A report filed in B.C. Supreme Court Thursday as part of a battle over the future of policing in the City of Surrey details dozens of incidents of alleged bullying and harassment by RCMP officers against the Surrey Police Service officers hired to work alongside and ultimately replace them.
VANCOUVER A lawyer for B.C.'s Public Safety Ministry says the City of Surrey was given a pathway to retain the RCMP as its police force, but "made no effort at all" to meet conditions to do so. Trevor Bant told the B.C. Supreme Court that the city's plan to abandon a transition to the Surrey Police Service didn't consider the risk of losing municipal officers who didn't want to join the RCMP. Bant was speaking on day four of the city's legal challenge against the B.C. public safety minister's order to continue the switch to the municipal force. Bant says reports by both the province's director of police services and Surrey city staff acknowledged that keeping the RCMP or transitioning to the municipal force were both feasible although "complex." He told Justice Kevin Loo that the RCMP had expected about half of Surrey Police Service officers to "patch over" and join the RCMP if the transition was halted, but the Surre
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Lawyers for the B.C. Public Safety Ministry had sought to seal exhibits containing the allegations, but that was denied by the judge and the union’s documents were filed Thursday
VANCOUVER - Lawyers for the Surrey Police Union say officers were subjected to harassment and disrespect by members of the Surrey RCMP, only to be left in a "jurisdictional void" when both federal and British Columbia bodies declined to investigate their allegations.