickson
Vancouver Police Union: David Crossin, Q.C.
Dr. Kim Rossmo (ex-VPD): Mark Skwarok
Doug Fell (VPD): Kevin Woodall and Claire Hatcher
Don Adam (ex RCMP): Janet Winteringham, Q.C.
Gary Bass (ex RCMP): Richard Peck, Q.C. and Tony Paisana
Earl Moulton (RCMP): Ravi Hira, Q.C.
Brian McGuiness (VPD): Greg DelBigio, Q.C.
Terry Blythe and John Unger (ex VPD): Edward Greenspan, Q.C. and Vanessa Christie
Brock Giles (VPD): David Butcher, Q.C. and Anila Srivastava
Gary Greer (VPD): Rick Henderson
Fred Biddlecombe (VPD): David Neave
Peel Regional Police: Linda Bordeleau
posted by Cameron Ward
MWCI: Brian Hutchinson hits the nail on the head
January 21, 2012 in Opinion
Brian Hutchinson has written an excellent article in today’s National Post that summarizes some of the evidence before the Missing Women Commission of Inquiry. The first paragraph reads:
“It was April 2000, the height of Robert “Willie” Pickton’s killing spree. Dozens of women were already missing, and 23 more would vanish. The Port Coquitlam pig farmer was trolling for skid row prostitutes, driving them to his farm, murdering them, disposing of their bodies and going back for more. He would continue this horrible pattern for at least another year, and right under the noses of police.”
After noting that Pickton became a prime suspect of both the RCMP and VPD in August of 1998, Hutchinson writes:
“Perhaps most telling, on April 25, 2000, RCMP officers were already discussing the possibility that bungled police efforts would lead to a public inquiry.
On that date, a staff sergeant named Brad Zalys had a conversation with a superior officer, RCMP Inspector Earl Moulton. Staff Sgt. Zalys made the following observation in his notebook: “Also discussed Pickton again–>if he turns out to be responsible–>inquiry!–>Deal with that if the time comes!”
What led Staff Sgt. Zalys, Inspector Moulton, and others to such a state? What did they know? Why hadn’t Pickton been stopped by then? And why did B.C.’s criminal justice branch decide, in 1998, to stay proceedings against the loathsome pig farmer, after he’d been charged with attempting to murder a prostitute on his pig farm?
The present inquiry, led by former B.C. attorney general Wally Oppal, has a mandate to find out all of that, and to recommend changes to the way police homicide investigations are conducted.”
Robert William Pickton was not stopped until February 5, 2002. By then he had participated in as many as 49 murders.
The RCMP have never apologized to the families of the murdered women for their handling of the case. The Crown has never apologized to the families for letting Pickton walk away from charges of attempted murder, assault with a weapon, forcible confinement and aggravated assault arising from his attack on a Vancouver sex trade worker in March of 1997.