Thursday 25 August 2022

Halifax police chief to testify today at Nova Scotia mass shooting inquiry

 
 
 

MCC - DAY 63 - HRP CHIEF DAN KINSELLA

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In 2006 I ran against the ex cop from Springhill Murray Scott when he was the Attorney General of Nova Scotia. This was done after raising a lot of Hell about my concerns about the RCMP et al while running in the elections of the 38th (Fundy Royal) and 39th (Fredericton) Parliaments. Later in 2006 I ran in the provincial election in NB while preparing to sue the Crown in Federal Court in Fredericton just as I had promised to do during the aforementioned elections. Trust that In had some interesting battles with the RCMP and many other corrupt cops in Nova Scotia long before Mikey Savage and Murray Scott became Mayors and the dude Kinsella came down here to be the latest HRP Chief. However in 2004 a war began with the RCMP and the Fredericton Police Force that all their past and present bosses are well aware of particularly the MMC Commissioner Fitch
 
Hello LGC and gang, I’m watching now at 10 pm. I’m in the hospital with spotty internet, I’m on the up swing so all is good I may be going home tomorrow ☺️ Thank You for your positive thoughts 🙏🏻 God bless the 23❤
Joanne our thoughts , and prayers🙏are with you. God bless the 23 , and the families, and everyone here.
 
 
I posted a link a few mins ago and now gone? Just wondering if you deleted it, Seamus?

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I did not. I checked the held comments and found a comment made by yourself on yesterday's Brenda's video. I approved it. Is that what you are referring to?
 
 
  
 
 

MCC Day 61 – Halifax Regional Police Chief Dan Kinsella

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The Mass Casualty Commission heard today from Halifax Regional Police Chief Dan Kinsella today. Chief Kinsella was brought in to discuss the HRP role in the events of April 18-19, 2020, as well as the structure of policing in Nova Scotia. HRP and the RCMP each cover different areas of Halifax Regional Municipality, and so confront issues of interoperability on a regular basis. 
 
There are two things I would like to note before getting to the substance of Chief Kinsella’s testimony. 
 
First, it appears that I was far from the only person curious as to why Commissioner Brenda Lucki and the other RCMP officers who have testified at the MCC have not been wearing their uniforms. The reason the officers are testifying in civilian clothing is as a result of a request from the MCC to do so, so as to avoid triggering anyone watching the proceedings who might be sensitive to the uniform as a result of the killer’s employment of it in his rampage. Chief Kinsella was also not wearing a police uniform, presumably for the same reason. 
 
The second issue is the point I raised yesterday about Commissioner Michael MacDonald’s comment to Commissioner Lucki at the end of her testimony where he urged her to be a champion of the MCC’s forthcoming recommendations. I said that this seemed to be a sign that the MCC was not going to recommend the removal of the RCMP as a police force in Nova Scotia in favour of another model. It has been pointed out to me, and I agree, that it could also be interpreted as a call for her to support a transition to another model of policing if that were to be recommended. In either case, Commissioner Lucki has committed to supporting and acting on the recommendations. 
 
Chief Kinsella testified that the HRP was ready to assist the RCMP as events unfolded, and gave evidence about the relationship between HRP and the RCMP more generally. On the events of the mass casualty, Chief Kinsella noted that HRP did everything that was asked of them, and was ready for Wortman had he made it to their jurisdiction.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Halifax police chief says it's 'inconceivable' they wouldn't have considered alert in mass shooting

Chief Dan Kinsella testified before the mass shooting inquiry Thursday

Chief Dan Kinsella took the stand Thursday afternoon before the Mass Casualty Commission leading the inquiry into the April 2020 massacre where a gunman killed 22 people across the province. 

The webcast of the proceedings can be seen here.

Commission counsel Rachel Young asked Kinsella to expand on the lengthy list of questions they had sent the Halifax police force last month, including the topic of the Alert Ready system.

