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Director of police services Clayton Pecknold speaks during a press conference at the press gallery at Legislature in Victoria, B.C., Monday, December 19, 2016. Accessibility to British Columbia s municipal police complaints process can and should be improved, its commissioner says, as the office faces criticism from both legal advocates and the head of Vancouver s police union. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito January 11, 2021 - 1:00 AM
VANCOUVER - Accessibility to British Columbia s municipal police complaints process can and should be improved, its commissioner says, as the office faces criticism from both legal advocates and the head of Vancouver s police union.
Clayton Pecknold, who was appointed to the role in 2019, said in an interview he s aware of criticism over how his office responds to complaints against local police forces and officers.
Posted: Jan 11, 2021 8:06 AM PT | Last Updated: January 11
Clayton Pecknold, who was sworn in as B.C. s fourth police complaint commissioner in 2019, said in an interview he s aware of criticism over how his office responds to complaints against local police forces and officers.(THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito)
Alarmingly, their founder is from Canada.
The petition states how Earlier this year, the Proud Boys, a right-wing extremist group that promotes white supremacist views made international headlines after being bolstered by Donald Trump.
Earlier this week, members of the Proud Boys joined a group armed with deadly weapons as they stormed the U.S. Capitol, which was an act of domestic terrorism, explains the NDP.
The petition also notes that Alarmingly, their founder is from Canada.
At one point, Singh says that the website crashed Due to overwhelming support from people signing the petition. Unpopular opinion : Activist/writer weighs in on NDP petition
VANCOUVER Authorities quietly laid two domestic violence charges against a Vancouver police officer late last year, CTV News has learned prompting concern from critics that a battle against higher rates of domestic violence among law enforcement may be far from over. Const. Neil Logan, who is on extended leave, faces charges of assault and uttering threats against a woman for an incident dating back to March 2014, according to court documents. That’s three years before he was found in a police misconduct proceeding to have broken a windshield with his fists and assaulted his ex-girlfriend Alyssa Leblevec five times in a trip to Oregon in 2017.