B.C.’s police watchdog lacked training during fatal shooting probe: report
VANCOUVER — British Columbia’s police watchdog lacked clear procedures and training for investigators after an officer-involved shooting led to a man’s death, says a former RCMP superintendent who reviewed the agency’s operations.
Doug Kiloh said in a report that the Independent Investigations Office did not have a disciplined structure in a case where a 48-year-old distraught man was shot in the parking lot of a casino in New Westminster on Nov. 8, 2012.
Kiloh, who is also a former emergency response team member, said the agency learned the man could possibly be available for an interview after he was transferred from an intensive care unit but the office delayed speaking with him and failed to provide any rationale for that decision.
Mehrdad Bayrami died 10 days after being shot, and his daughter later told a coroner’s inquest he was taking medication for severe depression.