When asked if Halifax police would have sent an alert about the gunman had he crossed over into their jurisdiction, Kinsella said the best time to be contemplating a public alert would have been "much earlier" in the 13-hour shooting.

"There was various points in time where I believe it could have been used," Kinsella said. "It's really inconceivable that we wouldn't have considered it."

Kinsella added that HRP would have still weighed the situation and the impact an alert would have on the public and officers, but it would have been an option "particularly had we gotten a call from EMO," he said.

At the time of the massacre, all Nova Scotia police agencies had to send a request for an alert and the accompanying text to the provincial Emergency Management Office.

The provincial EMO executive director, Paul Mason, has told the commission that one of their staff tried to speak with the Mounties the morning of April 19 to check if they wanted an alert sent out, but couldn't reach anyone. Eventually the staff member called an officer he knew and got through that way.

At 11:20 a.m. AT, RCMP called EMO to request use of the alert system, but Mason said they did not suggest any message. Shortly after, the gunman was killed.

Instead of requesting an alert, the RCMP tweeted late on April 18 about a firearms complaint in Portapique. They turned to Twitter again the next day around 8 a.m. AT to report that it was an active shooter incident. The RCMP did not release the fact that the gunman was driving a mock police car until 10:17 a.m. on April 19. An image of the vehicle was posted to Twitter.

Regional police investigators confer outside the Atlantic Denture Clinic on April 20, 2020, in Dartmouth, N.S. The clinic was owned by the Nova Scotia mass shooter. (Tim Krochak/Getty Images)

Although an alert had never been used for policing in Nova Scotia before the shooting, Kinsella said he knew it could be used for active shooter situations.

Multiple RCMP staff and officers have said they had no idea the national Alert Ready system that is used for major weather events or Amber Alerts could also be used for policing.

Nova Scotians immediately began asking why the Mounties chose to release information on Twitter rather than using the alert system, which would have sent information to people's cellphones. Many have pointed out that internet service is spotty in central and northern Nova Scotia, and Twitter use is not widespread.

Family members of some of the nine people killed on April 19, 2020, have said their loved ones could have been saved had they known there was an active shooter driving a replica police cruiser on the loose.

Halifax Regional Police and RCMP have since been trained on the Alert Ready system and are now able to directly issue their own alerts. 

The lawyer for the family of victim Gina Goulet, who was killed in her Shubenacadie home the morning of April 19, 2020 shortly before the gunman was shot by police, asked Kinsella why Halifax police officers couldn't have just gone out on their own to help the manhunt.

Twenty-two people died on April 18 and 19, 2020. Top row from left: Gina Goulet, Dawn Gulenchyn, Jolene Oliver, Frank Gulenchyn, Sean McLeod, Alanna Jenkins. Second row: John Zahl, Lisa McCully, Joey Webber, Heidi Stevenson, Heather O'Brien and Jamie Blair. Third row from top: Kristen Beaton, Lillian Campbell, Joanne Thomas, Peter Bond, Tom Bagley and Greg Blair. Bottom row: Emily Tuck, Joy Bond, Corrie Ellison and Aaron Tuck. (CBC)

Kinsella said they were preparing what to do if the gunman crossed into their jurisdiction, but until then they had to wait for requests for help from RCMP who were in charge of the response.

"You can't just get in your car and your cruiser and drive into the scene — you could but it's not good police business to do that," Kinsella said.

The chief said that he personally offered help to Chief Supt. Janis Gray, who was the head of Halifax RCMP at the time, around 8 a.m. on April 19 but never heard back. 

When Lenehan asked Kinsella about why the Halifax police's emergency response team (ERT) wasn't deployed closer to Truro, Kinsella again said he didn't get a request from RCMP.

"You can't just send them," Kinsella said.

But the leader for the Halifax Regional Police emergency response team, Charles Naugle, has told the commission he was frustrated to be denied extra members, and always assumed the force would face an active shooter "with everything that we had."

