Police psychologist says RCMP “lost” top secret files about undercover cops

shockedcanadian

Diamond Member
Aug 6, 2012
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If they aren't taking sticks to a teens scrotum, they are caught by "creep catchers", a vigilante group that catches creeps, and to which the RCMP denounce their tactics (not surprising since they caught RCMP officers in their net). Or worse, they are sexually assaulting their own officers which the taxpayer has the honor of paying $200M+ for while noone loses their jobs. This article illustrates how loosely they toss around undercover files of their agents.

TPS, OPP, RCMP.

No wonder our allies don't trust us...

Police psychologist says RCMP “lost” top secret files about undercover cops

The RCMP “lost” hundreds of “top secret” files about its undercover officers, according to a police psychologist.


According to Mike Webster, he has in his possession about 400 to 500 of these files even though his contract to evaluate officers deep undercover expired a few years ago.

In a phone interview today (February 1), Webster claimed that the force has not retrieved the documents.


Webster noted that the way the files had been handled speaks to the organizational problems besetting the national police force.

Webster and the RCMP had a bitter falling out after the psychologist criticized at a public inquiry the conduct of four Mounties who repeatedly zapped Robert Dziekanski, a newly arrived Polish immigrant, at the Vancouver airport in 2007.

According to Webster, the sensitive files are secured in a safe provided by the government.

He related that he had received a call from a government representative informing him that the safe needed to have some maintenance checks. The psychologist then asked that person why the documents are not being taken back since his contract was already over.

That exchange set the wheels turning. Webster later received a call from the RCMP in B.C., telling him that two police officers will come to take the files.

However, Webster reminded the caller that there are strict protocols that need to be observed in transporting the documents. For one, officers handling the documents should have top-level security clearances.

As required by security protocol, Webster said that he is now doing an inventory of the files.
 

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