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Angry emails to PMO question RCMP competence in hunt for B.C. homicide suspects

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Face  of  Nation  : Canadians from coast to coast wrote to the Prime Minister’s Office during the hunt for the country’s two most wanted men this summer, some expressing outrage with how the search for Bryer Schmegelsky and Kam McLeod was handled. And more than a month after the bodies of the two men were found, a former RCMP deputy commissioner says there are still unanswered questions about the case.

In roughly a dozen emails sent to the PMO, obtained by CBC News through an access to information request, writers expressed dismay that the two B.C. homicide suspects were able to evade police during a weeks-long search this summer, and criticized the lack of information provided by Mounties and the government.

“The treatment of Canadians by the RCMP during the manhunt for McLeod and Schmegelsky and the autopsy etc is completely unacceptable,” one Burlington, Ont., writer said to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale in an Aug. 12 email, after the search had ended. “Heads at the RCMP should roll, Goodale should be fired,” the voter said, adding they thought this would become an election issue.

Since the bodies of McLeod and Schmegelsky were discovered on Aug. 7, RCMP have said little about the investigation, and have not indicated any possible motive for the killings in which the two men were suspects.

McLeod and Schmegelsky were charged on July 24 with second-degree murder in the killing of Leonard Dyck, a botany lecturer at the University of British Columbia. He was found dead on July 19. Those charges were recently abated, as the suspects are dead.

On July 23, police said Schmegelsky and McLeod were suspects in the three deaths, sparking a search focused in northern Manitoba — where a burned-out vehicle used by the fugitives was found on July 22. 

During the more than two-week-long search, people from Vancouver to Antigonish, N.S., wrote to the Prime Minister and Goodale. “The RCMP were slow to sound the alarm as to the gravity and potential danger of this case,” the Antigonish writer said.

Asked for comment on the emails, the Prime Minister’s Office deferred to Goodale’s office, who deferred the request to the RCMP.  Shoihet said this week she can appreciate members of the public criticizing the Mounties’ decisions, but said every decision police made was based on information they had at the time.

“As soon as we had verified information linking to the two investigations, we provided that information to the public. We cannot provide information we do not have,” she wrote in an email. She said over nine days, the RCMP issued nine news releases and held five press conferences to keep communities informed and up to date.

One concern during the manhunt came from a Grande Prairie, Alta., resident who wrote to the Prime Minister’s Office on July 30 to ask why military forces hadn’t been deployed to help work through the tough northern Manitoba terrain.

“These young men need to be found so people of [Gillam, Man.], and other Canadians can return to a normal lifestyle,” the writer said. “There is never hesitation to deploy military personnel help in other world countries.”

A July 26 email from Goodale’s office says the RCMP were going to ask for a military plane to help search for the two suspects, who were presumed to be near Gillam, Man. Peter German, a former RCMP deputy commissioner, said calling in the military is a last resort in situations like the manhunt.

“Quite frankly … you don’t bring in the military until you’ve exhausted your own assets,” he said in a phone interview from Vancouver. But German, who had praise for the officers who worked on the search, wondered why RCMP air resources weren’t used, instead of the military’s.

“The RCMP has the capability to do night searching with their helicopters. Their pilots are trained for it [and] with night-vision goggles, can do things that civilian pilots can’t. I don’t know [if] that question has been answered.” The RCMP said they did use one of their planes with infrared capabilities in the search, on the evening of July 23. Drones were also sent to the area to assist with the search.

RCMP said they used one of their helicopters, but it didn’t arrive in Manitoba until Aug. 3. This was in addition to front-line and tactical officers, police dogs, forensic identification specialists and major crime investigators who were sent to Gillam.

“Generally speaking the concerns over evidence, release of information [and] so forth disappear, or certainly dissipate, after death,” he said, adding RCMP are likely treading carefully in an effort to minimize harm to the victims’ families.

“It could be inflammatory. It could be embarrassing. It could be nasty. We just don’t know,” he said, speaking of the reported videos. He also questioned how the RCMP communicated to the public during the search.

“I think the big issue that I kept hearing was information to the public. Was the public receiving enough information and was it real-time information? … Were people at the right level communicating information?” Sgt. Shoihet said B.C. RCMP do not have any definitive plans for an update on the case.