Halifax officer wanted more resources

In an interview last September, Naugle told the commission he wanted to bring in eight more emergency response team members around 9:30 a.m. on April 19 to bring their team full strength to more than 16 members "for the search and others to standby" — which was denied.

"Never in my life would I think that I would have to try to figure out how to get permission to call the resources out that are sitting down in the locker room," Naugle said.

Soon after, the gunman killed Lillian Campbell in Wentworth and Naugle said the ERT members he did have formed into teams and went out onto the roads with the instructions to stop the gunman from entering Halifax. Naugle said some members went to the Halifax airport and Fall River, while others were at the Enfield Big Stop when the gunman was killed.

Kinsella said Thursday he stood by the decision the duty officer would have made at the time, given how quickly things were unfolding, but it's always a good idea to look at what could be done better.

"Maybe there is some recommendations that come out of this that will say, based on this situation, we need a certain amount of tactical officers on duty at all times," Kinsella said. 

Chief 'refused' to meet with commission until now

Kinsella had declined multiple requests from the commission to be interviewed and only testified after being subpoenaed, according to documents tabled Thursday.

An email from commission counsel Rachel Young to Halifax municipal lawyer Andrew Gough on July 13 said the fact that Kinsella and other senior HRP officers had declined to be interviewed by the commission "is a missed opportunity" to contribute to a conversation around public safety.

By that point, Young said the commission had tried to arrange an interview with Kinsella multiple times, but he cancelled in March and April due to scheduling issues and not getting questions ahead of time.

Young said that on June 7, a day after watching Truro police Chief David McNeil's testimony in person, Kinsella cancelled an interview scheduled for June 10. The commission had sent Kinsella questions earlier that month.

"No other chief has refused to meet with the commission," Young wrote, adding that although Kinsella said he'd supply written answers to some questions by July 13, he hadn't done so.

Young said in order to ensure a timely response, she was sending the written questions in the form of a subpoena with a seven-day turnaround time. Commissioner Michael MacDonald also issued a subpoena for Kinsella to appear Thursday for oral testimony.

Kinsella did then respond to the 86 questions the commission sent with Young's email, as well as to a series of followup questions.

Tension between RCMP, Halifax police

Co-ordination between RCMP and municipal police forces during the mass shooting has been a point of contention during the inquiry.

The commission has heard Halifax Regional Police played various roles in the mass shooting response the night of April 18 and 19, 2020, including monitoring the gunman's Dartmouth denturist clinic and apartment. They also brought family members of the gunman's spouse, Lisa Banfield, to a safe location early in the morning on April 19, and shared photos of his mock RCMP cruiser to RCMP shortly after 7:15 a.m. that day.

In an internal Halifax Regional Police email from April 29, 2020, Staff Sgt. Donald Steinburg said there were 18 officers on duty in the integrated criminal intelligence division alone as of 6:45 a.m. AT the Sunday of the mass shooting.

The RCMP asked for the division to team up with the Halifax Regional Police emergency response team to gather up Banfield's family members. The emergency team members were also eventually sent to the Irving Big Stop in Enfield, where the gunman was shot and killed.

The gunman was apprehended by police near a gas station in Enfield, N.S., around 11:40 a.m. local time. on April 19, 2020. (Eric Woolliscroft/CBC)

Steinburg also said the province's Serious Incident Response Team (SIRT) asked for HRP investigators and the forensic identification section to handle the Big Stop scene following the gunman's death. The identification members were eventually redirected to other crime scenes, Steinburg said.

By midday April 19, Steinburg said Halifax police had approximately 50 officers assisting with various tasks. 

In a redacted wellness report of 24 N.S. RCMP commissioned officers or civilian equivalents finished in September 2021, many said there was an ongoing "turf battle" over operational control and funding between the Halifax Regional Police and the Nova Scotia RCMP. 

Several participants also reported that despite the Mounties doing their best to be a "partner" in this integrated model, "the leadership of HRP was doing everything it could to undermine and break the relationship with the RCMP in order to access more resources from (Halifax Regional Municipality) and the province."

On Monday, Lee Bergerman, the retired commanding RCMP officer for the province, was asked at the inquiry if organizational issues between the RCMP and municipal police affected the police response to the mass shooting. She said no, but that in the aftermath of the tragedy, "it was apparent that it became popular to distance yourself from the RCMP because we're receiving a lot of criticism publicly."

Bergerman said that she believes the RCMP's push to establish province wide policing standards "has caused a rift between the RCMP, the Department of Justice and municipal policing agencies."

She added that municipal chiefs were also upset by the RCMP's move to start tracking expenses every time RCMP special units have to be called in by outside forces. But Bergerman said the RCMP hasn't been billing municipalities for those services, just keeping track to show the province where their money is going when they run a deficit.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Haley Ryan

Reporter

Haley Ryan is a reporter based in Halifax. Got a story idea? Send an email to haley.ryan@cbc.ca, or reach out on Twitter @hkryan17.

With files from The Canadian Press

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 

Halifax police chief to testify today at Nova Scotia mass shooting inquiry

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HALIFAX — The Halifax Regional Police chief is scheduled to face questions today at the public inquiry into the 2020 Nova Scotia mass shooting.

It’s expected that Dan Kinsella will be asked about his force’s working relationship with the RCMP and Halifax Regional Police’s role in responding to the two-day rampage that ended on April 19, 2020, and resulted in 22 deaths.

Co-ordination between RCMP and municipal police forces during the mass shooting has been a point of contention during the inquiry.

Both the Halifax and Truro police forces were involved in the RCMP-led response to the mass killing.

In September 2021, a “wellness report” commissioned by the RCMP and completed by an Ottawa-based consultant group, noted that RCMP staff said there was an ongoing “turf battle” over operational control and funding between the Halifax Regional Police and the Nova Scotia RCMP.

A redacted version of this report released by the inquiry said staff reported that there were "major dysfunctions" at the Nova Scotia RCMP before the mass shooting.

It said that several participants interviewed reported that RCMP members were doing their best to partner with the Halifax police, but “the leadership of (Halifax Regional Police) was doing everything it could to undermine and break the relationship with the RCMP in order to access more resources from (Halifax Regional Municipality) and the province,” reads the report.

RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki testified on Tuesday at the inquiry that she wasn’t aware for several months that the wellness report had been completed, adding that she first saw the report in June of this year.

In his June testimony before the inquiry, Truro police Chief David MacNeil said that the Nova Scotia RCMP didn’t ask him to send extra help during the mass shooting, though his officers were trained in responding to active shooters and were among the closest to the rampage.

He said if his force had been asked, he would "definitely” have called in officers as needed. MacNeil said they had carbines in their cars and were trained to use them.

On Monday, Lee Bergerman, the retired commanding RCMP officer for the province, was asked at the inquiry if organizational issues between the RCMP and municipal police affected the police response to the mass shooting. She said no.

But in the aftermath of the tragedy, “it was apparent that it became popular to distance yourself from the RCMP because we’re receiving a lot of criticism publicly,” Bergerman said.

“There were times where there was an opportunity for certain (police) chiefs to publicly say negative things. That was the start of it,” she said.

Bergerman added that she believes the RCMP’s push to establish provincewide policing standards “has caused a rift between the RCMP, the Department of Justice and municipal policing agencies.”

When asked why that would cause tension, Bergerman said, “you would have to ask a municipal police chief why that might cause problems.” She added that provincial police standards would likely require municipalities to have specialized police units, which could be “cost-prohibitive.”

Kinsella is scheduled to appear as a witness before the inquiry today at 2 p.m.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 25, 2022.

---

This story was produced with the financial assistance of the Meta and Canadian Press News Fellowship.

Lyndsay Armstrong, The Canadian Press

"We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community After two independent reports and a ban on street checks, Halifax Regional Police finally apologizes. By Fadila Chater click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community The Coast “On behalf of the Halifax Regional Police, I am sorry," chief Dan Kinsella said. "I am sorry for the actions that have caused you pain.” It was an important day for Halifax’s Black community as it heard, for the very first time, the official apology from one of the institutions that has caused it harm and grief for generations. Halifax Regional Police chief Dan Kinsella addressed an audience of about 100 people Friday morning at the Halifax Central Library. “Far too many times—far too many times—we have failed you,” Kinsella said. “On behalf of the Halifax Regional Police, I am sorry. I am sorry for the actions that have caused you pain.” In mid-October, street checks—the police practice of watching or stopping citizens in order to gather police intelligence—were banned after being found illegal and an infringement on constitutional rights by an independent review from the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission An initial report released in March 2019 by the NSHRC found the practice specifically targets Black men, who are “five times more likely to be subject to a street check than their proportion of the population would predict." Kinsella went on to announce HRP have committed to doing better moving forward. click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community THE COAST Amariah Bernard (left) and Zamani Millar sang a moving rendition of “O Canada” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in front of the crowd. Before Kinsella spoke, two youth, Zamani Millar and Amariah Bernard, sang a moving rendition of “O Canada” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in front of the crowd. “I felt very powerful, I felt I was standing with my community and speaking on behalf of us,” Millar said about her performance of the Black national anthem. “It emphasized the sense of unity.” Millar and Bernard, 18 and 17 respectfully, are both hopeful and ready to hold HRP accountable for the commitments they made Friday. But they say the good fight is not over. Nzingha Millar, 25, said that while the apology was a good start and an important milestone, more could be done to ensure the plans laid actually take place. “The plans left out some very important issues,” Nzingha Millar said, “which is how the police force will specifically change the culture of policing within that institution.” Nzingha Millar, who has been personally affected by street checks, said not enough has been done to address the emotional harm that was caused. click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community THE COAST Mayann Francis, Nova Scotia's first Black lieutenant governor. Her sentiment was mirrored by Nova Scotia’s first Black lieutenant governor Mayann Francis, who gave a brief but profound opening speech about Nova Scotia’s history of police violence, discrimination and segregation. “Being here today in the south end to receive a long-overdue apology sends a powerful message to those who still believe that African Nova Scotians do not belong in the south end,” she said. Millar also said that there’s an issue with the gendered lens that HRP is looking at the issue through. The focus, she said, has been mainly on Black men. “Black women are also being affected by police interactions that are wrong, and they are also facing a double oppression of gender and race,” she adds. The street check report found that Black women were three times more likely to be street checked than their proportion in the population would predict, and were street checked at a rate 3.6 times higher than white women—a rate even higher than the rate for white males. HRP hasn't mentioned women specifically in any of its action planning. But it is forming an advisory committee—in “early 2020”—which Kinsella said will include the participation of members from the Black community. Kinsella said the committee will address specific incidents and ensure the Black community is central to informing future long-term initiatives like community outreach, training, recruitment and youth engagement. Actions planned by the HRP include a “know your rights campaign,” which Kinsella said will provide information through paper handouts and social media messaging on what people should expect during interactions with police. He also said that HRP will rethink officer training to include the Black community. Part of that training will “be rooted in African Nova Scotian history” and he said members of the Black community are welcome to create and deliver the training. And Kinsella committed to hiring more Black officers “in order to better reflect the community” they served. Nova Scotia RCMP has yet to apologize for its role in street checks. It is not taking responsibility until results from a national review on street checks is assessed.

Read more at: https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache%3ATE5il9GSd28J%3Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.thecoast.ca%2Fhalifax%2Fwe-have-failed-you-police-chief-dan-kinsella-tells-black-community%2FContent%3Foid%3D22947080&cd=13&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca&client=firefox-b-d
 
"We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community After two independent reports and a ban on street checks, Halifax Regional Police finally apologizes. By Fadila Chater click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community The Coast “On behalf of the Halifax Regional Police, I am sorry," chief Dan Kinsella said. "I am sorry for the actions that have caused you pain.” It was an important day for Halifax’s Black community as it heard, for the very first time, the official apology from one of the institutions that has caused it harm and grief for generations. Halifax Regional Police chief Dan Kinsella addressed an audience of about 100 people Friday morning at the Halifax Central Library. “Far too many times—far too many times—we have failed you,” Kinsella said. “On behalf of the Halifax Regional Police, I am sorry. I am sorry for the actions that have caused you pain.” In mid-October, street checks—the police practice of watching or stopping citizens in order to gather police intelligence—were banned after being found illegal and an infringement on constitutional rights by an independent review from the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission An initial report released in March 2019 by the NSHRC found the practice specifically targets Black men, who are “five times more likely to be subject to a street check than their proportion of the population would predict." Kinsella went on to announce HRP have committed to doing better moving forward. click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community THE COAST Amariah Bernard (left) and Zamani Millar sang a moving rendition of “O Canada” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in front of the crowd. Before Kinsella spoke, two youth, Zamani Millar and Amariah Bernard, sang a moving rendition of “O Canada” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in front of the crowd. “I felt very powerful, I felt I was standing with my community and speaking on behalf of us,” Millar said about her performance of the Black national anthem. “It emphasized the sense of unity.” Millar and Bernard, 18 and 17 respectfully, are both hopeful and ready to hold HRP accountable for the commitments they made Friday. But they say the good fight is not over. Nzingha Millar, 25, said that while the apology was a good start and an important milestone, more could be done to ensure the plans laid actually take place. “The plans left out some very important issues,” Nzingha Millar said, “which is how the police force will specifically change the culture of policing within that institution.” Nzingha Millar, who has been personally affected by street checks, said not enough has been done to address the emotional harm that was caused. click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community THE COAST Mayann Francis, Nova Scotia's first Black lieutenant governor. Her sentiment was mirrored by Nova Scotia’s first Black lieutenant governor Mayann Francis, who gave a brief but profound opening speech about Nova Scotia’s history of police violence, discrimination and segregation. “Being here today in the south end to receive a long-overdue apology sends a powerful message to those who still believe that African Nova Scotians do not belong in the south end,” she said. Millar also said that there’s an issue with the gendered lens that HRP is looking at the issue through. The focus, she said, has been mainly on Black men. “Black women are also being affected by police interactions that are wrong, and they are also facing a double oppression of gender and race,” she adds. The street check report found that Black women were three times more likely to be street checked than their proportion in the population would predict, and were street checked at a rate 3.6 times higher than white women—a rate even higher than the rate for white males. HRP hasn't mentioned women specifically in any of its action planning. But it is forming an advisory committee—in “early 2020”—which Kinsella said will include the participation of members from the Black community. Kinsella said the committee will address specific incidents and ensure the Black community is central to informing future long-term initiatives like community outreach, training, recruitment and youth engagement. Actions planned by the HRP include a “know your rights campaign,” which Kinsella said will provide information through paper handouts and social media messaging on what people should expect during interactions with police. He also said that HRP will rethink officer training to include the Black community. Part of that training will “be rooted in African Nova Scotian history” and he said members of the Black community are welcome to create and deliver the training. And Kinsella committed to hiring more Black officers “in order to better reflect the community” they served. Nova Scotia RCMP has yet to apologize for its role in street checks. It is not taking responsibility until results from a national review on street checks is assessed.

Read more at: https://www.thecoast.ca/halifax/we-have-failed-you-police-chief-dan-kinsella-tells-black-community/Content?oid=22947080
"We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community After two independent reports and a ban on street checks, Halifax Regional Police finally apologizes. By Fadila Chater click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community The Coast “On behalf of the Halifax Regional Police, I am sorry," chief Dan Kinsella said. "I am sorry for the actions that have caused you pain.” It was an important day for Halifax’s Black community as it heard, for the very first time, the official apology from one of the institutions that has caused it harm and grief for generations. Halifax Regional Police chief Dan Kinsella addressed an audience of about 100 people Friday morning at the Halifax Central Library. “Far too many times—far too many times—we have failed you,” Kinsella said. “On behalf of the Halifax Regional Police, I am sorry. I am sorry for the actions that have caused you pain.” In mid-October, street checks—the police practice of watching or stopping citizens in order to gather police intelligence—were banned after being found illegal and an infringement on constitutional rights by an independent review from the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission An initial report released in March 2019 by the NSHRC found the practice specifically targets Black men, who are “five times more likely to be subject to a street check than their proportion of the population would predict." Kinsella went on to announce HRP have committed to doing better moving forward. click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community THE COAST Amariah Bernard (left) and Zamani Millar sang a moving rendition of “O Canada” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in front of the crowd. Before Kinsella spoke, two youth, Zamani Millar and Amariah Bernard, sang a moving rendition of “O Canada” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing” in front of the crowd. “I felt very powerful, I felt I was standing with my community and speaking on behalf of us,” Millar said about her performance of the Black national anthem. “It emphasized the sense of unity.” Millar and Bernard, 18 and 17 respectfully, are both hopeful and ready to hold HRP accountable for the commitments they made Friday. But they say the good fight is not over. Nzingha Millar, 25, said that while the apology was a good start and an important milestone, more could be done to ensure the plans laid actually take place. “The plans left out some very important issues,” Nzingha Millar said, “which is how the police force will specifically change the culture of policing within that institution.” Nzingha Millar, who has been personally affected by street checks, said not enough has been done to address the emotional harm that was caused. click to enlarge "We have failed you," police chief Dan Kinsella tells Black community THE COAST Mayann Francis, Nova Scotia's first Black lieutenant governor. Her sentiment was mirrored by Nova Scotia’s first Black lieutenant governor Mayann Francis, who gave a brief but profound opening speech about Nova Scotia’s history of police violence, discrimination and segregation. “Being here today in the south end to receive a long-overdue apology sends a powerful message to those who still believe that African Nova Scotians do not belong in the south end,” she said. Millar also said that there’s an issue with the gendered lens that HRP is looking at the issue through. The focus, she said, has been mainly on Black men. “Black women are also being affected by police interactions that are wrong, and they are also facing a double oppression of gender and race,” she adds. The street check report found that Black women were three times more likely to be street checked than their proportion in the population would predict, and were street checked at a rate 3.6 times higher than white women—a rate even higher than the rate for white males. HRP hasn't mentioned women specifically in any of its action planning. But it is forming an advisory committee—in “early 2020”—which Kinsella said will include the participation of members from the Black community. Kinsella said the committee will address specific incidents and ensure the Black community is central to informing future long-term initiatives like community outreach, training, recruitment and youth engagement. Actions planned by the HRP include a “know your rights campaign,” which Kinsella said will provide information through paper handouts and social media messaging on what people should expect during interactions with police. He also said that HRP will rethink officer training to include the Black community. Part of that training will “be rooted in African Nova Scotian history” and he said members of the Black community are welcome to create and deliver the training. And Kinsella committed to hiring more Black officers “in order to better reflect the community” they served. Nova Scotia RCMP has yet to apologize for its role in street checks. It is not taking responsibility until results from a national review on street checks is assessed.

Read more at: https://www.thecoast.ca/halifax/we-have-failed-you-police-chief-dan-kinsella-tells-black-community/Content?oid=22947080
 
 
 
Halifax Police Chief Dan Kinsella has his balls in a vice. A vice of his own making.
If he has not yet lost the confidence of his rank-and-file officers, then that best before date is almost certainly on the horizon.
Pity, given the Hamilton, Ont. import is not even two years into his new gig.
But that’s what you get for forsaking your own boys & girls to throw your lot in with the Mob...
Has Police Chief Dan Kinsella 'lost the room'?
(for subscribers only)
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